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Massive Labubu heist!  ₹26.23 lakh worth of viral toys stolen from California store

Massive Labubu heist! ₹26.23 lakh worth of viral toys stolen from California store

Mint2 days ago
In a massive Labubu heist, thieves stole ₹ 26.23 lakh worth of viral toys from a store in California, Los Angeles. These toothy, fluffy, mischievous monster dolls and all their viral spinoffs are escalating into a potential crime wave.
According to The Guardian, the theft was 'pre-planned' and was carried out by a group of burglars. The store had just announced a restock in Labubus.
Joanna Avendano, co-owner of One Stop Sales, told local news that a lot of Labubu dolls were taken, estimating his loss at "maybe like around $30,000 or more of inventory".
'We worked so hard to get to this point, and for them to just come in and, like nothing, take it all away, it's really bad,' she said.
According to the store's co-owner, the burglars targeted the Labubus specifically, bypassing other merchandise. She also alleged that the break-in was planned.
A suspicious truck was reportedly parked outside the store on Tuesday night, which Joanna Avendano said she suspects was the burglars monitoring the store's social media account.
It wasn't clear how many dolls were stolen.
The Los Angeles County Sheriff said an investigation into the burglary is underway, and shared that the van used for the crime was found abandoned shortly after.
'Several boxes of Labubu dolls were stolen, valued at approximately seven thousand dollars,' the sheriff's department said in a statement.
Labubu dolls are priced at a whopping $500 ( ₹ 43,730) each on its official website. However, their significant demand has incited resellers to hike prices by thousands of dollars each and the rise of a black market of fake Labubus.
The Labubu dolls are exclusively made and sold by Pop Mart. Celebrities, including Rihanna and Lisa from the K-pop group Blackpink, have endorsed this viral doll.
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$7k worth of viral Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store
$7k worth of viral Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store

Time of India

time41 minutes ago

  • Time of India

$7k worth of viral Labubu dolls stolen from Los Angeles store

Sources: iStock The growing frenzy around Labubu dolls, small, mischievous plush monsters designed by Hong Kong-born artist Kasing Lung and sold by Pop Mart, has taken a darker turn. This week, a group of masked thieves stole roughly $7,000 worth of the collectibles from a store in La Puente, California, about 18 miles east of Los Angeles. According to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, the burglary occurred early Wednesday morning. Surveillance footage shows several individuals in hoodies and face coverings breaking in, rifling through shelves, and carrying out boxes of merchandise. Authorities say the suspects used a stolen Toyota Tacoma, which was later recovered, and the investigation is ongoing. The targeted store, One Stop Shop, posted on Instagram that thieves cleared out its entire Labubu inventory and left the premises in disarray. 'We are still in shock,' the owners wrote, urging the public to help identify the culprits. Source: Getty Images A toy that became an investment asset Labubu dolls, introduced about a decade ago, were initially adored for their quirky charm and playful designs. Retailing for around $20, they are sold in 'blind boxes,' meaning buyers don't know which version they'll get until after purchase. While the concept fuels excitement for some collectors, critics say the practice borders on gambling, preying on impulsive buying behaviors. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Learn More - How Donating Sperm May Boost Your Income SpellRock Undo What started as a harmless collectible craze has evolved into a high-stakes market. Limited supply, strategic product drops, and global hype have driven prices for rare editions into the thousands. One Labubu recently fetched over $10,000 in the secondary market. This growing value has attracted not only passionate fans but also opportunistic resellers and investors. Bots, scarcity, and skyrocketing prices Source: Getty Images As demand surged, savvy resellers began deploying automated bots to scoop up large quantities of Labubu dolls online within seconds, leaving everyday consumers with limited options. Many are forced to buy from secondary sellers at heavily inflated prices. Social media influencers and celebrities have further fueled demand, turning the dolls into status symbols and speculative assets. The result is a volatile collector's market, and, as the La Puente theft suggests, one that is increasingly attracting criminal attention. With more people treating Labubus like rare art or luxury goods, the pressure on supply and security is mounting. For now, the La Puente case remains open, but it's a stark reminder that the Labubu craze has moved far beyond toy shop shelves and into a space where money, scarcity, and crime intersect.

