Are Some Halloween Kid Costumes Too Risque or Too Gory?

Forget the ghosts and goblins of Halloweens past.

This Halloween season, the scariest thing for parents may be the costumes your children are wearing.

The pumpkin and princess costumes once deemed as "cute" are today sexy and salacious, complete with halter tops, miniskirts and bare midriffs, and are perhaps the scariest thing parents have to contend with.

One item on the aisles of costume stores this year is a chamber maid costume -- for a 6-year-old.

"Good Morning America" showed bloggers from the website Moms & the City some of the costumes we found marketed to tweens and little girls this year to see what they thought.

As with manyparenting topics, their opinions were divided.

"I have two little girls, ages 6 and 2, and my little girls would never walk around in that costume," mom blogger Melissa Gerstein said of a "Wonder Woman" costume that included tights and a leotard. "That's an adult costume being marketed to children. I have a problem with that."

"Oh please," countered Gerstein's fellow mom blogger, Denise Albert. "It's Halloween. This is the time that our kids get to play dress up and put on these amazing costumes."

One of this year's strongest-selling costumes, the "Monster High" costume from toy maker Mattel, sparked a similar disagreement between the two moms.

"I don't love it," said Gerstein. "I think it's too risque. Let them dress as Dora. Let them dress as Mickey Mouse."

"This gives them options," countered Albert, who said that kids should be allowed to be different. "I think we are now programmed to overthink and overanalyze all these things. It's a cute costume."

This year's Halloween costumes have parents debating not just whether they're too revealing for young girls but also wondering whether they've become too gory, with kids taking a cues from horror movies like "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre."

Joel Schwartzberg, the father of a 12-year-old boy and twin 9-year-old girls, was so incredulous at the terrifying looks of costumes meant for kids that he created a website called TooScaryCostumes.com.

"With this mask in the movie, the character took the skin off his victims and created his own mask," Schwartzberg said of the "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" costume. "So you have kids wearing a mask that depicts human skin."

"It's really desensitizing them to violence," he said,explaining why he believes children too young to see horror movies should not be allowed to wear the costumes either. "I believe they come to a place where they believe such things are normal, and their standard for what's right and wrong, their values, starts to dip."

Pointing to a zombie doctor costume in particular, Scwhartzberg argued there is no way gory costumes do not have an effect on kids.

"Dressing yourself up in that costume, becoming that character and assuming that role of someone who kills, who mames, who tortures, I have to think it has an effect," he said.

Standing up for the new breed of Halloween costumes are, unsurprisingly, the merchants who sell them, and the companies that put them on the market to begin with.

Jason Sandlofer is director of operations for Ricky's, a costume shop in New York City.

"It's harmless," he told "GMA" of the scary costumes on his store's shelves. "When I was a child I wanted to be a ghost or a monster or Frankenstein. It's something they don't get to do every day and it's a time for them to express themselves, to be their alter ego."

Mattel, the maker of the "Monster High" costume issued this statement to "GMA":

"Adults bring a different lens of mature notions and experiences that children simply do not possess. Girls see the Monster High characters for who they are – fun, funny and relatable characters whose monster features and heritage speak to a universal truth – everyone has days when they feel like a monster and that they do not fit in. The brand's message to celebrate your unique differences has made the Monster High characters and their costumes popular with tween girls."

Click here to return to the "Good Morning America" website.

