The Journal. - Why Is Everyone Obsessed With Labubus?

Episode Date: August 7, 2025

An ugly-cute monster has become a global sensation. PopMart, the company behind Labubus, has leveraged blind-box packaging, scarcity and artist collaborations to turn these collectible plushies into a... booming business. WSJ's Kaitlin Wang explains the rise of the Labubu and a "Labubu influencer" describes the appeal. Michelle Hackman hosts. Further Listening: - How the Stanley Cup Became the Internet’s Favorite Water Bottle - Mattel Bets Big on Barbie - Is Supreme Still the King of Streetwear? Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey everyone, it's Jess. I'm here to say that my colleague Michelle Hackman is here to guest host today's episode. Enjoy. Can we start with just having you introduce yourself? So, hi. My name is Ebony, Ebony Hall. I am 26 years old from Georgia. Yes, I'm a mommy, mamacita. And Ebony Hall has one of those jobs that you probably didn't even know existed. She's a Labibou influencer. I'm your Lubuski-Love and Bestie. That's how I kind of sum it up as far as my content creation. Labubos are the latest toys that have taken the world by storm. They're little furry monsters, kind of creepy, but also kind of cute.
Starting point is 00:00:48 They have pointy ears, big eyes, and wide, toothy grins. They look a little mischievous. It can be pretty hard to get your hands on one, but I actually managed to pick one up ahead of my call with Ebony. So I'm going to describe actually what's in my hands. So I'm holding this like pastel box. It's maybe six inches tall. And on the side here, there are like six different options of what could be in this box.
Starting point is 00:01:15 I don't actually know what's in here. It doesn't say. And I'm going to open it. See what's inside. Yes. I'm so excited for you. Louboos are like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get.
Starting point is 00:01:27 That's because they come in what's called a blind box. And when you open one to reveal the laboooo inside, it can feel like a whole event. So you kind of lift the tab up. You see that little tab right there? Yeah. And you grab it and just... And just feel like that. All right.
Starting point is 00:01:43 That'll work. It's open. All right. Let's see. See, let's see. Oh, wow, you guys said, oh, what's that? Sesame? Hello, no, that's Toffee. Oh, my God. Congratulations on your first Lubu baby, Labusie baby.
Starting point is 00:02:04 It is so cute. For the record, I got a little sandy-colored monster. It's part of the exciting macaron of Lubu-Boo collection. It's a little neutral that I think is going to look great on my backpack. If you're a frequent TikTok user, you've probably seen these toys everywhere. This is a Labuobo. The girls who hate Labibu, they're not for you, babe. This is so cute. And for Potmart, the Chinese toy company that makes Labubo's, business has been Laboooo-Booming. Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
Starting point is 00:02:51 I'm Michelle Hackman. It's Thursday, August 7th. Coming up on the show, Scarcity, scary cute monsters, and the Laboo Boo Boo Takeover. Searchlight Pictures presents The Roses, Only in Theater's August 29th, From the director of Meet the Parents and the writer of Poor Things comes The Roses, starring Academy Award winner Olivia Coleman, Academy Award nominee Benedict Cumberbatch, Andy Samburg, Kate McKinnon, and Allison Janney.
Starting point is 00:03:34 A hilarious new comedy filled with drama, excitement, and a little bit of hatred, proving that marriage isn't always a bed of roses. See The Roses only in theaters, August 29th. When my colleague Caitlin Wang started reporting on Labuboos, she was a bit of a skeptic. Yeah, you know, when I first started looking into this, I was like, I don't know about these guys. You know, I wasn't really sure either, but as I really reported this out, spoke to people who like them, I myself started to gain a little bit of affection for them. They're really, honestly, kind of like cute. I think people have described them as ugly cute, which I think is maybe a little bit mean to them.
Starting point is 00:04:21 People all over the internet have fallen in love with these ugly, cute little monsters. There are tons of videos of people unboxing them. Am I a grown-ass woman on the internet about to unbox a lobooboo? Yes. Was I originally a hater about the loboos? But then I remembered I was raised with Furbies, Tel-A-Tubbies, and Beattie Babies, and realized that it was really never that deep and live a little. Also, yes.
Starting point is 00:04:46 They also dress up their loboos. Welcome to my series where I match my outfits to my liububes. I bought four different outfits for different occasions. First one is for my pickleball bag. And her little hat has a really pretty flower on it. You can see the details. And people also wear their loboos. They often come on a keychain.
Starting point is 00:05:05 Here's my Labubu with its Prada outfit. And here's my Prada bag. Cute! So I got my looboo matching my prada bag. Labibos were introduced by the Chinese toy company Pop Mart in 2019. But it wasn't until last year that they started to take off globally after some celebrities were seen wearing them. We've seen Labibu's dangle off.
