Would you buy an Easy-Bake Oven for your son?

APNewsBreak: Unisex Easy-Bake oven on the way

FILE -- This is the current version of Hasbro's Easy-Bake Oven. The company is moving to make it more gender neutral so boys can feel free to bake too.

Hasbro has announced that it will be selling Easy-Bake Ovens in gender-neutral colors so boys can get their bake on without being embarrassed. A little girl from New Jersey started a campaign asking Hasbro to offer a boy version and puts boys in the commercial but it seems like the company was already thinking the same thing.

From AP:

“McKenna Pope, 13, of Garfield, N.J., got more than 40,000 signatures on her online petition at Change.org and the support of celebrity chefs including Bobby Flay, who backed her call for Hasbro to make a gender-neutral oven and to include boys in the ads.”

“She was prompted to start the petition after shopping for an Easy-Bake as a Christmas present for her 4-year-old brother, Gavyn Boscio, and finding them only in purple and pink.”

“…Hasbro has been working on the new color scheme and design for about 18 months, and decided to invite McKenna to see it and offer her thoughts, said John Frascotti, Hasbro’s chief marketing officer.

….Frascotti pointed out that the classic toy has had about a dozen different color schemes, from yellow to green to teal to silver, since first being introduced in 1963. The most recent iteration, introduced in 2011, is mostly purple with pink accents.

“He said it’s sold well since then, and that prompted the company to look for a way to update it and to broaden the consumer base by doing it in different colors.”

“It’s actually a product that’s played with by both boys and girls,” he said. “We will continue to offer the existing product too because it’s so popular.”

“Hasbro plans to introduce the new color scheme at the industry’s Toy Fair in New York in February. Frascotti said people are likely to see it on store shelves next summer.”

I agree with Hasbro’s marketing officer that boys have probably always used their sisters’ pink ones, and I don’t think they thought twice about it as long as none of their friends were around. But it makes total sense to me to make it gender neutral with cooking being so hot and food/cooking shows featuring men being so prevalent.

(This is also interesting in light of our recent discussion about men driving more buying decision and marketers using more “manly” colors to draw them in.)

Longtime AJC food columnist John Kessler wrote in 1998 about what happened when he bought an Easy-Bake oven for his daughter and when HE asked for an Easy-Bake Oven in 1970:

“By my unscientific straw poll, the Easy-Bake Oven was a hot seller for Christmas 1997. My daughter Rachel, who had long coveted this toy, got one. So did the other two Rachels in her first-grade class, her cousin Sam and the 9-year-old nephew of a colleague of mine.”

“Not bad for a decidedly low-tech toy whose basic trick —unchanged in 35 years —is cooking tiny baked goods with the refracted heat of a 100-watt light bulb.”

“And though five random children is no basis for a market study, I’d still say that one important demographic shift is revealed nonetheless. More boys seem to be joining the ranks of easy bakers, even though Hasbro spokeswoman Audrey Basso admits that the ovens are still marketed primarily to girls and their mothers.”

“That wasn’t the case back at Christmas 1970. Back when I wanted an Easy-Bake Oven of my own.

“When I told my parents they looked concerned —nearly aghast. My four older brothers and sisters snickered ruthlessly. I might as well have asked for a set of hot rollers and a jar of Dippity Do.”

“But on Christmas morning a large, potentially Easy-Bake-sized box appeared under the tree with my name on it. I ripped into it, took it out of its box, plugged it in. Bliss.”

“I remember the 1970 model came not only with an oven, but also a griddle on top. Right there, under the tree on Christmas morning, I fried a hot dog. The only way my parents could drag me away from my Easy-Bake was an excursion to see “The Aristocats.”

“Later on I worked through the mixes that came with it —miniature boxes decorated with idealized pictures of layer cake that belied the tasteless little hockey pucks they actually produced. Before long the oven was retired to the attic without much fanfare, as doubtless millions of others have been since the fad heated up.”

“Sales have been steady since the Kenner toy company (now a division of Hasbro) introduced the Easy-Bake Oven in the early 1960s. It was was an immediate success, selling more than 2 million units by 1967. Soon a household word, it begat a number of product-line extensions including the Easy-Pop Corn Popper, the Easy-Bake Bubble-Gum set as well as a taffy machine and a blender/juicer.”

“Improvements on the basic model, introduced at various times, have included a 20-minute timer and a dual-temperature oven. The “slide-thru baking pan” that keeps little fingers from reaching into hot baking chambers was introduced in 1968 and has remained a feature to date.”

