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Care and Feeding | Slate's parenting show

From Decoder Ring: Stuffed Animals Gone Wild

Care and Feeding | Slate's parenting show

Slate Podcasts

Society & Culture, Kids & Family, Parenting

4.61K Ratings

🗓️ 2 September 2024

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Care & Feeding team is off for Labor Day — but we won't let that stop you from hearing something great from elsewhere in the Slateiverse. So: we're handing the mic over to our friends at Decoder Ring! Axolotls. Narwhals. Llamas. Sloths. Every few years, it seems like American kids and parents collectively decide they cannot get enough of a creature that makes teddy bears seem impossibly quaint. In today’s episode we’re going to swim after the axolotl, as it takes us to some far-flung and unexpected places, to understand how it came to rule the stuffed animal kingdom. Though the answer absolutely has to do with parents eager to please their children at the gift shop, it’s bigger than that. The insatiable hunger for novelty that is bound up with the axolotl — well, that has to do with all of us. This episode was written by Willa Paskin. It was produced by Katie Shepherd. It was edited by Evan Chung. We produce Decoder Ring with Max Freedman. Derek John is Executive Producer. Merritt Jacob is Senior Technical Director. In this episode you’ll hear from Elaine Kollias who works with Folkmanis Puppets, Diana Laura Vasquez Mendoza who is a biologist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, Dr. Jessica Whited who is a professor at Harvard, Gerhard Runken who is the executive vice president of global brand and marketing for Jazwares, and Laura Wattenberg who is a baby name expert. Thank you to our translator Ezequiel Andino, as well as Luis Zambrano, Kelley Garnier, and Alejandra Escobar. And if you’d like to help the wild Axolotl, here is the conservation project where Diana works and they accept donations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone, the care and feeding team is off for Labor Day, but we won't let that stop you from hearing something great from elsewhere in the slate universe.

0:08.4

So we're handing the mic over to our friends at Decoder Ring.

0:11.6

They've got a great story for you about how the world of stuffed animals

0:15.2

transcended the teddy bear and how a lot of it is thanks to the wonderfully weird axolotel.

0:20.8

We'll catch up with you later this week, but until then enjoy Decoder Ring. When I was a little kid I had one stuffed animal that I loved more than all the rest.

0:38.6

I adore it so much, I could never part with it, even as I got older.

0:42.9

I'm a little sheepish about all the places that I lugged it.

0:45.5

Summer camp, college, the many apartments I lived in in my 20s.

0:50.4

All until it found a new owner. This is Owley.

0:54.0

It was my mom's favorite Stephanie Willis,

0:58.1

and it's an outlet.

0:59.7

It used to be white, but she favors it so much it turned gray.

1:03.4

That's my seven-year-old daughter.

1:05.2

The other day I asked her to go through a bag full of her stuffed animals,

1:09.0

which she calls stuffies.

1:11.0

And tell me about each of them.

1:13.0

Oh, this is cowy, my favorite stuffy. It's white and black and it's a cow.

1:18.0

I begged mommy for him.

1:21.0

At first glance, her stuffed animal collection is full of familiar adorable classics.

1:26.6

Your cats, your dogs, your bears.

1:29.6

This one is named Berry.

1:31.6

It's a dog and it's very like that.

...

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