Jay Foreman is an American businessman who lives and works in Boca Raton, Florida. He is president and CEO of Basic Fun!, [1] which began as The Bridge Direct in 2009. Basic Fun! and its related companies, Good Stuff, K'nex, Uncle Milton, and PlayHut, design, develop and market toys for children and adult collectors. The company's product portfolio includes internally developed brands like Mash'ems and Cutetitos, as well as licensed product lines from major entertainment companies, sports leagues and other toy companies, such as Mattel and Hasbro. In 2020 the company relaunched Tonka and Care Bears, which can now be found at major retailers around the world.
Foreman began his toy career in the amusement industry at the age of 18, while working at games on the boardwalk in Wildwood, New Jersey. In 1986, he became a sales rep for Fable Toys, which manufactured stuffed toys in its own factory in Brooklyn, New York.
In 1990, Foreman co-founded Play By Play Toys in San Antonio, Texas, with Arturo Torres. He served as the general manager of the company from 1990 to 1996. Play By Play manufactured and distributed toys and novelties to the amusement and theme park industries. In 1992, Foreman secured rights for the company to make stuffed toys using the Coca-Cola and Harley Davidson brand names. These products were picked up by Walmart, the company's first traditional retail customer, expanding Play By Play's distribution from amusement channels into mass-market stores. In subsequent years, the company acquired licenses to make toys with Looney Tunes and Disney brands as well. Play By Play went public in 1995 on the NASDAQ exchange under the symbol PBYP. The following year, Play By Play acquired its largest competitor, Ace Novelty.
In 1996, Foreman joined San Francisco-based Galoob Toys. As Senior Vice President, he was tasked with building a direct-import division, and managing the development of internally conceived product lines. Foreman's major achievement at Galoob was identifying the opportunity and securing global rights to manufacture fashion dolls based on The Spice Girls, in cooperation with Simon Fuller, President of 19 Entertainment. Powered by the global pop-music phenomenon of the girl group, the toy line became the first to oust Barbie as the best-selling fashion doll by units, in both 1997 and 1998. The Spice Girls dolls became the most profitable toy line in Galoob's history at the time, with sales exceeding $125 Million in 1998.
That same year, Foreman left Galoob, as the company was negotiating its sale to Hasbro. [2] He joined Empire of Carolina [3] in Florida as head of marketing and product development. At Empire, Foreman met Charlie Emby who was head of sales for the company and Foreman's future business partner.
In 1999, Foreman and Emby both left Empire and co-founded Play Along Toys [4] with an angel investment of $3M. Here, Foreman managed marketing, product development and sourcing. The company's first product line was a range of Britney Spears dolls [5] and toys modeled after the emerging pop star. Some of the other product lines from Play Along included the relaunch of Cabbage Patch Kids, [6] Care Bears, Puppy in My Pocket, Doodle Bear, plus licensed lines including The Lord of the Rings action figures. With the addition of these lines, Play Along's sales grew to over $130 Million by the end of 2003. The company's biggest hit came a few years later, in the form of a doll line based on Disney’s Hannah Montana TV show. [7]
In 2004, Play Along was sold to Jakks Pacific, and became a wholly owned division of that company. [8] The total compensation for the deal was valued to be an excess of $135 Million if Play Along achieved all of its earnings targets over a 3.5-year earnout period, which it did. Play Along's sales peaked at $240 million in 2007. Foreman and his partners managed the division for Jakks Pacific until January 2008, when they exited the company.
In 2008, Foreman was engaged by Oaktree Capital Management to advise on its plan to acquire and take private Jakks Pacific. [9] Under the terms of the arrangement, once acquired, Foreman would become the Jakks CEO. Together, Foreman and Oaktree pursued Jakks for three years but despite an offer to purchase the company, they failed to break the board's poison pill blockade and were unsuccessful in their acquisition efforts.
During this time, Foreman on his own acquired Camp Beverly Hills, a 1980s clothing line.
