The Piñata Factory, 640 N Stone Ave., in ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥, Ariz. sells COVID-19 inspired piñatas with angry eyes.

COVID-19 has stolen a lot from us in the last year, but local party shops are turning the tables.

A number of ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ stores are sellingÌýpiñatas shaped like the coronavirusÌý— which means you can grab a baseball bat and whack the heck out of the spiky ball we've all come to hate.

After receiving several requests for COVID-19ÌýpiñatasÌý(whichÌý), Danita Miller, owner of long-time local shop Party Carousel, recently placed an order for them.

She hopes to get theÌýpiñatas in by the beginning of May.

"I've had people ask for them and I kept thinking I would get them," Miller says. "And now that people are starting to go out and have a little bit more events than they were —Ìýbecause a lot of people are vaccinatedÌý— I thought, well, they're going to start having parties to celebrate that they can be together.

"And this is something that they want to hitÌý— COVID," she says.

Miller started Party Carousel 44 years ago with her husband Bob Miller, who recently died after contracting COVID-19 while in the hospital for knee surgery.

"We had college degrees, but not in the party business. We just both enjoy decorating for the holidays and were very into colors and everything, so we went looking at what we should do," Miller says. "We came up with this idea that ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ needed a party store 44 years ago —Ìýand it did."

Miller says she and her husband started from the ground up, and although many things have changed since thenÌý— including the rise of the internet and the emergence of big box storesÌý— Miller says she's "still doing the same things I've always done."

"I'm a small store, family-owned, and very hands on with every customer that comes in," she says.

Miller says business was very slow last year, but the pace is starting to pick up again.

"It is coming back," she says. "You can tell with all the traffic out there now that people are definitely out and about and coming to life."

"People do want to start getting together again and sometimes they just — maybe they don't have a birthday or an anniversary, they just decide, 'I’m just going to get the group together and we’re going to have some fun and hit this COVID-19 ball,'" Miller says.

The Piñata Factory, 640 N Stone Ave., in ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥, Ariz. sells COVID-19 inspired piñatas on April 22, 2021.

And over the last year, ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ drivers may have seen the infamous spiky COVID-19Ìýball hanging in the parking lot of another local shop:ÌýPiñata Factory, .

AtÌýPiñata Factory, Tito Torres makes 10 to 15 — or sometimes even 20Ìý—ÌýCOVID-19Ìýpiñatas every week.

Torres started making theÌýpiñatas because customers started asking for them about a year ago near the beginning of the pandemic.

"I imagine that people don't like the virus and they want to beat it," Torres says.

When the pandemic first hit,ÌýPiñata Factory closed for about a month and business picked up slowly after that.

By fall, "people started coming in," Torres says, adding that business has been steady since.

Torres says Piñata Factory has served ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ for about 16 years.

Five local places you can get a COVID-19Ìýpiñata:

Make sure to call ahead of time, as some shops need time to order or make the piñatas in advance.Ìý

Party Carousel —Ìý,Ìý327-1945

Piñata FactoryÌý—Ìý,Ìý495-0920

Sweet Palace PiñatasÌý—Ìý,Ìý408-2442, Ìý

Desert Jumping CastlesÌý—Ìý,Ìý405-0409,Ìý

Grandiosa TentacionÌý— ,Ìý704-1405,


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ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ reporter Stephanie Casanova contributed to this story.