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Culture The Color Pink
ASSOCIATED PRESS

From Barbie to millennial pink, the cultural phenomenon behind the color that sells

The release of “Barbie” is upon us, and the color pink is nearly inescapable

By KARENA PHAN
Published - Jul 21, 2023, 08:57 AM ET
Last Updated - Jul 21, 2023, 08:57 AM EDT

“Think pink! think pink! when you shop for summer clothes. Think pink! think pink! if you want that quelque chose.”

That advice, sung as an epiphany in the 1957 musical film “Funny Face,” has definitely been heeded — just take a look around at fashion and media. The fascination around pink — each shade and hue with its own connotation — has shaped those cultural engines for generations, revving into full force as we reach peak “Barbie” season.

The color has been a crucial detail for films and television — from that scene in “Funny Face,” to Elle Woods sporting her iconic head-to-toe vibrant pink courtroom outfit in 2001's “Legally Blonde,” to “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” where the shades of pink in costuming play a symbolic role in the final season. And, now, with the Greta Gerwig-helmed film's release, the vividly hot “Barbie Pink” is inescapable.

Throughout history, designers, artists, and brands have played with the emotions the color evokes, shaping meanings that are ever-evolving. From gender to class, those associations have constantly been challenged, flipped and subverted — while the definition of pink is always in flux, there's one constant: its cultural staying power.

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