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by roughly 920 days ago
Laying off the workers at the toy factory two weeks before Christmas is the thing the villain in an 80s kids movie would do.

I don't mean that to be hyperbolic - like, literally, that's the sort of thing that was culturally cast as villainous behavior a generation or two ago.

4 comments

Christmas for a toy company offers an villainous two-fer:

(1) lay off people right before the biggest American holiday, and

(2) lay off people right after they helped a toy company crunch through the lead-up to Christmas.

But is this what's actually happening? The IGN article [1] and the WSJ article [2] about this claim the layoffs will be done in 18-24 months.

Since this is like the 4th toplevel comment with this point and each one generates huge threads of people pretty much saying the same thing over and over again, I'm curious whether anyone has actually read any other information about this or if everyone is just reacting to the Polygon article by making the same comment.

[1]: https://www.ign.com/articles/dungeons-dragons-owner-hasbro-l...

[2]: https://www.wsj.com/business/retail/hasbro-layoffs-toy-compa...

But the country in the 80s didn't have a generation of brainwashing by Billionaires, Millionaires, and Temporarily-Displaced-Millionaires parroting the myth that the executive board of a publicly-traded company has a "fiduciary duty" to make as much money as possible.
Did you live through the 80s? I did and find this wildly inaccurate. See the Greed is Good memes and hero worship of Wall Street.
I think they were circling a real idea but poorly worded: if you were a kid in the 80s, that stuff was surprising and parodied in many cases even if it ultimately won out. Now when people see the backdrop for some of the movies which came out around then, it doesn’t seem like a parody as much as a pretty linear projection. Gordon Gecko was the villain but you can find a lot of people and especially many politicians who now unironically support his beliefs.

So, yes, those positions existed back then but they weren’t culturally ascendent the way they were by the turn of the century.

I did not live through the 80's (not the whole decade at least), but I have seen Robocop which I thought was supposed to be a parody. Obviously Alec Baldwin's speech from "Glengarry Glen Ross" is iconic as well.

Even a recent re-watch of "Tommy Boy" really drove home how much of a toll Reagonomics took on the industrial midwest. I never really understood why the man was so revered, but I guess he put on a good act that people bought into.

Yeah. That type of people have existed since forever. Today they just have more power than ever or just don’t try to hide it anymore.
It has been happening all along. People are just barely starting to notice now (and back in the 1970s people were a lot more aware of it).
I am pretty sure you have a story or two to share after I've read such a paragraph ...
It's not exactly celebrated right now either.