Categories
USA

The American Girl Place store in Chicago: where dolls rule!

American Girl historic dolls in Chicago store American Place (photo by Sheila Scarborough)If your child is a fan of the American Girl dolls, books, movies and toys, there’s only one place to take her (or him) if you visit Chicago: American Girl Place, the flagship store for the American Girl brand.

The company was founded in 1986 by Pleasant Rowland, and the original dolls were fictional historic characters:  pioneer girl Kirsten, Victorian girl Samantha, World War II-era girl Molly, colonial girl Felicity,  slavery escapee and Civil War-era girl Addy, etc.

Even though I’m not a big doll person and neither was my now-teen daughter (she blew my money and her time on Japanese manga books) I talked about the ins and outs of the store with Char Polanosky, who blogs at Doll Diaries.

Look, call me a curmudgeon, but I wince when I read a store brochure that says, “Shop. Dine. Party, too! Come celebrate all the things girls love to do.”  To me, girls need to back away a little from this “we’re all about princesses and shopping” racket, but Char convinced me to consider it from a history and education angle.

The 1st floor historic dolls section, American Girl Place, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)That appealed to me, so I decided to visit the Michigan Avenue shop myself while in Chicago for a blogging conference.

American Girl Place is part of the Water Tower Place shopping complex on the famous Miracle Mile.

Talk about an empire….whip out those wallets, Moms and Dads. The dolls are certainly wholesome entertainment (I heard that over and over from parents, and the semi-slutty Bratz dolls suffered a lot of slings and arrows) but keeping them outfitted will cost you.

I overheard one customer tell another that at least one family “….flies from New York to Los Angeles regularly, and they arrange a Chicago stopover to come to the store – with an empty suitcase, of course.”

Er, all to support the economy, I guess.

American Girl hair stylist Veronica at American Place, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)The first floor is a display area for the historic dolls – there are artifacts from each era and the dolls are arranged with their era-specific clothing, toys and household items.

The ones for World War II Molly were particularly appealing for me, perhaps because she wears glasses like I did as a child;  the Depression-era Kit dolls were, um, unfortunately quite timely in their descriptions of Kit’s family economic crisis.

All the dolls are plucky. I support plucky! I like Nancy Drew!

Then I rounded a corner and was somewhat appalled to find Julie, an American Girl coming to grips with change in the 1970s. She wears a mood ring and peasant blouse. Her bedroom is pink and orange with a beanbag chair and hanging beads around her bed.

American Girl Nez Perce doll Kaya, American Girl Place, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)Hey, wait a minute – I went to high school in the ’70s, and now I’m a historic doll?! I had pink and orange sheets, too. I slunk off in old-lady shame to look at the rest of the store.

It was pretty amazing.

There’s a doll hair salon, where friendly staffer Veronica was tending to a perpetually-smiling, unblinking plastic head with shiny hair that apparently needed styling (pigtail braids, $20.)

Hairdressers spend a lot of time untangling hairy doll head messes, too, before they can style. Veronica says they will “swap heads, but only for the same head.” No sticking Molly’s head on Kit, apparently.

Doll ear-piercing is available  (18″ dolls only, for $14 – results in those rubbery ears are obviously irreversible.)  There is a photo studio where kids can take a formal portrait with their doll (cheapest package; $22.95.)

You can get a custom T-shirt for your doll or check her into the Doll Hospital for required repairs.  There is a nice café where patrons can dine with their dolls; there are cute little doll chairs that attach to the tables, and loaners if your child arrives doll-less.

There are tons of in-store special events with hands-on activities for kids, including grandparent days, cooking classes, character birthday celebrations, meeting the book authors, dates with Dad and one called “A Smart Girl’s Guide to Money.”

Young patrons of the American Girl flagship store, Chicago (photo by Sheila Scarborough)If you visit the Chicago flagship store, take a look at the Web site ahead of time and set a budget for doll fun activities. It’s hard to maintain equilibrium when everywhere you look are cute doll-sized things to buy and do.

Consider tradeoffs – new hairstyle, maybe a new doll dress but no doll furniture. Or, repair the mangled arm at Doll Hospital, get a new set of household items and a pair of shoes, but no hair styling or photo sessions. Or, one hair session, a kid’s Molly-style set of pajamas and a branded beach towel, but no doll clothes.

