Hello Kitty arrived on the scene rather unremarkably, in 1975: a white cat with a red bow and an expressionless face, printed on a vinyl coin purse.
Nearly half-a-century later, the world is awash in Hello Kitty merch.
Pretty much any item you can think of — swivel chairs, Adidas sneakers, catnip planters, what I initially mistook as a Hello Kitty pregnancy test but was actually Hello Kitty earbuds — has a version emblazoned with Japan's most iconic cartoon character.
So it's no surprise that Hello Kitty has her own Cafe Truck, which will be parked near Ridgedale Center's Cheesecake Factory this Saturday,between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
The menu is minimal: macarons, madeleines, giant cookies are apparently Hello Kitty's version of Fancy Feast. But the limited-edition merchandise is far more extensive, including hoodies, lunchboxes, thermoses, canvas totes, enamel pins, and cup plushes (whatever those are).
The fact that Hello Kitty trucks have been roving the country since 2014 is a testament to her enduring appeal.
And it begs the question: Why has Hello Kitty stayed so popular as other Gen-X cuties — Cabbage Patch Kids, Beanie Babies — flashed in the pan, their influence as faded as film-camera prints?