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Why Fast Food Restaurant Chains Stopped Promoting Toys To Kids – Chowhound

One surefire way fast food brands can get customers in the door is by marketing flashy toys. While these limited-edition action figures and pocket games are fun, have you noticed that they haven’t been promoted as much recently? You’re not wrong — fast food chain restaurants have stopped pushing toys so heavily in their marketing.
The main factor was that children were requesting stops at fast food establishments too frequently. Over time, this promoted an unhealthy lifestyle. Along with all of those unhealthy and bad ingredients in fast food, the association of fast food restaurants with toys created harmful habits in youth, so regulations began to spring up. Some brands, like McDonald’s and the Interactive Advertising Bureau, formed a self-regulatory program called the Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative in 2006. This organization seeks to encourage advertising for healthier lifestyle choices and create more guidelines for marketing aimed at children. Since this association started, according to Healthy Food America, studies have shown children have viewed less junk food marketing. 
Many other attempts were made to widen these restrictions. Congress attempted to pass legislation to create voluntary requirements for the food industry to limit harmful advertising to children. One requirement was for meals sold with toys to meet a minimum set of nutritional standards. These requirements never came to fruition in the U.S. due to industry lobbying. Still, other countries such as Chile and Taiwan banned the food industry from using toys to market fast food. These restrictions proved to limit children’s exposure to fast food.

Not only is creating toys to market fast food to kids harmful — it’s also wasteful. Kids simply don’t stay entertained by cheap plastic toys for long. McDonald’s released a statement in which the fast food giant pledged to reduce the amount of plastic in its Happy Meal toys by 2025, but that’s not the only issue. Some people scramble to buy meals with toys simply to get collectible items. KFC got some flack for this in China after releasing six different figurines and giving them out with meals in a blind box. One customer bought 106 meals to try to collect them all. That’s a lot of food going to waste.
Some countries may have restrictions on using toys to sell meals, but in the age of the internet, it’s not enough. Why spend money producing physical items when you can churn out internet ads instead? Most fast food restaurants have long phased out using toys to advertise kids’ meals, relying on TV or social media ads instead to appeal to that demographic. As children increasingly use phones that rely on algorithms to decide which content will show up, unregulated marketing is becoming more of an issue. Luckily, laws have been proposed and passed to limit children’s exposure to these online ads too.
While it’s great for kids to get new toys, let the Happy Meal action figure be a nice surprise instead of a desperate need. And if you or your child don’t need the toy, telling a fast food worker to leave it out is good for the planet in the long run. Maybe the day will come when fast food restaurant chains don’t include toys in the meals at all, which will be a boon to the sanity of parents everywhere.

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Friends of the Arc Auxiliary donates toys for Gifts 4 Kids Giveaway – Scranton Times-Tribune

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The Friends of the Arc Auxiliary donated toys for their Gifts 4 Kids Giveaway to the Catherine McAuley Center. Gifts 4 Kids is a program where families in Lackawanna County were able to register to receive gifts for their children during the holiday season. Standing, from left: Corolla Sawka, Pat Kwiatkowski, Nancy Crafferty, Kathy McDonnell, Jean Biggar, Eileen Rempe, Linda Kusy, Christa Lucke and Bill McDonough. Seated, from left: Carol Burke, Peggy Tenelly, Betty Moreken; and Mary Murphy Fox, auxiliary board president.
Copyright © 2025 MediaNews Group

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Souper Bowl of Caring: What do Steve Young, Toys for Tots and child hunger have in common? – KUTV 2News

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Super Bowl Champion and NFL Most Valuable Player Steve Young believes charities work best when they work together.
The Forever Young Foundation advises charities to join with each other to maximize their impact. This is why Steve was particularly pleased to hear how Toys For Tots collaborated with the Souper Bowl of Caring to use the Tackle Hunger Map to provide about a million dollars worth of Christmas toys to children in the Granite, Jordan, and Salt Lake school districts.
MORE SOUPER BOWL OF CARING: Souper Bowl of Caring: Jordan District makes remarkable progress tackling hunger
Watch the story here.
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Finds at the 2025 International Toy Fair – WSAZ

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) –
The New York International Toy Fair, the largest toy fair in the Western Hemisphere and one of the world’s top three toy fairs, returns to the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York City from March 1–4, 2025. K
Known as the most influential event in the toy industry, this ultimate playground will showcase hundreds of global toy companies unveiling thousands of innovative products set to hit shelves for the 2025 holiday season.
From cutting-edge tech toys and creative educational games to nostalgic items for kids and adults, lifestyle and parenting expert Amanda Mushro spotlights the must-have toys for kids of all ages.
Copyright 2025 WSAZ. All rights reserved.

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