In 2009, Foreman and Oaktree Capital Management founded The Bridge Direct, a consumer products company focused on children's entertainment products. [10] The plan was to grow the company organically through internally conceived product lines, as well as through acquisitions. Initially, the company acted as a licensee and agent for Cepia LLC, maker of the world famous Zhu Zhu Pets toys. In 2010, The Bridge Direct launched its first internally conceived toy line by acquiring the licensing rights for pop star Justin Bieber. [11] Propelled by the singer's ascent to fame, the doll line quickly became a hit with fans. [12]
Foreman began implementing his acquisition strategy for The Bridge Direct in 2013. His first target was the Good Stuff company and its Basic Fun! division, based in Jersey City, NJ. [13] Good Stuff was a supplier of toys to the leisure industry, and the Basic Fun! division was known for collectable key chains, novelty and retro toys. The acquisition in 2013 expanded The Bridge Direct's product offering and distribution. The retro toy line became a large part of the combined company's portfolio, including reproductions of classic toys like the Fisher-Price Chatter Phone and Hasbro's Lite-Brite and electronic Simon game. The company subsequently added more retro toys to its portfolio including classic reproductions of the original My Little Pony [14] and Pound Puppies toys, [15] as well as a line of handheld electronic games including Pac-Man, Frogger, and The Oregon Trail. [16]
In 2017, The Bridge Direct merged with Toronto-based Tech 4 Kids, [17] bringing the Mash'ems surprise collectible product line into the portfolio. The combined company later acquired Uncle Milton Industries, [18] which manufactures STEM-related toys including Uncle Milton's Ant Farm. Later that year, the company rebranded itself as Basic Fun! [19]
In early 2018, the company acquired K'nex, the American-made construction toy brand which also manufactures Lincoln Logs and Tinker Toys, under license from Hasbro. [20]
In addition to its headquarters in Boca Raton, FL, Basic Fun! has a sales office in the UK (part of the K'nex acquisition) and an office and showroom in Hong Kong. The Hong Kong-based staff oversees engineering and manufacturing with China-based factories. In 2019, under the threat of import tariffs for products brought to the US from China, Foreman became an outspoken opponent of the Trump administration policy proposals, which would have added 10% duties to toys imported from China. [21]
In 2024, Basic Fun! filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The company will use bankruptcy proceedings to repay its creditors while remaining in operation. [22]
As a part of his career in the toy industry, Foreman has served as a board member of Licensing International, formerly known as the Licensing Industry Merchandiser's Association, and has served on the board of the Toy Industry Association, [23] as well as its charity foundation the Toy Industry Foundation. He is also on the board of the Florence Fuller Child Development Centers [24] and the Board of Trustees at the Pine Crest School. [25]
Foreman credits his grandfather Samuel Polack as his inspiration in business. A European immigrant who came to America in the early 1900s with his mother, Sam left school to work as a coal carrier on the railroad and a copy boy at a newspaper. He later worked as a coal miner in Pennsylvania, but left the coal mines during World War II to join the US Navy. After the war, Sam went to work for the United States Bureau of Mines where he developed products and procedures for mine safety. [26] He spent the second half of his career traveling coal country to educate miners and mine owners about new techniques in mine safety.
Foreman also credits his mother, Joyce, for inspiring him in work and ethics. Ms. Foreman started her career at the Rockwell Manufacturing Company in Pittsburgh, PA. After moving to New Jersey in the early 1960s and raising a family, she went back to work as a marketing executive at the Sperry & Hutchinson company, marketing S&H Green Stamps, and later at Citi Corp as VP of marketing for their industrial credit division.
Cabbage Patch Kids are a line of cloth dolls with plastic heads first produced by Coleco Industries in 1982. They were inspired by the Little People soft sculptured dolls sold by Xavier Roberts as collectibles. The brand was renamed 'Cabbage Patch Kids' by Roger L. Schlaifer when he acquired the exclusive worldwide licensing rights in 1982.
Hasbro, Inc. is an American multinational toy manufacturing and entertainment holding company founded on December 6, 1923 by Henry, Hillel and Herman Hassenfeld and is incorporated and headquartered in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Hasbro owns the trademarks and products of Kenner, Milton Bradley, Parker Brothers, and Wizards of the Coast, among others. As of August 2020, over 81.5% of its shares were held by large financial institutions.
Tonka is an American brand and former manufacturer of toy trucks. The company is known for making steel toy models of construction type trucks and machinery. Maisto International, which makes die-cast vehicles, acquired the rights to use the Tonka name in a line of 1:64 scale, featuring mostly trucks.
Lincoln Logs are an American children's construction toy consisting of square-notched miniature lightweight logs used to build small forts and buildings. They were invented around 1916 by John Lloyd Wright, second son of well-known architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Lincoln Logs were inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame in 1999. They are named after U.S. president Abraham Lincoln, who once lived in a log cabin.
