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Argos faces backlash over ‘influencer kit’ for toddlers

about 20 hours ago
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Argos has ignited a debate among parents and child development campaigners after promoting a wooden “influencer kit” aimed at toddlers.Critics have warned that the play set could normalise the precarious world of digital labour and prematurely expose children to the pressures of online visibility.The toy, designed for children aged two and over, is made entirely from wood and includes a tripod stand, a miniature camera with an adjustable aperture lens, a smartphone model, a tablet, and a microphone.All the items can be stored in a carrying pouch.Argos currently advertises the £15 product on its website as a tool designed to “cultivate children’s storytelling skills and creativity through career role-play”.

However, the decision to position the potential of social media stardom on the same level as more traditional role-play has drawn criticism from advocacy groups.Daisy Greenwell, co-founder and director of the advocacy group Smartphone Free Childhood, said: “The best play is about real life – mud kitchens, toy ovens, doctor kits – children copying the world around them and making sense of it.”She added: “There’s something a bit off about dressing up a very adult, very performative world as a wholesome wooden toy.Influencing is all about chasing attention, so we have to ask what we’re teaching children to value, if that’s the world we’re inviting them to copy.”The brand Rini has previously been heavily criticised for marketing cosmetic face masks specifically to young children, a move dermatologists described as dystopian, warning that the beauty industry is now expanding its reach from teenagers to toddlers.

Dr Francis Rees, an expert in childhood and digital culture from the University of Essex, said: “While it may be tempting to dismiss this as simply another example of questionable children’s toys, I think it’s more useful to see it as part of a broader shift in how childhood is being imagined,”She said: “Toys have long reflected adult roles, with doctor sets, kitchens, and toolkits being normal parts of growing up,With ‘influencer’ now ranking highest in surveys of children’s future career aspirations, this product is not entirely surprising,”However, Rees warned that influencer culture was not just another profession to be mimicked,“It is built around visibility, performance, and the monetisation of everyday life,” she noted.

“What toys like this normalise is the idea that children are not only participants in play, but also potential objects of attention, as individuals who are watched, followed, and engaged with as ‘content’,”According to Rees, whose research focuses on digital risks, this increased normalisation of visibility can expose children to significant dangers concerning privacy, digital permanence, and identity formation – concerns directly reflected in the Unicef Industry Toolkit on Children’s Rights and Digital Marketing,“So, while this toy may well function as imaginative play, it also reflects a wider cultural moment in which forms of highly visible, and often precarious, digital labour are becoming normalised from an early age,” Rees said,“The question is not simply whether children should play at being influencers, but what kinds of risks we are comfortable with taking in the process, and what career expectations we are preparing them for,”An Argos spokesperson said: “We offer a broad selection of toy sets that encourage imaginative and creative play.

This product is part of that wider range, which includes items such as our Chad Valley Tool Box, Wooden Toaster and Pizza Counter sets, designed to help children have fun.”
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UK politics: Reform UK suspends mayoral candidate after he described Jewish security group as ‘cosplayers’ – as it happened

Ben Quinn is a Guardian political correspondent.Reform UK has confirmed that that it has suspended Chris Parry as its Hampshire mayoral candidate after he described members of a Jewish neighbourhood watch group as “cosplayers” and likened them to “Islamists on horseback”. (See 1.53pm.)A Reform UK spokesperson said: “Chris Parry has been suspended by Reform UK pending investigation

about 17 hours ago
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Reeves slips into yoga voice to try to soothe fears over costs of Trump’s war | John Crace

You have to feel a bit sorry for the chancellor. Roughly four weeks ago, Rachel Reeves had come to the Commons to deliver her spring statement. A moderately upbeat picture of the nation’s finances that didn’t necessarily coincide with people’s lived experience. Still, it more or less did the trick. Bought her another six months until the autumn budget

about 17 hours ago
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Labour lost white working-class voters to Greens in Gorton and Denton, party analysis finds

Labour lost significant numbers of white working-class voters to the Greens in Gorton and Denton, the party’s postmortem has concluded, after it came third in the Greater Manchester byelection last month.The Greens won the byelection, with Reform in second place.Labour’s deputy leader, Lucy Powell, told activists and members it was a warning the party could lose voters on its left flank who went far beyond the stereotype of progressive young professionals and those from Muslim communities.High numbers of voters broke for the Greens in the final hours before polling closed, the party’s analysis has found, with some conflicted until they reached the ballot box about which party was better placed to stop Reform.Powell was expected to present the findings to Labour’s national executive committee on Tuesday but told activists and members in a call over the weekend that people had repeatedly said they needed a “reason” to vote Labour

about 17 hours ago
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Reform UK suspends mayoral candidate over comments on Jewish group

Reform UK has suspended one of its key mayoral candidates after he described members of a Jewish neighbourhood watch group as “cosplayers” and likened them to “Islamists on horseback”.Chris Parry, who had remained the mayoral candidate for Hampshire despite a previous controversy in which he said David Lammy should “go home” to the Caribbean, made the latest comments on Monday about Shomrim, a volunteer group that safeguards communities including Orthodox Jewish families.The former rear admiral was condemned for comments made when he retweeted a post on X by Catherine Blaiklock, a co-founder of the Brexit party, hours after news emerged of an arson attack on ambulances run by a Jewish charity in London.“Can Christian’s [sic] in Britain set up their own police and patrol certain neighbourhoods?” said Blaiklock, who posted a picture of a number of Shomrim vehicles.Parry shared the post, adding: “Remember that these cosplayers have no more jurisdiction or legal authority than ordinary citizens

about 18 hours ago
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UK defence firms ‘bleeding cash’ as delayed spending plan leaves industry in ‘paralysis’

Defence manufacturers are going bust while others have been left in “paralysis” and “bleeding cash” as they wait for a long-delayed UK military spending plan for the next decade, MPs have heard.Industry groups said a more than six-month delay to the defence investment plan (DIP) had also left the UK behind Germany and the US in attracting cash from global investors.“The ecosystem is not in a great place, it’s what I would call paralysis,” said Samira Braund, the defence director of the ADS Group trade body, speaking to the defence select committee on Tuesday. “I don’t think that [the government] have put effective mitigation plans in place at all.”The DIP, originally expected last autumn, has been repeatedly postponed amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years

about 18 hours ago
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Rachel Reeves rules out universal support on energy bills

Rachel Reeves has ruled out universal support to deal with any future rise in energy bills, saying any government help would be targeted, and criticised the support offered by Liz Truss’s government as unaffordable and irresponsible.The chancellor also said she would review the planned fuel duty rise in September, but did not commit to delaying or postponing it.She said contingency planning was taking place for an expected rise in energy bills but the focus was on longer-term measures to bring down bills for all, and targeted support for the poorest households.“The previous government pushed up borrowing, interest rates, inflation and mortgage costs with an unfunded, untargeted package of support under Liz Truss. That gave the support to the wealthiest of households,” Reeves said

about 19 hours ago
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Royal Mail owner pushes back against criticisms that service has declined

about 16 hours ago
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Crispin Odey: I can’t remember telling female employee ‘I could attack you now’

about 17 hours ago
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Baltimore sues Elon Musk’s AI company over Grok’s fake nude images

about 15 hours ago
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Protect men and boys from manosphere influencers, Labour MPs tell Ofcom

about 17 hours ago
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From the Pocket: Essendon have all the hallmarks of a team deep in rebuild – just not the stomach to acknowledge it

about 6 hours ago
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Crammed Test cricket schedule risks leaving Australian summers unrecognisable | Geoff Lemon

about 8 hours ago