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Jenna Ortega warns fans about mistreating ‘Wednesday’ dolls in new TikTok trend

Recent videos have shown people coming across dolls of Ortega’s character in the hit Netflix series that are being sold in stores, and turning their hair behind their head so the dolls look like they are bald.In one video, there are over a dozen Wednesday Addams dolls sitting on a display in a store after being turned bald.At least one store even had to put up a sign that says, “Do not flip Wednesday’s hair, you will be asked to leave.”Ortega, 22, eventually spoke out about the viral trend by commenting on one of the TikToks.“Please don’t,” the actress wrote.However, most fans were amused over the trend.“WHY ARE THEY SO MAD ITS SO FUNNY,” one TikToker wrote.“It’s never that serious,” another person said. Someone else wrote, “Now that’s too far, getting kicked out for making her bald????”“But why do they even care that much,” a fourth comment read.Even brands like Uno, Vitamin Water, Fanta, Rice Krispies Treats, Play-Doh and La Roche Posay got a kick out of the viral trend.“The way the dolls look like they are over it too,” La Roche Posay commented.“Wednesday” premiered on Netflix in Nov.
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Tim Burton’s ‘Wednesday’ Series, Starring Jenna Ortega, Sets Netflix Release Date
Jordan Moreau Thanksgiving is the new Halloween. Tim Burton and Netflix’s upcoming “Wednesday” series, the “Addams Family” spinoff starring Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams, has gotten a release date. “Wednesday” will premiere all of its episodes on Nov. 23 — which happens to be the Wednesday before Thanksgiving.Wednesday premieres November 23! Snap, snap. pic.twitter.com/Ejwn9U5Sl9 In the series, Wednesday attends Nevermore Academy, where she attempts to master her new psychic abilities and solve a murder mystery connected to her family’s past. “Wednesday is currently a teenager, and we’ve never seen her as a teenager before,” Ortega said in a statement. “Her snarky, snide remarks might not necessarily sound as charming when they’re coming from somebody who should probably know better than a 10-year-old girl. That was a balancing act. We didn’t want to make her sound like every other teenage girl, but we also didn’t want to make her too ignorant. And we’ve never seen her on screen this much. Any other time you’ve seen Wednesday, she’s been the one-liner, the end of a joke, she always hits it, and I think that’s what people really love about her. But in this show, every scene is Wednesday. There’s an opportunity to give her a bit more dimension, and she becomes a bit more of a real person, which I don’t think we’ve ever seen before.”
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