The café requires set seating times and the special events are usually by reservation, so call ahead to arrange. I was impressed by the cheery professionalism of the staff; they seem to really enjoy working there.

Any other suggestions for enjoying the positive aspects of an American Girl experience (but avoiding wallet meltdown or girly overload?)  Comments below are welcomed….

Categories
USA

Taste of Chicago: Garrett Popcorn

An advertisement for the Chicago Mix at Garrett Popcorn (Scarborough photo)When I travel, I love to seek out those unique attractions or events or food/drink that can only be found in certain places.

In Chicago, Illinois, I found Garrett Popcorn.

Now, I don’t leap out of bed in the morning in search of popcorn. It’s an OK food, but not one of my top favorites.

Still, I’d heard that Garrett in Chicago is special, so since I’m here in the Windy City for the SOBCon08 blogging conference, I headed out in search of the crunchy stuff.

My finger-licking scouting report: this is one bag of greasy, yummy, super-fabulous popcorn.

I couldn’t decide between the CaramelCrisp and the CheeseCorn, but I didn’t have to: Garrett’s sells “The Mix” with both of them mixed together.

Warning — you’ll need a serious pile of napkins to survive a buttery, well-lubed Garrett eating session.

There are several locations in Chicago (670 North Michigan Avenue plus some others) and two locations in New York City. The store locator page can help you find Garrett, or if you can’t make it to Chicago, just order online from their Web site.

I’ve found a new addiction.

Do you have a favorite local food or drink? Please share it down in the comments!

Related posts:

Categories
Blog

Why bloggers will flock to Chicago in May

Sure, I’m a little swamped right now, so I can’t yet get back to the normal Friday original post about some aspect of family travel, but that doesn’t mean that I can’t take a moment to….borrow someone else’s work! 🙂

One of the fabulous connectors that I met at South by Southwest Interactive (for the first time face-to-face; I already know him on Twitter) is Jason Falls. He writes Social Media Explorer and also produces Social Media Explorer TV, with online video insights into the burgeoning world of Web 2.0.

He’s also a motorsports fan, particularly Robby Gordon, so we gabbed about NASCAR at one of the SXSWi parties.

Jason interviewed one of my dear friends whom I’ve mentioned here before: Community Maestro Liz Strauss of the warm and welcoming Successful Blog, where “you’re only a stranger once.”

She spoke on camera with Jason about her upcoming Biz School for Bloggers event, SOBCon08, May 2-4 2008 in dynamic Chicago, Illinois.

Jason Falls is excited about it, and he said:

I caught up with Liz at South by Southwest (SXSW) to talk about SOBCon2008 in Chicago, May 2-4. Be sure to pay close attention to her description of the [conference] format, which is a unique and engaging offering for those in attendance. And the speakers aren’t the only attraction. SOBCon attracts many of the top bloggers in the world as attendees. You can’t come to this thing and not learn a lot about blogging, business and more.

Here is Jason’s short video interview with Liz, outside the Austin Convention Center during SXSWi earlier this week. I can assure you that Liz is as thoughtful and engaging in person as she is on camera. Will you join me in Chicago in May?

Categories
Blog Photos

Photo of the Day: I’ll see this at SOBCon08

The Chicago River, in the home of SOBCon (courtesy wallyg at Flickr’s CC)

This photo (courtesy wallyg at Flickr’s Creative Commons) shows one of the great things about Chicago, or any city that is on or near the water. There’s just something about the sense of space around open water, and the possibilities for adventure when you look down a moving river.

I’m headed to the Windy City for one of the best events of the year, the SOBCon08 “Biz School for Bloggers” conference May 2-4 2008 (no, no, SOB means Successful and Outstanding Blogger — coined by SOBCon founder and Galactic Blogger Liz Strauss.)

Last year was an absolute blast, and I know that the 2008 version will give me a stack of both new friends and superb ideas for Web 2.0 communication.

Will you join me there?

Categories
USA

It’s true; Chicago has changed from the 1920s

Highlights of Millennium Park, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

(This is cross-posted with the Perceptive Travel blog.)

In the U.S., there’s a saying usually ascribed to Native Americans about getting another person’s perspective by “walking a mile in their moccasins.”

