The series is set in a fictional version of Malibu, California, where all of its inhabitants are dolls. The dolls behave like humans, though a number of the show's gags rely on their doll-like nature. The series centers on the life of Barbie, her friends, her siblings, her boyfriend Ken, and a number of pets. The series is stylized as a mock reality show featuring confessionals of the characters in between scenes. The show heavily relies on slapstick humor, and makes a lot of satirical and self-parody references to the Barbie doll line.

If you need more Barbie in your life, this show is delightful to casually watch. I have watched the whole thing through multiple times, and it is always funny. There is no such thing as too much Barbie, and I live by that.


Barbie Life


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In January 2007, I was looking for a way to make my peers realize the importance of eating disorders and body image issues. I was frustrated after quitting the cheerleading squad, frustrated with pressures to look and act a certain way and most of all frustrated with the eating disorder controlling my life. I wanted to do something that would turn others' apathy into action. That evening, my neighbor and I found two long pieces of wood and started measuring. With a little math, nails and hammering, we built a stick figure that stood about six feet tall.

Our News, Politics and Culture teams invest time and care working on hard-hitting investigations and researched analyses, along with quick but robust daily takes. Our Life, Health and Shopping desks provide you with well-researched, expert-vetted information you need to live your best life, while HuffPost Personal, Voices and Opinion center real stories from real people.

Barbie Life in the Dreamhouse Doll Collection: Barbie doll's life in the Dreamhouse is pretty FAB. Friends are always stopping by to say hello and join in the fun. Barbie and her friends play a big role in her dream life and are always hanging around the Dreamhouse. Inspired by the reality web series Barbie Life in the Dreamhouse, where Barbie and her friends are brought to life. Each doll captures the animated character's facial details which are highlighted by beautiful rooted eyelashes. This group of BFFs is ready for the next adventure wearing iconic fashions recognizable from the related webisodes. The each doll also comes with one additional fashion. Choose from Barbie, Summer, Teresa, Nikki, Raquelle, Midge and of course Ken. Each doll sold separately, collect them all.

The 20,000 square-foot attraction allows fans to step inside Barbie's life-sized Dreamhouse, try on one of Barbie's careers for size and even get in the driver's seat of a Barbie Camper Van designed by West Coast Customs.

Each Barbie came with the perfect set of accessories, and the transformation of Barbie from Pop Star to Doctor to Ballerina to Lawyer with a simple change of clothing represented the unlimited possibilities for what life could become.

My expectations for the "Barbie" movie conjured up images of easy, playful, and thoroughly pink anecdotes. Sure, the cleverly conceptualized story and brilliantly written dialogue did just that. (And was hilarious, too!) But the movie is also quick to point out some of life's more poignant truths: in a world where roles, rules, and societal structures often influence our path, what happens when the status quo isn't working anymore? What happens when change isn't just wanted, but desperately needed?

Barbie represented all the things a girl could be, accomplish, or share with the world when she grew up. So solving the world's problems and living a perfectly curated life was just a change of accessories away...right?

Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@newsweek.com with some details about your best friend and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.

Alice Gibbs is a Newsweek Senior Internet Trends & Culture Reporter based in the U.K. For the last two years she has specialized in viral trends and internet news, with a particular focus on animals, human interest stories, health, and lifestyle.

(CBS) For generations of young women, Barbie has been larger than life. But when Galia Slayen, a Hamilton College student who once battled an eating disorder, tried to make an actual life-size Barbie, she was shocked at the result - a freakish woman with pencil-thin legs, breasts that threatened to topple her over, and a body mass index (BMI) that would put her squarely in the anorexia camp.

"I was living on my own and trying to figure out how I was going to survive," she said. "My life was completely out of control and it was the one thing I was able to control - the hours at the gym, the calories I was in-taking. It's a means to control your life."

Slayen says she's not mad at Barbie, which she played with as a child, but wasn't "obsessed" over. She says she first built the life-size Barbie as part of National Eating Disorder Awareness Week when she was in high school and is now showing her off at college where she is studying China and government. Slays says she recently raised more than $10,000 for the cause and wants insurance companies and the federal government to take notice. 


\"We have heard from many of our customers that they want to have fun with fashion again. The special partnership between Balmain and Barbie does that and more,\" said Lana Todorovich, president and chief merchandising officer for Neiman Marcus. \"As Neiman Marcus continues to innovate the ways in which we engage with our customers, we are thrilled to partner on an exclusive pop-up experience that celebrates the excitement of playing dress up and brings a modern multi-cultural take on the Barbie brand to our Dallas NorthPark location. It doesn't get any more joyful than being able to explore and shop the limited-edition unisex collection while immersed in a unique adventure envisioned by Balmain and Barbie. We look forward to bringing it to life for Neiman Marcus customers.\"

"We have heard from many of our customers that they want to have fun with fashion again. The special partnership between Balmain and Barbie does that and more," said Lana Todorovich, president and chief merchandising officer for Neiman Marcus. "As Neiman Marcus continues to innovate the ways in which we engage with our customers, we are thrilled to partner on an exclusive pop-up experience that celebrates the excitement of playing dress up and brings a modern multi-cultural take on the Barbie brand to our Dallas NorthPark location. It doesn't get any more joyful than being able to explore and shop the limited-edition unisex collection while immersed in a unique adventure envisioned by Balmain and Barbie. We look forward to bringing it to life for Neiman Marcus customers."

