I hope they let him work on something interesting. We lost out on so much.
Dear Valued EE Customers,
I want to update you on the current environment (specifically related to new tariff policy) and the impact it is having on our business and our pricing.
Since February, the Entertainment Earth team has been working as hard as possible with our vendor partners and internally to absorb as much cost impact as possible. Unfortunately, we cannot absorb all of the cost increases/tariffs, particularly on products coming from China. Additionally, the current situation is preventing many retailers (ourselves included) from importing product from China which will impact timing of product receipt.
A few things to know:
You will be receiving information in the coming days on price increases and/or delays based on cost increases from vendors and/or tariffs.
To protect you and your purchases, you will be able to adjust your orders without penalty, as we understand the new costs may impact your ability/desire for these products.
If the environment changes and we have the opportunity to reduce prices, we have every intention to do so based on positive changes in the cost structure of toys. Our goal is to support you in building and growing your collections.
Entertainment Earth was built by fans with the singular purpose of bringing pop culture joy to all of you. As fans and collectors ourselves, it truly pains us both personally and professionally not to be able to deliver amazing collector products from so many terrific partners at prices that meet your (and our) expectations.
Please know that we continue to advocate for improved pricing from all possible partners, that we continue to “tighten our belt” as much as possible to serve you, and that if we see positive changes that can lower price, we will pass them on.
Thank you deeply for your continued support and partnership. As always, please feel free to reach out to our team with any questions.
Best regards,
Billy Lagor, CEO Entertainment Earth, and the EE Team
IIRC, he was just a consultant/extra hand with TLS at Toy Fair. Presumably, he's announcing his formal employment by TLS. Also, that sort of stuff is maybe better suited to the MASK and other Hasbro Revival thread we have over in General:Odd that he's posting about it now, when he was there with them at Toy Fair like a month and a half ago.
I mean, good on him! But still.
I saw the other day that the newest wave of GI Joe Classified figures went from $24.99 all the way up to $31.99 (a whopping 22% increase). Likely a result of more recent GI Joe figures being sources from China, where as Transformers are sourced from Vietnam.EE's prices went up..
$26.99 for a Deluxe (8% increase)
$37.99 for a Voyager (8.57% increase)
$59.99 for a Leader (9.1% increase)
$97.99 for a Commander (8.89% increase)
$163.99 for Star Convoy (9.33% increase)
$218.99 for Other Titans (9.5% increase)
If anybody is apt to get a decent push without Disney’s stuff, I would think GI Joe since it already has a well established collector segment. I would LOVE to see what Hasbro might do with a Epic World of Action GI Joe line.Interesting, I thought sales on both of those were down; though I guess they probably make enough money still that Hasbro would be negatively affected if they lost the license.
Though maybe they'd give D&D and Power Ranger toys another shot in that case.
Could be several issues in why the license was renewed. For all we know, Disney acquiesced to both segments’ (ESPECIALLY Star Wars) lesser performance the past couple of years and Hasbro got some of the license costs reduced. If the brands WERE sufficient anchors, I don’t think Hasbro would be that fussy about dropping either.I assume it's more pride than anything else. Star Wars and Marvel have been an absolute boat anchor in recent years, but at this point they're more associated with Hasbro than a lot of their in-house brands are. Giving them up would be humiliating.
Whatever gets us back to 4 inch, I'll at least hear out. I love that Classified has Joe fans eating REAL good, but the only 4 inch stuff being classic o-rings from Super 7 (the new non-o-ring Retro sculpts from Hasbro were nice but those didn't last at all) has been kind of a bummer. And the Epic stuff for Marvel looks nice enough (and they seem to be having some fun with it too).If anybody is apt to get a decent push without Disney’s stuff, I would think GI Joe since it already has a well established collector segment. I would LOVE to see what Hasbro might do with a Epic World of Action GI Joe line.
Interesting, I thought sales on both of those were down; though I guess they probably make enough money still that Hasbro would be negatively affected if they lost the license.
I assume it's more pride than anything else. Star Wars and Marvel have been an absolute boat anchor in recent years, but at this point they're more associated with Hasbro than a lot of their in-house brands are. Giving them up would be humiliating.
Which is why the Transformers movie happened in 2007. Hasbro's first idea for a movie in the early 2000s was GI Joe but the Iraq War made that a hard sell. So they pivoted to Transformers.GI Joe also has the drawback of being built heavily on American symbolism and jingoism, which is a......divisive subject right now, to say the least.
So they're kinda stuck in a not entirely happy status quo, just one with no clear alternatives.