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Did Your Child Receive the Super Luchamania Action Figures as a Gift?

Did Your Child Receive the Super Luchamania Action Figures as a Gift? – Child Safety Blog Child Safety Blog BannerYour First Stop For All Things Regarding Child Safety Did Your Child Receive the Super Luchamania Action Figures as a Gift? user-pic By Marianne on January 27, 2012 2:00 PM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBacks (0) By Marianne Frederick

There are some children’s toys which could give parents and children a headache–like the Super Luchamania Action Figures. They were made in Mexico and the surface paint on them contains an excessive amount of lead violating the federal standards for lead paint in children’s toys.

Approximately 7,000 packs of the Super Luchamania Action Figures, which were sold in packs of 12, are being recalled, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) announced yesterday, in cooperation with importer, Lee Carter Company of San Francisco, California.

Why is excessive lead in surface paint on toys dangerous to children? According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Basic Information on Lead in Paint, Dust and Soil, lead can be absorbed by a child’s body more readily than an adult’s. As we know, babies and young children often put toys in their mouths. Some painted toys can even have lead dust on them. Children’s brains and nervous systems are more sensitive to the damaging effects of lead. If not detected, children with high levels of lead in their bodies can suffer from different maladies including damage to the brain and nervous system, behavior and learning problems, such as hyperactivity, slowed growth, hearing problems, and headaches, to name only a few. http://www.epa.gov/lead/pubs/leadinfo.htm#health.

Please take a look in your children’s toy box to check whether these toys are there. The multi-colored Super Luchamania male action figures are made of plastic, have various colored plastic capes and measure about four inches tall. “Super Luchamania” is printed on the action figures’ package. The packs of 12 action figures were sold by Mexican specialty craft stores throughout the United States from June 2000 through October 2011 for between $12 and $14 per pack.

Parents and caregivers should remove the action figures from children’s access and return them to Lee Carter Company for a full refund or credit toward another Lee Carter product. Consumers may contact Lee Carter Co. by calling collect at 1(415) 824-2004 anytime, or visiting the firm’s website at www.leecartercompany.com.

To view a photo of the Super Luchamania Action Figures, please visit the CPSC website at: http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml12/12092.html.

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Categories: News in Child Safety, Recalls, Toys Tags: toy recall No TrackBacks

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1 Comment Lareelacey8 | February 21, 2012 1:19 AM | Reply

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Leave a comment Name Email Address URL Remember personal info? Comments Child Safety Blog CSB Home About this Entry This page contains a single entry by Marianne published on January 27, 2012 2:00 PM.

Infant Toy Rattles Being Recalled! was the previous entry in this blog.

Britax Recalling Chaperone Infant and Child Restraint Systems Due to Defect! is the next entry in this blog.

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Super Chatter: Analyzing Conversations about the Super Bowl on Twitter

super_chatter.jpg
The online dashboard Super Chatter [collemcvoy.com] designed by advertising agency Colle+McVoy acts as a visual overview of the true impact of the Super Bowl event in contemporary social media, and Twitter in particular.

An interactive timeline not only highlights some of the most important sports scoring events, but aligns them next to all the advertisements that were shown on television. A line graph then maps the rate of tweets-per-minute of those 641,094 tweets that mentioned one of more than 250 specific terms resembling “Super Bowl” (the official hash tag was only used in 4% of all relevant tweets), against a set of predefined terms, such as the popular brands, food and drinks, personalities, or the teams themselves.

See also Brandwatch Super Bowl.



Revealing the Impact of Super Bowl Advertising on Social Media

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The interactive dashboard at Brandwatch Super Bowl [brandwatch.com] shows the true impact of the highly expensive advertising that is shown during the Super Bowl, in particular on social online media.

Each so-called ‘worm’ represents a unique sponsor (including brands like Pepsi, Mars, Walt Disney or H&M). The accompanying number stands for the number of tweets that were made about that brand or their products over the last 28 days (and, yes, the ‘worm’ who has possession of the ball is winning).

The additional display on the right reveals the complete ranking of all tracked brands, complete with time-based sparklines, the positive versus negative sentiment of the daily tweets, and the most popular keywords that were used.

As a result, one can already attempt to estimate what will be the most anticipated ads for this Sunday, in addition to their expected content.




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