An animated series that ties in with the popular Barbie toyline, Barbie: Life in the Dreamhouse is a 2012-2015 web series produced by Mattel. The series follows a Slice of Life look into Barbie's, well, life in her Malibu dream house, with brief Reality Television-esque asides into Barbie and her friends' thoughts. Barbie attends parties, goes to the beach, dates Ken, hangs out with her sisters, and does all of the sort of things you would expect Barbie to do. What's unexpected is the massive helping of Affectionate Self-Parody, Lampshade Hanging, Medium Awareness, and Parental Bonus on display, adding up to a lovingly parodic version of the Barbie universe not completely out of line with her Toy Story 3 depiction.

Barbie's personality is that of a sparklingly cheerful girl who's done, and is good at, everything, to the point of comedy. Her boyfriend Ken is a good-natured klutz who's almost as perky as Barbie, if nowhere near as skilled. She lives with her three younger sisters, parents nowhere in sight, and her three hyperintelligent pets. Her friends, Nikki, Teresa, Midge and Summer often come over to hang out. Meanwhile, Barbie's "friend" Raquelle is often looking for ways to make her life difficult so that she can be the star for once, occasionally teaming up with her twin brother Ryan, who really just wants in on Barbie. And the whole thing is filled to the brim with nods to Barbie's 50-odd year history, along with plenty of other Parental Bonuses and all-ages rapid-fire humor.

T-Z  Tastes Like Purple: Teresa claims that Barbie told her (and apparently Skipper as well), that if she became an ice cream flavor, she would choose "pink" flavor. Taught by Experience: When Skipper's inventions for making over patrons of Barbie's boutique make Raquelle actually look worse than before, Skipper proceeds to detect and repair glitches in the devices quickly enough for Barbie to see how efficiently they can serve patrons when in proper condition. Tempting Fate: Barbie asks Ken if he finds it safe for him to tend to her plastic pox alone. Ken simply asks, "What's the worst that could happen?" The scene then cuts to a healed Barbie tending to a pox-infected Ken. Fortunately, he admits that he doesn't mind feeling sick if it means keeping Barbie by his side. That Poor Cat: A cat yowl is heard after the giant roll of masking tape bounces away in "Closet Clothes Out". That Was Not a Dream: Barbie has to say this to Ken after purposely deciding to let Raquelle outshine her. Title Theme TuneHey, hey! Life in the Dreamhouse! 

Oh, yeah! Life in the Dreamhouse! 

Barbie: Life in the Dreamhouse! (bow wow) Toppled Statue: Raquelle has a statue of herself erected at Malibu Mall. Since the statue proves a hazard to low-flying planes, some of the other dolls destroy it. Trade Snark: The written summaries for the episodes indicate that the trademark is actually part of Barbie's name. Trophy Room: Barbie's closet has a ton of clothes she never wears anymore (including the uniforms for all the jobs she's ever had), but she still holds on to them because she associates each with a different memory. Ironically, the room where she keeps her actual trophies doesn't seem as well organized. Trrrilling Rrrs: Rrraquelle! Unknown Rival: Bless her heart, but Barbie just doesn't seem to realize that Raquelle is constantly trying to upstage her. Unlimited Wardrobe: Barbie can even change her clothes on the fly through her strange, Barbie-based powers. It is a severe emergency when her closet becomes full! The Unreveal: We never do learn Barbie's age. Urine Trouble: Taffy pees all over Ryan's song for Barbie. "If I'd wanted that reaction, I would've just played it in front of my agent." Vacation Episode: The reunion show promises an episode in which Barbie and the gang go to Paris. The "clip" becomes revealed as simply everyone standing in front of a backdrop. Vague Age: The entire plot of Episode 13, where it's Barbie's birthday and most of the gang try futilely to figure out Barbie's age. Nikki: Well, I know she was a doctor once, and you have to go to school for, like, eleven years to do that... 

Teresa: She ran for President once! You have to be at least thirty-five for that, so let's see... carry the one... uh... What am I adding? Valentine's Day Episode: "Playing Heart to Get" sees Ryan compete with Ken in giving Barbie the best Valentine's presents. Victory Is Boring: Raquelle leaves the Bizarro Universe mentioned above after she misses scheming to steal Barbie's spotlight. Whole-Plot Reference: "Alone in the Dreamhouse" is one to Home Alone. Women Drivers: Barbie gets her driver's license without taking driving lessons, so she has trouble driving smoothly. Worthless Yellow Rocks: Ken deems his glitter detector a failure after learning that it picks up 24-karat gold instead. Wrestler in All of Us: One of Ken's fights with Ryan has him jumping off the hood of a car to do a drop on him. Writing Around Trademarks: "It looks like a Swedish furniture outlet threw up in here." "You look like a movie on that channel nobody watches!" Chelsea would have put a mermaid on her lemonade sign if not for "some coffee shop" beating her to it. "Let's do something together, like tossing around this generic flying disc!" Your Favorite: Raquelle tries to convince Barbie to help her improve her modeling behavior by baking her peanut butter fudge cookies, which she assumes Barbie considers her favorite. Barbie admits that she actually prefers a different kind of cookie,note We don't find out exactly what kind before Raquelle interrupts, but we do learn that one of the ingredients consists of chocolate. but still helps Raquelle out of the goodness of her heart.That's life! Life in the dreamhouse! e24fc04721

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