A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

This is the free for all area, live and unleashed, say what you like!
Post Reply
User avatar
hhfarang
Hero
Hero
Posts: 11060
Joined: Fri Mar 12, 2004 1:27 am
Location: North Carolina

A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by hhfarang »

I wasn't sure if this should go in regular news or here??? :shock: :roll:

Image

A new craze for life-size dolls is sweeping through Thailand and a low cost airline has been forced to draw up new guidance for staff on passengers bringing on board these dolls. The dolls, called look thep or Child's Angels have become fashionable in Thailand after several celebrities 'adopted' them in the belief that they bring good fortune.

The owners put the dolls through a ceremony to 'draw angels into them'. They take care of the dolls, which are the same size as infants, as they would real children, which includes cradling them, feeding and dressing them up.

The dolls can cost anywhere from 2,000 baht to 20,000 baht (£1.1 to £391; $55 to $556). The owners believe that the dolls hold children's spirits which bring them good luck, wealth, blessing and protection from harm. The Carbonated TV website said the dolls are believed to be possessed by the spirits of deceased children, who are invited to inhabit the doll through ancient rituals.

In a bid to avoid upsetting passengers who want their dolls to be treated as infants, Thai Airways' low cost carrier, Thai Smile Airways, is now giving passengers the option to buy an additional seat for the doll.

Those who do purchase an extra seat for their doll, will have all facilities and services accorded as if a real child is travelling with them. This means, snacks and drinks will be served to the dolls and seatbelts must be fastened during take-off and landing.

The airline issued a statement to explain the guidance issued, noting that it was an internal document for staff. It explained that more than 40 passengers had brought their Child's Angel on board over the past two or three months and there was a growing need to issue guidelines for cabin crew staff to deal with the situation.

The airline noted that some passengers were unhappy when cabin crew members placed their dolls on the overhead compartments or under the seats for safety reasons. The guidance therefore outlines procedures for its staff treat the dolls respectfully but at the same time sticking to the airline's safety requirements.

Thai Smile Chief Executive Officer Woranate Laprabang said that most passengers with the dolls place them on their laps or strapped them on seats next to them, as they believe that the dolls are valuable. This practice, he said, may obstruct or disturb other passengers on board.

He said these dolls can be placed on seats if they are unoccupied but they must have seat belts fastened to prevent them from being flung around in the event of turbulence. For passengers who choose not to purchase an additional ticket for their dolls, they will be treated as carry-on baggage and will have to weigh not more than 7kg.

Chula Sukmanop, the director of the Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand said a meeting of all Thai-registered airlines and airport operators will be convened in a few days to discuss standard procedures to handle passengers with Child Angel dolls. "Without a standard, if passengers carry on look thep dolls aboard airplanes and cause a problem or unexpected incident in the way that affects air safety, that may affect efforts to solve the red flag and significant security concern of the International Civil Aviation Organisation."

The new trend has even prompted several restaurants in Bangkok to offer children's meals to the dolls."

http://www.businessinsider.com/bizarre- ... ?r=UK&IR=T
My brain is like an Internet browser; 12 tabs are open and 5 of them are not responding, there's a GIF playing in an endless loop,... and where is that annoying music coming from?
User avatar
buksida
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 22641
Joined: Tue Dec 31, 2002 12:25 pm
Location: south of sanity

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by buksida »

As if those stupid rat-dogs that the hisos carry into restaurants weren't enough ...

Thai airline now serves ‘child angel’ doll passengers food and drink
https://asiancorrespondent.com/2016/01/ ... look-thep/
Who is the happier man, he who has braved the storm of life and lived or he who has stayed securely on shore and merely existed? - Hunter S Thompson
User avatar
migrant
Addict
Addict
Posts: 5865
Joined: Tue Aug 08, 2006 6:15 am
Location: California is now in the past hello Thailand!!

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by migrant »

Why do those things weird me out so bad??!!
The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.
User avatar
StevePIraq
Rock Star
Rock Star
Posts: 3043
Joined: Sat Jun 28, 2008 1:21 pm
Location: Ting Tong Land

Only In Ting Tong Land - Lucky Thai dolls 'non-human' says aviation authority

Post by StevePIraq »

You can only laugh. :cheers: :lach: :lach:

Lucky Thai dolls 'non-human' says aviation authority

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/offbeat/l ... md#image=1

Thailand's air safety body warned passengers Wednesday that lucky "child angel" dolls cannot be considered real people and must be properly stowed before take-off and landing.

The unusual clarification from the Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand (CAAT) came in response to the latest superstitious craze sweeping the kingdom, where Thais are pampering lifelike dolls that are believed to contain the spirit of a real child hoping it will bring them good luck.

Known in Thai as "luuk thep" (child angels), the pricey dolls, which can cost up to $600, were first popularised by celebrities who claimed dressing up and feeding the dolls had brought them professional success.

Continued
"Live everyday as if it were your last because someday you're going to be right." Muhammad Ali
HHTel
Hero
Hero
Posts: 10842
Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 7:44 pm

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by HHTel »

Just wait until they all join forces. The 'Chucky' invasion!
User avatar
Big Boy
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 45264
Joined: Fri Nov 04, 2005 7:36 pm
Location: Bon Kai

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by Big Boy »

OMG, they're discussing them on Channel 3 as I type. How pathetic. Somebody is making a fortune out of these mugs.
Championship Plymouth Argyle 1 - 0 Leicester City :dance: :dance: :dance: :dance:

Points 48; Position 18
HHTel
Hero
Hero
Posts: 10842
Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 7:44 pm

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by HHTel »

And it's not the Thai's making money ------ it's the Chinese exploiting the superstitions of the Thai's.
HHTel
Hero
Hero
Posts: 10842
Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 7:44 pm

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by HHTel »

My local restaurant have had a notice outside for a long time stating 'No cats, No dogs, No pets of any kind'. They have added 'No Angel Dolls'
User avatar
hhfarang
Hero
Hero
Posts: 11060
Joined: Fri Mar 12, 2004 1:27 am
Location: North Carolina

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by hhfarang »

"Lucky or Chucky? Thai spirit dolls delight and disturb"

Image

Driving to a Buddhist temple on the northern fringes of Bangkok, beauty salon owner Natsuda Jantaptim is running through her youngest daughter's likes and dislikes.