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18 comments

  • Derek  •  Omaha, Nebraska  •  2 months ago
    The sexy costumes do bother me some but who am I to question other parents. Thats what freedom of choice is. The horror costumes can be disturbing to some, but it's all in the education of the situation. My kids have loved horror movies since they were little. They understand that it's all fake and that it's not proper to behave that way in society. They are honor students who volenteer. It's not that big of a deal.
  • Peepers  •  6 months ago
    speak with your wallet people! If you don't like it, don't buy it! Parents are the issue. Be a parent and say NO. If the market for the truely offensive kid's costumes goes away, the stores will not stock those in the future. Our school does not allow kids to bring toy weapons, and the principal usually sends a note home reminding parents to put some thought into the appropriateness of the costume they get for their child to wear to school-- that seems like enough censorship to me. Ultimately, he leaves it up to The Parents'---amen!
    • Miranda 6 months ago
      I SOOOO TOTALLY AGREE
  • Lea  •  6 months ago
    Sexualizing children in any way is sick.
  • MarcD  •  6 months ago
    Tights and a leotard. Horrors. Someone has a problem with that. So why don't they have a problem with that in dance class? Oh, they DO? Well, GET OVER IT! I'm the one who decides what's proper for my kid, not you. Everyone knows what best for everyone ELSE'S kid. Devote more of that excess energy to your own kid, because yours is the one that's knocked up at 14, or on drugs, or serving probation for theft...
  • Steven S  •  6 months ago
    Ok, I understand the concern with the "french maid" outfits and such. Definitely inappropriate, not just because of the appearance of the outfit, but because of the mentality behind the outfit. That said, what is the problem with the Wonder Woman outfit? It shows less than the age-appropriate swimsuits do, and Princess Diana of Paradise Island is hardly a sex-related character. I mean, a ballerina or gymnast outfit would show the same amount or more skin, and people would have no problems with those, because they are not sexual in nature. Neither is Wonder Woman, unless you are an utter perv, in which case you shouldn't be around kids in the first place.
  • Adam12  •  6 months ago
    It is not a holiday. But I do agree with KERI that costumes get out of hand with adolescences. Where are the responsible parents of these children? Some parents and I do mean SOME have no business populating the gene pool. Out of control kids of radical parents with no morals or common sense. That's the American way these days.
    • MarcD 6 months ago
      Not for you to say. I may not like the way you raise YOUR kids. Would that give me the right or authority to override YOUR decisions for them?
    • Steven S 6 months ago
      Umm... yes, Halloween aka All Hallows Eve aka Samhain *is* by definition a holiday (root: holy day). A number of religions and religious sects consider it a holy day. Others put the holy day on November 1. Some recognize both.
  • Samantha  •  6 months ago
    This is ridiculous. It's HALLOWEEN! Parents now a days want all of their kids in a bubble. GEEZE let the kids grow up. Tere was recently an article that they are making playgrounds to "safe" meaning there is nothing challenging for kids to do on them. No monkey bars, nothing to climb where you actually have to reach for the goal. My 3 year old god daughter and I were recently at a playgroud and she made it up the rope ladder all alone and she was so proud of herself and she kept doing it because she faught her fear. Everyone now overanazlyes everything. Do you really think your 6 year old is going to get the Wonder Woman costume and think "Oh I'm sexy now so all the boys will be looking at me" No she thinks its fun. And if you're worried about other people thinking shes sexy well #1 maybe you need to move #2 if you do have a pervert around like that they will think that in that costume or in regular clothes. I grew up on all the scary movies, I've always been allowed to watch them with my parents and if I thought it was to scary I left the room. It taught me 2 things, that I like paranormal movies but not bloody ones and that being afraid of the dark is silly. Guess what...I'm not a wierdo, I didn't bring a gun to any of my schools, I hate video games except Mario Kart and I've done very well in my life. 22 years old and a manager at a major natural gas company and still in school at night. Let your childen explore a little atleast on Halloween.
    • smitty 6 months ago
      I agree this article is way conservative when it comes to childrens costumes. But I don't believe a 6 year old in a promiscious costume is appropriate. What would be the point in wearing such a small tight costume, like the wonderwoman one, other then to look sexually appealing? You can buy your child a wonder woman costume and have it be less revealing. Do you really wanna see little kids walking around like street walkers, or don't they atleast get to enjoy their childhood?
  • The Real Deep Throat  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
    I was going to go as Napolitano but I couldn't look stoned long enough.
    • Steven S 6 months ago
      You know, I was just thinking to myself the other day "what this thread needs is a spammy political troll to liven it up". Thanks. /sarcasm
  • The Real Deep Throat  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
    I was going to go as a czar but out of the 40 something different ones I couldn't decide.
  • The Real Deep Throat  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
    I was going to go as the village idiot but Biden already had it.
  • The Real Deep Throat  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
    I was going to go as an illegal alien but obama already had it.
  • The Real Deep Throat  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
    I was going to go as a gun runner but Holder already had it.
  • The Real Deep Throat  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
    I was going to go as a tax cheat but Turbo Tim already had it.
  • The Real Deep Throat  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
    I was going to go as a silverback but "me"chelle already had it.
  • goodgrief  •  6 months ago
    Nope, wouldn't buy any of them. But then, we use our imaginations & make our own. Use some common sense people.
  • Keri  •  6 months ago
    Just saw this segment on GMA and had to come comment. I am so glad this was discussed today! We have to start taking more responsibility for our kids and the ideas to which we expose them. Halloween is a great, fun holiday, but I do agree the costumes can quickly get out of hand. Thanks for sharing this today!!
    • MarcD 6 months ago
      When 9 year olds start wearing Madonna stage costumes, MAYBE you might have reason to be concerned.
  • smitty  •  6 months ago
    I don't like the fact of little girls running around in skimpy costumes, ill agree with that. But whats wrong with the kids wearing a scary costume? It's Halloween. It's about being scary! If you don't want your kid seeing the scary costumes, then keep your kid inside. My 5 year old nephew is gonna carry a fake knife and be Michael Myers, don't want your wimpy child to be afraid? Keep em indoors.
  • Miranda  •  6 months ago
    not only are the costumes like that but also there every day clothes i have 2 daughter both who are 9 and the clothes that i see are disgusting if i ever wore clothes like that when i was a kid my mother would of had a heart attack if parents dont buy the clothes or in this instance costumes than hopefully the manufactures wont continue to make the clothes that they make as an adult i dont even wear revealing clothes and i dont expect my 9 year old daughters to do it either IT IS SICKENING