Starting point is 00:05:35 You know, Madonna, Rihanna, Lisa from Black Pink has said she loves Pop Mart. Dylan Brooks, the NBA player, was seen walking into a game with a Labibu dingling from his hip. So there's just so much hype around these characters, and that kind of makes you want one. That's when Ebony, the influencer you heard from earlier, started to get into Lububo's. I saw Rihanna, and she had the Leachie Berry Labubu in her photo, and I said, you know what, that's kind of cute. So once I saw that leachie berry exciting macaron on Rihanna's bag, I said, you know what? Let's just see. So Ebony decided to document on TikTok her attempt at snagging her first Labubu.
Starting point is 00:06:15 I am determined to get a Labibu tonight. Like, I don't care what I have to do. I am getting a Labuski. Ebony's quest to get a Labubu, or as she lovingly calls them, Labuskis, went viral. Her post got more than 300,000 views, and her follower count doubled.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Since then, she's leaned into Labubu content. Ebony says she's bought hundreds of Labubu Blindboxes, which at the moment retail for 2799 apiece in the U.S. As far as how much I've spent, I have spent thousands on the boo-boos. Many of them she ends up reselling. Her personal collection of just over a dozen Labuboos sits on a shelf,
Starting point is 00:06:54 a Labubu altar framed with neon lights along with other figurines. Are you like guarding these things with your life? Are you actually wearing them? Yes, I am guarding them with my... Well, I won't say that. I do... My libububoes go out into the world.
Starting point is 00:07:09 They are well-traveled, okay? They go to McDonald's with me. We go to Walmart together. Yes, my favorite. Libu that I wear down. I wear it outside the world, everywhere I go. It's going to be my Fallen Wild Labibu. It's the plush pendant. Why do you like them so much? What's the appeal? It's the fight more so than the product, I feel like. I will always say that. I think the appeal is not so much in the product, but in the ways or methods that we have to go through, the trials and
Starting point is 00:07:36 tribulations that we have to go through in the part of our battlefields to get the products. Put me in that moment, what happens when there's about to be a drop? What do you do? So initially, we would get a countdown and you would just have to prepare yourself, like kind of mentally prepare yourself and your TikTok to go through this process of fighting over 20,000 people for potentially 200 items, maybe, maybe 100 sometimes. They'll even drop five. So you really don't know until after the drop. How can you put yourself in position to beat 20,000 people? Click fast and pray hard. Click fast and pray hard. Click fast. pray hard.
Starting point is 00:08:16 This is like me trying to get concert tickets on Ticketmaster. Yes. Yes, that is a perfect example. Okay, if you want to be, if you want to see Yancey front row, you're going to make sure that LTE is up to date. You're going to make sure that your Wi-Fi is paid up. For Ebony, she waits with bated breath to buy Labuibu's online. Other people may have a potmart store nearby.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Most are in Asia, but the company is expanding quickly in the U.S., and those stores can get pretty crowded. Our colleague, Caitlin, was in L.A., and saw the frenzy firsthand when Potmart announced its latest drop of Lubbos. Michelle, when I tell you, it was the craziest experience I've ever had. I've really never seen anything like it. What was it like? Yeah, there were over 2,000 people there before 10 a.m., which is when the store opens. Yeah. Why? They were all lining up, trying to get their hands on this new Lapuobu. There were people who I'd met who were there since 8 p.m. the night before. There were people in line.
Starting point is 00:09:23 There were people still streaming in. And keep in mind, I was there at 6 a.m. The store wasn't going to open for another four hours. And what happened when the store opened? Yeah. Well, they had planned for this in-person shopping, drop, right? They had a certain amount of Labubu sets and they were going to sell them to people who shop in store. There were so many people there and the crowd got rowdy enough that they actually
Starting point is 00:09:53 canceled in store shopping for the Labuboos. Things got so out of hand that the store decided to sell the Labuboos online. What do you make of all the commotion? Like, what is driving this devotion that's getting people to line up 12 hours before the store opens? I think it's a real interesting exercise in collectibles and in scarcity, and they're just so hard to get. They're sold out all the time, except for when Pop Mart does a drop, and they do do a drop every week, but they sell out within minutes. And so this kind of all just drives this sort of crazy, crazy hype, and that's why you have people lining up for hours and hours trying to be the first in line to make sure they can buy one.
Starting point is 00:10:37 The hype behind Labuboos has been a major break for the toys maker, Pop Mart. The company has been around since 2010 and makes all kinds of blind box collectibles. They've enjoyed relative success, especially in Asia. They were doing really well before Labuboos. They were growing really, really steadily in 2017. They had about 21 million USD in revenue, and by 2022, They were looking at $642 million. Potmart likes to collaborate with popular artists.
Starting point is 00:11:15 That's where Labibu came from. The character was created by a Hong Kong artist named Kai Singh Lung. And they consider these toys high-end. So even though Pop Mart's toys are popular with kids, the company says they actually aim for a different demographic. They're aiming for this sort of what they call a kid-ult customer, someone who is an adult, someone who has their own spending money, but really loves nostalgia, wants to collect these items. They're collectibles more than they are toys.