Dua Lipa reading Helen Garner may set off a trend. But books have signified taste for centuries
Dua Lipa reading Helen Garner may set off a trend. But books have signified taste for centuries

Scroll.in

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Dua Lipa reading Helen Garner may set off a trend. But books have signified taste for centuries

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Bookshelves as interior decoration – along with book-of-the-month clubs and discussion of books in popular media – were 19th and 20th-century trends too, though with important differences. Unlike books bought by the metre, those trends could cultivate a genuine interest in reading – as do some 2025 trends, like the celebrity book club. Helen Garner's This House of Grief was recently chosen by musician Dua Lipa for hers. Democratising reading The imposing library in the gentleman's stately house in the 19th century is a familiar image. It was a key element in marking one's arrival in the privileged professional or landed classes. At the end of the 19th century, though, book publishing (and book talk) filtered down to middle-class and working-class readers who began to self-educate or to broaden their reading through accessing new books. These changes were brought about by wider education and employment, but also an increase in publishing activity, especially for new novels. (The later invention of the mass-market paperback, in the 1930s, would be another landmark.) Readers hunted down the classics, followed reading lists set up by reformist associations, or joined newly opened libraries, which also expanded across this period. A new fashion emerged, from the 1920s, for knowing the best, most absorbing or enjoyable of the many new books appearing: modern novels above all. This fashion for the new often existed alongside a desire to know the classics and their authors – and to display them all in the home. Book clubs formed, book programmes on the new medium of radio were introduced, and new essays and advertisements about owning and displaying books appeared. Features in newspapers and magazines highlighting the 'Book of the Week' or 'Book of the Month' became common by the late 1920s. So did essays and advertisements addressed primarily to women readers. Most images, though, showed a man sitting in an armchair surrounded by his homely books. A new language emerged too, describing the emerging book worlds as 'middlebrow', in contrast to the 'lowbrow' (those merely following popular or mass tastes) and the highbrow (those whose tastes were only high, refined and, perhaps, pretentious). All three terms could be terms of abuse: usually in feminised forms. Harvard Classics The volume of new books could provoke anxieties for both established critics and the new readers about 'drowning in a sea of new novels', alongside new enthusiasms for trying to keep up with the latest. Guidance in reading – what to read and how to read – became a new industry. So did guidance on buying and collecting books, and owning them. And, no less important, to displaying them by building a library in your own home. In the United States, in 1909–10, Charles W Eliot, president of Harvard University, edited the Harvard Classics, or Dr Eliot's Five-Foot Shelf: 50 volumes containing selections of classic works, newly packaged for ordinary and aspiring readers. Authors ranged from Plato to Saint Augustine, Dante to Milton, and included Charles Dickens, Robert Louis Stevenson and Edgar Allan Poe. Subjects ranged from Christian texts, to texts from Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam. The total choices were extraordinary (and no doubt daunting for many). Special editions were produced, but cheaper versions appeared over the 1920s and 1930s. Harvard Classics were designed for the home. They could be purchased with a five-foot bookshelf to hold them, as well as a booklet giving plans for reading through the collection in just 15 minutes a day. The mix of high culture and easy access to it was one dimension of what would be labelled the middlebrow. 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Visakhapatnam police lay down safety, eco-friendly norms for Vinayaka Chaviti pandals
Visakhapatnam police lay down safety, eco-friendly norms for Vinayaka Chaviti pandals

The Hindu

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  • The Hindu

Visakhapatnam police lay down safety, eco-friendly norms for Vinayaka Chaviti pandals

With just two weeks to go for Vinayaka Chaviti, the city police convened a meeting with Ganesh pandal organising committees to outline guidelines for idol installation and safety protocols during the festivities. Commissioner of Police Shankabrata Bagchi urged organisers to prioritise eco-friendly clay idols and instructed police personnel to hold awareness programmes in educational institutions to discourage the use of Plaster of Paris (PoP) idols. He directed that each pandal must have at least three volunteers on duty round the clock, with their contact details shared with the local police station. Organisers were told to ensure proper barricading, lighting, public-address systems, backup generators, orderly queue management, adequate parking facilities, and multiple entry and exit points at procession and immersion sites. No inflammable materials should be stored near pandals, and water and sand must be kept ready at all times as fire safety measures. Mr. Bagchi stressed that pandals should not inconvenience the public and must be set up on only one side of the road to avoid traffic disruptions. DJ systems are strictly banned at pandals and processions. Organisers must install CCTV cameras with 24x7 recording and monitoring. Forced donations, lucky dips, and lotteries remain prohibited. Idol immersions are permitted only at officially designated locations, and firecrackers are banned during immersion processions. Loudspeakers and microphones must adhere to prescribed decibel limits and are prohibited between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. As in previous years, the city police will soon launch a dedicated website for pandal organisers to apply for permissions. Meanwhile, idol makers have been working for months to prepare thousands of idols. The district sees an average of 3,000 to 4,000 installations each year, and this time will feature some unique creations — including, for the first time, a Ganesh idol adorned with one lakh sarees at Lanka Grounds in Gajuwaka.

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