‘Hanged’ on $5 stuffed birds, desperate shoppers flock to Target: ‘The stress is palpable’

The early bird gets the worm or, in this case, the decorative figurine.

Loyal Target shoppers and devout fans of the store’s festive birds rise into the wee hours of the morning in an attempt to snag one of the $5 fabric figurines online before they sell out again.

Cicero, New York, resident Theresa Hoffman woke up three hours later than planned at 6 a.m. on July 14 to mark the newly thrown Halloween set. The 24-year-old picked up seven that day, she told the Wall Street Journal, which alone added to her collection of 75.


Winter 2022 collection of seasonal felt birds
The dots correspond to holidays or seasons, such as winter. Courtesy Alyssa Fine

The bird frenzy has similarities to the 90s Beanie Baby craze or Gen Z’s current obsession with Sonny Angel figurines, and often results in sales of the coveted creatures.

The stress is palpable, Megan Frantz, a 32-year-old electrical engineer who owns 180 deceased birds, told The Journal.

The birds, which were first produced more than a decade ago, are released every season or holiday, with the summer birds wearing swimming trunks and sunnies, while the winter collection featured scarves and hats, but can be found at resale sites months later with a huge price increase. On eBay, for one, a set of four Easter-themed birds is listed for nearly $100, while an assortment of 15 Christmas birds sells for $350.

Collectors can join Facebook groups dedicated to finding, selling and swapping their “birbs,” as they’re affectionately called, which gather thousands of members, while Redditors and TikTokkers brag about their latest finds. huge collections and creative methods of online display.

Frantz, along with her sister, Anna, 34, have joined such groups to stay informed of upcoming layoffs. The Portland, Ore., duo also build custom creatures and sell them, often made to imitate famous figures like Taylor Swift or Dwayne “The Flock” Johnson.


eBay listings for target birds
On eBay, cute animals can fetch five to 10 times their original price or more. Ebay

Jackie Kaelble
Minnesota collector Jackie Kaelble, 37, owns 150 birds and even has a tattoo of one. Courtesy Jackie Kaelble

Target released its own celebrity character earlier this year, which fans claimed looked like Tippi Hedren, despite the “birb” being billed as “The Movie Star’s Feathered Bird Friend.”

Regardless, the adorable bird went viral as the best of Target’s Pride collection and quickly sold out online, forcing 24-year-old Connor Clary to visit multiple brick-and-mortar stores to find one.

Many of the ads about the bird are people seeing other people struggling to get them, the content creator told The Journal. This makes other people want to get them.

In fact, people are so fascinated by the decorative figures that one superfan got the Valentine’s Day 2021 bird, named Poppy, tattooed on her leg. Some devotees have even had to curb their spending habits when it comes to collectible creatures.

My rule now, especially now that I have one for every month of the year, unless it’s cuter than the ones I already have, I can’t buy more, Alyssa Fine, 33, a second-grade teacher and proud owner of 62. birds, said The Journal.


Star bird of the movie
The movie star’s bird has been compared to Tippi Hedren. Courtesy Connor Clary

Collection of Theresa Hoffman
Fans wake up at the crack of dawn to shop online for the latest hits from Target’s late birds. Courtesy Alyssa Fine

The New Jersey resident uses the fabric figurines as educational tools in her classroom and often goes “bird watching” with fellow educators at Target to hunt down new birds, some of which have sparked arguments among the faithful.

The new Halloween birds, for one, have sparked a raging online debate about being beakless, their typical bills exchanged for goofy mouth expressions and grins.

The lack of their characteristic beaks called “mouthgates” has disappointed and upset many collectors, prompting some fans to perform seam ripper “surgery” to remove the uncharacteristic mouths.


An assortment of Halloween Featherly Friends decorative bird figurines displayed on a table in a Target store
The new Halloween collection sparked online debate over the lack of real beaks. The aim

“Why do they have mouths?” asked one season-obsessed horror content creator, arguing that “they still need beaks” in a recent TikTok video.

“They’d be so much cuter without the mouths,” one concerned user commented on another clip.

And yet, almost all models are sold online.

The popularity of the clothing creatures, and the accessories and merchandise that accompany them, is “another example of the creativity, playfulness and magic that our interior product design team brings to their work,” said Jill Sando, an executive vice president at Target. Journal, hinting at new collections expected to arrive later this year.

And the craze is contagious, as actual fanatics sing the birds’ praises.

Every job I’ve ever had, I’ve gotten people addicted to chicks, so now, ex-bosses still text me, Let me know when the new chicks drop, Hoffman said.


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Image Source : nypost.com

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