If Amy Schumer can save Barbie, a generation of feminist mothers will kiss her feet.
Because a doll might ‘just’ be a doll, but for us, Barbie will always be Trouble.
Trouble with her improbable proportions and her inability to stand in flat shoes.
Trouble with the many incarnations she can inhabit with a simple costume change. Doll, if it was that easy to switch between being an astronaut and a vet, we’d all be doing it.
Listen to us discuss Barbies. the Post continues after audio.
And Trouble because we know that just as we were once seduced by her attributes – boobs too big for real life and a seemingly never-ending array of life choices – now our daughters are, too.
Flashback to my house, my street actually, a week before the announcement that Schumer – the sharp, allegedly “unlikable” feminist comedian and writer who is nobody’s Barbie – is going to write and star in a new, live-action film about the doll.