"We sleep in the same bed together, she has her own pillow and blankets," she told AFP, her daughter sitting quietly in the front passenger seat.

"We didn't switch the air-con on two nights ago because she was cold. In the morning, she likes to drink strawberry milk," she added.

On first reckoning, it sounds like the everyday observations of a dedicated mother.

Except the daughter Natsuda refers to isn't real. Certainly not in the living, breathing flesh and blood sense.

She is a meticulously groomed plastic doll, part of the latest celebrity-fuelled superstitious craze that has swept the country -- much to the dismay of the kingdom's conservative military rulers.

Known in Thai as "luuk thep" (child angels), the pricey dolls, which can cost up to $600, were first popularised a little over a year ago by celebrities who claimed dressing up and feeding the dolls had brought them professional success.

Believers say the dolls -- many of which are blessed and have sacred scripts drawn on them by a monk -- contain the spirit of a real child and must be treated as a living being.

The theory runs that those who look after their dolls like members of the family will see good fortune returned to them.

As a result, plastic dolls are now taking their seats at restaurant tables, cinemas and even on airplanes.

Natsuda, 45, lives with her very real 21-year-old daughter.

But that has not dimmed her affection for the doll, auspiciously named 'Ruay Jang' (So Rich).

"Since I got 'Ruay Jang' my life has really changed. For example I won the lottery which I had never won before," she explained.

After praying for help from her doll, she added, a friend paid back a significant loan after years of fruitless efforts to chase it down.

Asked what she would say to those who think her credulous she replied: "It's a personal belief, I cannot blame those who don't believe in it but I believe in what I worship."

In many ways Thailand's child angel craze is simply the latest manifestation of a deeply superstitious society that places enormous emphasis on warding away bad luck and making good merit.

More than 90 percent of Thais identify themselves as Buddhist. But the country's Buddhism is known for its syncretism, comfortably blending many animist and Hindu traditions into daily worship.

Many Thais fervently believe in good and malevolent spirits -- and that offerings or the latest lucky charm will ward off bad karma.

In the late 2000s a style of large amulet became the latest "must have" item -- often selling for thousands of dollars each -- following the death of a popular police officer who claimed the charms helped him solve a murder case.

The luuk thep craze appears to have divided Thais.

Some see it as a natural extension of their merit-making traditions while others deride it as a commercial ruse and symbol of the dumbing down of Buddhism.

"I freak out sometimes when I see them on the train," admitted Lakkhana Ole, a 31-year-old graphic designer from Bangkok who says she spots dolls increasingly often around the city.

A poll this week by Bangkok's Suan Dusit Rajabhat University found two-thirds of Thais saw the dolls as something positive if it gave them direction or helped alleviate loneliness.

But the same poll also found that 72 percent of respondents dismissed them as the hocus-pocus of overly superstitious people.

"It reflects that society is perverse," Phra Buddha Issara, a conservative nationalist monk, famous for his fiery denunciations of commercialism with mainstream Thai Buddhism told AFP.

"If you're lonely... you can just go out and talk to your neighbours, interact more with others, do good things for public, help the blind, sweep floors or grow plants," he added.

Asked if he would he bless someone's doll he replied: "The only thing they would receive from me is: 'Damn you, you idiot."

Issara's criticism has been matched by Thailand's justice minister, a former general, and the country's top police officer, both of whom have publicly fretted that the craze is getting out of control.

Phra Ajarn Supachai, a monk in Nonthaburi's Bangchak temple has no such qualms. He regularly conducts prayer sessions for luuk thep dolls and their owners -- for a donation.

"People began turning up with the dolls about three years ago," he told AFP. "Now we get around ten people a week."

Natsuda's friend Mae Ning is a regular. Last week she took Natsuda to chant prayers as the saffron-robed Supachai anointed all those present, dolls included, with a stick soaked in sacred water.

Mae Ning, an avid collector and trader in luuk thep dolls, believes many Thais are looking for comfort in uncertain times.

"Some people are stressed about Thailand's bad economy, its politics, their jobs and finances, so they want something to attach to," she explained.

"When people have the dolls, they feel that they are happy just like they are in another world."

Natsuda, admits many find her attachment to Ruay Jang unusual.

"But honestly I don't care because what I do doesn't cause anyone trouble," she said."

https://news.yahoo.com/lucky-chucky-tha ... 40701.html
My brain is like an Internet browser; 12 tabs are open and 5 of them are not responding, there's a GIF playing in an endless loop,... and where is that annoying music coming from?
VincentD
Ace
Ace
Posts: 1487
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2004 4:04 pm
Location: Bangkok

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by VincentD »

Wonder if the rules would also change if you were travelling with an 'anatomically correct' doll?
Won't post the website but it seems they are quite popular in Japan...
วินเชนท์
U.Kvarme
Amateur
Amateur
Posts: 38
Joined: Mon Jan 18, 2016 11:23 pm

Re: A bizarre trend for life-size dolls in Thailand is forcing airlines to adopt new rules

Post by U.Kvarme »

As Thai (again), I do believe in good karma and don't believe in such a thing like this spirit doll. When people really need to have a good life and wealth, they have to work hard and work smart. If they need real love, they have to learn how to give love first...That's it!!
Post Reply