K'Nex is a construction toy system founded by Joel Glickman. It was first introduced in America in 1992. K'Nex is designed and produced by K'Nex Industries Inc. of Hatfield, Pennsylvania. K'Nex was purchased by Florida-based company Basic Fun! in 2018.
Jakks Pacific, Inc. is an American company that designs and markets toys and consumer products, with a range of products that feature numerous children's toy licenses. The company is named after its founder, Jack Friedman, who had previously founded LJN and THQ and presided over the company until retiring as CEO and chairman after March 31, 2010, a month before his death on May 3, 2010.
Pound Puppies is a toy line that was created by Tonka in the 1980s. It later inspired an animated TV special, two animated TV series, and a feature film. Shipments of the toys over five years generated sales of $300 million in 35 countries. The brand generated more than $1 billion in retail sales by 2002.
Playskool is an American brand of educational toys and games for children. The former Playskool manufacturing company was a subsidiary of the Milton Bradley Company and was headquartered in Chicago, Illinois. Playskool's last remaining plant in the aforementioned city was shut down in 1984, and Playskool became a brand of Hasbro, which had acquired Milton Bradley that same year.
Lewis Galoob Toys, Inc., was a toy company headquartered in South San Francisco, California. They are best known for creating Micro Machines, which accounted for 50% of its sales in 1989, and distributing the Game Genie in the United States.
A celebrity doll is a doll modeled after a celebrity.
Play Along Toys was a Florida-based toy company, and a wholly owned division of Jakks Pacific.
The Spice Girls dolls are celebrity dolls based on the popular girl group the Spice Girls. They were released by Galoob Toys from 1997 to 1999. With sales of over 11 million, they are the best-selling celebrity dolls of all time.
Sindy is a British fashion doll created by Pedigree Dolls & Toys in 1963. A rival to Barbie, Sindy's look and range of fashions and accessories made her the best-selling toy in the United Kingdom in 1968 and 1970. After Marx Toys' unsuccessful attempt to introduce Sindy in the United States in the late 1970s, Hasbro bought the rights to Sindy and remodelled the doll to look more American. As a result, the doll's popularity declined; in addition, Barbie manufacturer Mattel filed a lawsuit for copyright infringement, which was settled when Hasbro agreed to remodel Sindy's face. During the 1990s, Barbie's share of the doll market continued to grow while Sindy's diminished, which led to Sindy being delisted from major retailers in 1997. Hasbro returned the doll's licence to Pedigree, and the doll was relaunched in 1999, manufactured by Vivid Imaginations. Sindy's 40th anniversary in 2003 saw a new manufacturer, New Moons, and another relaunch and redesign. There were further relaunches in 2016 by Tesco and in 2021 by Kid Kreations. There is a 60th anniversary Sindy doll which was launched at the end of 2023 to celebrate 60 years of Sindy.
Palitoy was a British toy company. It manufactured some of the most popular toys in Britain, some original items and others under licence. Its products included Action Man, Action Girl, Action Force, Tiny Tears, Pippa, Tressy, Mainline Model Railways, Merlin, Star Wars figures, Play-Doh and the Care Bears.
Spin Master Corp. is a Canadian multinational children's toy and entertainment company. Spin Master employs over 1,600 people globally with offices in Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Vietnam.
Strawberry Shortcake is a cartoon character used in greeting cards originally published by American Greetings. The line was later expanded to include dolls, posters, and other products featuring the character, as well as an extended cast of friends and pets. In addition, the franchise has spawned television specials, animated television series and films. The franchise is currently owned by the Canadian children's television company WildBrain through the holding company Shortcake IP Holdings LLC.
Vivid Imaginations is a British toy manufacturer, distributor and wholesale company, based in Guildford, Surrey.
WWE action figures are poseable action figures based on wrestlers and personalities of WWE. They are currently manufactured by Mattel and have formerly been manufactured by LJN, Jakks Pacific and Hasbro.
Jack Friedman was an American entrepreneur, businessman, veteran of the toy and video game industries, and a philanthropist. Regarded as an influential member in the toy and video game industries, Friedman founded the three toy companies LJN, THQ, and Jakks Pacific; LJN and THQ later switched focus to video games.
Jeremy Padawer is an American businessman, founder, animated television producer, and broadly recognized toy industry executive and entrepreneur. Padawer serves as Chief Brand Officer of Jazwares, a Berkshire Hathaway company. Prior to selling to Berkshire Hathaway (2022), Padawer's toy company Wicked Cool Toys was acquired by Jazwares and parent company Alleghany Corporation in 2019.
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