As a traveler, it’s always interesting to see my country through another’s eyes.

Monet at the Art Institute, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

As I scanned my local newspaper the other day, I noticed an Associated Press article in the Sports section about how Chicago is trying to convince international officials to pick their city to host the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Apparently Chicago’s international image is pretty much summed up by….the gangster Al Capone.

Industrial grit and grime. Violence.

This is not at all the city that I’ve visited, but when you live in a big country and travelers tend to cluster in well-known coastal cities like New York, Los Angeles or San Francisco, it’s natural that a sprawling Midwestern place on Lake Michigan might tend to be overlooked.

In the AP article, Edinburgh resident Carol Morrison is quoted: “It’s much more visually stunning than I’d expected.”

Chicago Theater (Scarborough photo)

Gosh, yes, Chicago is that.

I visited last summer with my teen daughter to speak at the BlogHer blogging conference, and even though I’d been there before, I was struck anew by the energy, verve, sports enthusiasm, beautiful parks and dazzling architecture.

If you like history and amazing buildings, I strongly recommend the 90 minute docent-led Chicago Architecture Foundation river cruise (what, you didn’t know that Chicago has lovely rivers? See, you should visit….)

The museums alone could keep a visitor tied up inside for days.

For a hard look at press freedom and freedom of speech in general, there’s the McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum. For mind-blowing beauty, there’s the Art Institute of Chicago (I was crushed that Edward Hopper’s 1942 painting Nighthawks was gone when we visited….it was on loan to the MFA in Boston.) For T-Rex-sized portions of natural history, there’s the Field Museum.

Sheila reflected in the Bean, also known as Anish Kapoor's Cloud Gate, Chicago (Scarborough photo)

Inside “the Loop,” the main downtown area, I was never concerned about my personal safety, even at night.

Some parents might be horrified, but my teen walked from the Navy Pier to the Field Museum on her own, and I never worried about her.

Sorry, Al Capone and assorted gangsters no longer rule Chicago.

Poke around in the Chicago Tribune‘s travel section for plenty of visitor fun in what we call the Windy City or the City of Big Shoulders.

And if you plan a trip to any country, always try to explore a little bit beyond “the usual” places….and don’t rely on a city’s reputation from the 1920s.

Categories
USA

Chicago architecture, seen from a river cruise

Architecture River Cruise, Chicago IL (courtesy Chicago's First Lady and CAF)How do you trick your kid into admiring modern architects like Mies van der Rohe and the wedding-cake intricacies of the 1925 Chicago Tribune Tower?

Take her on a river cruise run by the Chicago Architecture Foundation (CAF.)

They offer all sorts of interesting tours, but on our July 2007 visit to the City of Big Shoulders, we wanted a maritime version.

We grabbed sandwiches and drinks at a local grocery store, and caught the 1:00 pm departure of the boat Chicago’s First Lady from the pier at the Michigan Avenue Bridge and Wacker Drive.

An experienced docent (trained guide, usually voluntary) kept up knowledgeable, fun patter for 90 minutes as the boat glided up and down different parts of the Chicago River, showing us over 50 significant sights and giving us great background info about why this city is known for creative buildings.

We learned how the city’s role as a commerce hub was established through the railroads, canals and Lake Michigan. In 1871, the devastating Great Chicago Fire wiped out the central business district and leveled more than 17,000 buildings, so architects and developers went to town, so to speak, designing and constructing striking edifices.

The tour was rather pricey ($26 on a weekday, $28 on a weekend, no discounts that I could find) but I thought it was worth the big bucks and my teenager actually paid attention and enjoyed it.

The top deck is open and there’s also an enclosed, windowed area with tables below….we sat below initially just to eat our sandwiches, but we were so comfortable and had such a good, air-conditioned view through the glass that we stayed down there the whole time. The docent’s descriptions were quite clear over speakers and it was nice to see what everyone else was seeing without baking in the sun.

The cruise operates May-November.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Chicago, Architecture River Cruise

Categories
Blog

More Good Stuff From Chicago

BlogHer '07 I'm  Speaking

Hurray!  I just learned this morning that I’m going to be a speaker/panelist for the BlogHer blogging conference in Chicago July 27-29 2007.  What an extraordinary honor to be on the same roster as people like Esther Dyson, Gina Trapani, Liz Strauss, Penelope Trunk and Wendy Piersall, to name just a smattering of fellow panelists and speakers across two days of stuff-your-brain bloggy discussions (and of course, men are welcome, too.)

