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Want to be an activist? Start with your toys

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    I'm McKenna Pope. I'm 14 years old.
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    And when I was 13, I convinced
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    one of the largest toy companies,
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    toymakers, in the world, Hasbro,
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    to change the way that they marketed
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    one of their most best-selling products.
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    So allow me to tell you about it.
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    So I have a brother, Gavin.
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    When this whole shebang happened, he was four.
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    He loved to cook.
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    He was always getting ingredients out of the fridge
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    and mixing them into these, needless to say,
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    uneatable concoctions,
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    or making invisible macaroni and cheese.
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    He wanted to be a chef really badly.
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    And so what better gift for a kid
    who wanted to be a chef
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    than an Easy Bake oven. Right?
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    I mean, we all had those when we were little.
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    And he wanted one so badly.
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    But then he started to realize something.
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    In the commercials, and on the boxes,
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    for the Easy Bake ovens,
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    Hasbro marketed them specifically to girls.
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    And the way that they did this
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    was they would only feature girls
    on the boxes or in the commercials,
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    and there would be flowery prints all over the ovens
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    and it would be in bright pink and purple,
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    very gender-specific colors to females, right?
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    So it kind of was sending a message
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    that only girls are supposed to cook, boys aren't.
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    And this discouraged my brother a lot.
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    He thought that he wasn't
    supposed to want to be a chef,
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    because that was something that girls did.
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    Girls cooked, boys didn't,
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    or so the message that Hasbro was sending.
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    And this got me thinking,
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    God, I wish there was a way that I could change this,
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    that could I have my voice heard by Hasbro
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    so I could ask them and tell them
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    what they were doing wrong
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    and ask them to change it.
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    And that got me thinking about a website
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    that I had learned about a few months prior
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    called change.org.
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    Change.org is an online petition-sharing platform
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    where you can create a petition and share it
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    across all of these social media networks,
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    through Facebook, through Twitter,
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    through YouTube, through Reddit, through Tumblr,
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    through whatever you could think of.
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    And so I created a petition
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    along with the YouTube video
    that I added to the petition
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    basically asking Hasbro
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    to change the way that they marketed it
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    and featuring boys in the commercials, on the boxes,
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    and most of all creating them
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    in less gender-specific colors.
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    So this petition started to take off,
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    like, humongously fast, you have no idea.
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    I was getting interviewed by
    all these national news outlets
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    and press outlets, and it was amazing.
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    In three weeks, maybe three and a half,
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    I had 46,000 signatures on this petition.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    So, needless to say, it was crazy.
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    Eventually, Hasbro themselves
    invited me to their headquarters
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    so they could go and unveil
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    their new Easy Bake oven product to me,
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    in black, silver, and blue.
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    It was literally one of the best moments of my life.
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    It was like Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
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    That thing was amazing.
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    What I didn't realize at the time, however,
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    was that I had become an activist.
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    I could change something that,
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    even as a kid, or maybe even especially as a kid,
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    my voice mattered, and your voice matters too.
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    I want to let you know it's not going to be easy,
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    and it wasn't easy for me,
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    because I faced a lot of obstacles.
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    People online, and sometimes even in real life,
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    were disrespectful to me and my family,
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    and talked about how the whole
    thing was a waste of time,
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    and it really discouraged me.
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    And actually, I have some examples,
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    because what's better revenge
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    than displaying their idiocy.
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    So let's see.
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    From username liquidsore29
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    —interesting usernames we have here—
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    "disgusting liberal moms making their sons gay."
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    Liquidsore29, really? Really? Okay.
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    How about from whiteboy77ags:
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    "people always need something
    to [female dog] about."
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    From jeffreygutierrez:
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    "omg shut up you just want money and attention."
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    So it was comments like these
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    that really discouraged me from
    wanting to make change in the future
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    because I thought people don't care,
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    people think it's a waste of time,
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    and people are going to be disrespectful to me
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    and my family.
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    It hurt me, and it made me think,
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    what's the point of making change in the future?
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    But then I started to realize something.
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    Haters gonna hate.
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    Come on, say it with me, one, two, three:
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    haters gonna hate.
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    So let your haters hate,
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    you know what, and make your change,
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    because I know you can.
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    I look out into this crowd,
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    and I see 400 people
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    who came out because they wanted to know
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    how they could make a change,
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    and I know that you can, and all
    of you watching at home can too
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    because you have so much that you can do
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    and that you believe in,
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    and you can trade it across all these social media,
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    through Facebook, through Twitter,
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    through YouTube, through Reddit, through Tumblr,
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    through whatever else you can think of.
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    And you can make that change.
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    You can take what you believe in
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    and turn it into a cause and change it.
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    And that spark that you've been hearing about
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    all day today,
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    you can use that spark that you have within you
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    and turn it into a fire.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Want to be an activist? Start with your toys
Speaker:
McKenna Pope
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
05:22

English subtitles

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