“But though the basic mechanism inside has remained unchanged, the design of the oven casing has undergone a major face lift. Twenty-seven years to the date after I first laid delighted eyes on my own Easy-Bake Oven, I’m staring at Rachel’s gleaming white model, and I’m in shock.”

“It looks like a microwave! Right down to the purple sticker bottom panel that flashes a perpetual time of 12:30.”

“She, however, is entranced. And desperate to get cooking. “Daddy, come oooon!” she implores, tugging on my hand and urging me up and out of an armchair. She had already taken grandpa on a tour through every convenience store open on Christmas morning to find the required 100-watt standard light bulb. She had already cajoled mommy into removing the back of the oven with a Phillips screwdriver and installing the bulb. Now it’s my turn to help her cook.”

“Cooking Easy-Bake style is not difficult. You select a mix and combine it with a precise teaspoon or two of water, measured from the provided M&M teaspoon. Rachel and I make a batch of seven dime-sized sugar cookies and slide them into the oven with the long sliding stick. After a few minutes we push them through to the cooling rack. They are actually delicious.”

“The Easy-Bake Oven will celebrate its 35th anniversary at the Toy Fair in New York next month. Cagey sources at Hasbro plan to make a “big announcement” about the toy, but they can’t tell me what it is yet, so stay tuned. Maybe they’re introducing contemporary mixes for creme brulee and tiramisu.”

“Later on we prepared the yellow cake with chocolate frosting and carved it into six itty-bitty wedges that Rachel passed around after dinner. Another winner. Now she’s out of mixes and wants me to pick up more at the toy store. She also wants to melt nacho cheese in the warming cup you put on top of the oven.”

“I hope not. With any luck they’ll reintroduce the griddle top. Then Rachel and I can pop “The Aristocats” into the VCR and fry up some hot dogs.”

Like John, I wanted an Easy-Bake Oven for years when I was little. But when I finally got it, I found it to be disappointing. (I think my mom waited too long and I was too old.) I didn’t think it cooked very well (occurs to me now I wasn’t patient enough) and even as a young girl I thought the pre-packaged tiny cake mixes were not economical. I quickly moved on the real oven and stove top.

I never bought one for my kids I guess because I wasn’t that impressed with it when I was young.

Do you think it’s necessary to change the Easy-Bake Oven colors/packaging? Would you buy one for your son? Would the color/packaging affect that purchasing decision?

If you’re a boy, did you every play with an Easy-Bake Oven? Did you claim it as your own or was it officially your sister’s?

53 comments Add your comment

sarah

December 19th, 2012
2:59 pm

I’m amused by the homophobia some our spouting. If a boy learns a cooking skill, he will not be less of a man or gay. Seriously, that laughable.

I have a girl and a boy so we have both a play kitchen and monster trucks in our home. We have a doll house and army fort tents. Both kids play with both types. I do not limit their imaginations by telling them they are only allowed to play with the toys that some mega million dollar company says is appropriate for their gender. Again, seriously laughable.

My 7 year old daughter loves art and girly things. She also loves “boy toys” but most don’t seem to have a problem with that. I get comments all the time how awesome they think it is that she can “hang with the boys” in athletics. She steamrolls them in tackle football.

I made such an effort to avoid putting sexist labels on toys that she had no idea that what she preferred was “boy toys” until the age of 4 when going thru the McDonald’s drive thru and they asked me if I wanted a “boy toy” or “girl toy” with our happy meal. My daughter likes superheros instead of pink ponies so I was forced to say “boy toy”. And her 4 year old self screamed from the back… “WHAT… BOY TOY??? BUT I’M NOT A BOY?!?!?! Well, then I was forced to have the conversation with her about how companies market their products and society tries to lock us in a little box by forcing certain expectations on us. It was confusing for her then, but now 7 years old and in 1st grade, she totally gets it. She owns her likes/dislikes and when a little girl asks why she likes “boy stuff” she says because it’s cool and encourages them to try. Very often a group of boys will shun her until they see that she has game… then she is the coolest player in the group. LOL

As for my son, he likes all things boy as well, but he can also makes some mean sandwiches in that play kitchen. LET THEIR IMAGINATIONS GROW PEOPLE!! Don’t stifle them with your personal issues about what is girly or boyish enough for a child to play with.

Warrior Woman

December 20th, 2012
12:13 pm

Why not? If boys are going to eat, they need to learn how to cook!

Paula

December 20th, 2012
9:30 pm

Hello everyone,
Back in the day they use to make those easy bake ovens in green. In fact I still have my original old school green easy bake oven.

Paula
In Austin, Texas