Starting point is 00:11:49 What is the Lubbubu done to Pot Mart's business overall? It has made it go crazy, is the short answer of that. I mean, Popmart was a big company, especially in Asia beforehand, but Lubu and the growth of Lubu's have really turbocharged Pop Mart's sort of status, especially here in the States. Potmart's revenue has doubled in just the last year, reaching $1.8 billion and turning the Chinese toy maker into a global phenomenon.
Starting point is 00:12:22 But their rise has faced some bumps. That's next. After my very first Labubu unboxing with Ebony, I called another Labubu expert, my eight-year-old niece, Olivia. Hi, Liv. Hi. Look what I got. It's a liboubu. It's so cute.
Starting point is 00:13:02 Olivia is a proud Labuobu owner. I have the yellow one with like a blue pink heart and it's tied to its belly and the, like, the string is like blue and it's like a bow in the front. But I'm also calling Olivia because they need her help with something. She happens to be an avid Labibu authenticator. If it has 10 teeth, then it's definitely fake. Okay, but how many teeth does it have to have? It has to have nine. Okay.
Starting point is 00:13:40 And even some fake one has to have nine, I think. Louie, let's count, let's count, hold on. I think. One, two, three. Luckily for me, it looks like this Laboooooo is the real deal. But I had to double check. And that's because, since they're now so hard to get, there's been an explosion of counterfeits. There's a name for these fake Labuboos.
Starting point is 00:14:01 I think we got Lafoufus. We got played. Lefufus. My colleague, Caitlin, says that even these fake lafufus have garnered a dedicated fan base. Something really interesting that I don't think I've seen with something so popular is that people are proud to own dupes. So people are showing off their lafufus and their laboobos,
Starting point is 00:14:22 and it's sort of just become this inside joke. It's a lafou, but I don't care. I wanted one so bad, so... I went to my local dollar store and found, Lafoufus, honey, and they were only $15. So I bought Labubu's at a pawn shop in Vegas, or are they Lafoufus? One thing is clear. The Labubu Industrial Complex is in full swing.
Starting point is 00:14:47 Not only are counterfeit sellers making a killing off Lafoufus, there's also an entire secondary market for the real thing. I mean, it's the scarcity model, right? There are more people who want Labuboos than they are able to sell them. for. And if you really want one, they're on eBay, they're on Facebook marketplace, they're on StockX, often selling for double the price. For some really rare Labuboos, resales have had them going for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Starting point is 00:15:18 A global collectible craze. These Labubu figurines have gone viral. One rare edition selling for $230,000 in a week. So what happens when Labubu shes? shopping gets out of hand. In Asia, some countries have looked to rein in Labubu's and similar toys. For example, the Chinese government has banned sales of blind box toys to children under the age of eight. And in Singapore, they've proposed capping the retail price of blind boxes. I mean, a lot of people have made the comparison that a blind box, pulling a blind box, opening it, is kind of a form of gambling because you're investing in this anticipation. You really
Starting point is 00:16:01 want this big payoff and you just don't know what you're going to get. So what has Potmarts said about that? Yeah, Potmert's response to the regulations has really been that they have never intended themselves to be marketed towards children. On their boxes and their website and everything, they say the product is for 15 plus. The company says they're also looking to expand beyond blind boxes. They're offering tech accessories. They're offering other kind of stuffed toys, plush toys, all in the hopes that people are connecting with their IP. And that sort of connection will drive sales beyond the blind box model.
Starting point is 00:16:47 In China, Pop Mart has even opened a theme park called Popland, where you can go and mingle with life-sized Laboooooo characters. If you love Pop Mart as much as I do, you've come to the right place. Outside of China, potmart's sales have more than tripled in the last year, and overseas revenue now makes up nearly 40% of the company's sales. Do you think Labibos are almost like another passing fad? Like, you and I probably grew up with beanie babies. You know, more recent generations have had squish mellows and tomogatchies. You know, is this like going to be a passing fad, or do you think Labibos are here to stay?
Starting point is 00:17:25 I think that's the big question for Potmart. I mean, obviously they've taken advantage. of this moment and take an advantage of it well, but how do they create this lasting empire off of this viral moment? I think that that kind of remains to be seen, but what they are trying to do, like I mentioned, is connect their customers with that IP, and so it sort of breeds some sort of loyalty. I spoke to an analyst while I was working on this piece, and And he told me that we should probably start looking at Potmar as something more similar to Disney. I mean, look at the theme park, right?
Starting point is 00:18:06 They're really banking on their own intellectual property, their own characters, the stories and the narratives that they create to build this empire. Wow. So do you think we're going to end up with like a Labuoboo movie, almost like the Barbie movie? Never say never. That's all for today, Thursday, August 7th. The journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal. If you like our show, follow us on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. We're out every weekday afternoon.
Starting point is 00:18:51 Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow. Thank you.

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