I’ll be on a panel in the morning of Day One — the topic is “Finding and Following Your Passion.”  Shouldn’t have any problem talking about that topic, eh? 🙂  Even better is that one of the other panelists is Christine Kane.  She’s a musician and blogger, and I happened to meet her at the SOBCon 07 blogging conference last month.  What goes around, comes around in the blogosphere. 

The other panelist with us (more may be added; not sure how that all works) is Carmen Stacier, who’s passionate about not eating junk and moving your bod.  Hopefully she can teach me how to stay focused and passionate in that area.

Won’t you join us in Chicago?  There’s even childcare….what a deal.

BlogHer '07 Fun

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, blogging, BlogHer

Categories
Blog

Blogapalooza: blogging conferences in May and July 2007

There are two terrific conferences for bloggers in the upcoming months, and I just want to take a moment to tell you about them in case you’d like to attend.  Both are in Chicago (I’m flying to one and driving to the other, and I’m in Texas; call me a glutton for travel punishment.)

First, SOBCon 07, for SOBs — no, no, silly, that’s “Successful and Outstanding Bloggers!”  Readers who know how much I like Liz Strauss and her Successful Blog have heard about SOBs before, and now a bunch of us are getting together May 11-12 at the Chicago O’Hare Sofiel, to take our blogging to the next level.  In the words of Liz Strauss: 

“Conversation Means YOU Talk Too.

A conversation involves more than one person talking. A conversation means you get to talk, too. The best ideas come when we mash up the knowledge and approaches from different fields and when we look at ideas from all points of view.

Imagine SOBCon — a room filled with web publishers, many you have met on your blog or blogs like this one.

See the SOBCon presenters. They’re leading conversations.

Can you see it? It’s an audience of people engaged in swapping strategies, offering top-notch thinking from which you get to choose . . . Here’s just a few of the folks who will be adding value.

  • Brad, Sheila, and Marcus, who know how words make connections with readers
  • Lisa, who brings the soul of an actress and the mind of a teacher
  • Jesse, who can see how a gamer might get over a wall
  • Tony, who can diagnose a problem inside a plan
  • Dr. Wolcott, who is at the top in the field of business innovation
  • Ashley, who brings a painter’s vision and delicate hand
  • Sandra, who knows tools and techniques of visual thinking
  • Joe, who brings those grounding questions and computer expertise
  • Jeff, who understands good to great and will get there
  • Tammy, who knows the people in every part of our job and the dynamics of conversation
  • Steve, who is the extreme leadership that lifts us to try
  • Dawud, who brings those goals he wrote that prove we express ourselves in our business
  • Vernun, who knows how to celebrate others as part of our dream
  • Muhammed, who can’t help but provide energy and new ideas
  • Robert, who will be there with a practical eye toward what is real
  • Franke and Timothy, who know the “group think” of the situation
  • Easton, who knows how to organize and monetize without killing the grace of an idea
  • Ann and Kent, who are leaders that know presentation is as important as content
  • Troy, who thinks big and challenges everyone to take permission to do so

And add to that list people from every walk of business life — corporate innovators, public relations communicators, and the hippest new media contributors — no kidding really. I’ve seen who’s coming and they’re all on it.”

BlogHer '07 I'm  GoingThe second event is BlogHer 07, July 27-29 at the Chicago Navy Pier conference area.  Yes, guys, men are most welcome at this conference for bloggers!

Conference organizers are still pulling together all of the threads, panels and speakers, but given the previous info from BlogHer 06 in San Jose, I think they will put on a wonderful program, with something for every level of blogger and every interest.

As you know from my South by Southwest Interactive guest posts on Successful Blog, I think that it’s very important for writers and bloggers (often a solitary bunch) to get together at conferences like these.  Not only do you learn an incredible amount about the craft of blogging and the topics that we talk about, you also get to meet and exchange ideas with people just like you, who write and read on the Web.

Hope to see you there!

Technorati tags:  travel, family travel, Chicago, blogging, BlogHer, SOBCon 07