Yearly Archives: 2006

Quincy’s Escape from New York

Check it out, a LEGO Kurt Russell:

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Hatena-gumi

Name: Hatena-gumi
Occupation: Charitable organization.
Interests: Security, international trade, banking, real estate, shipping, pharmaceuticals, construction, heavy industry, government, agriculture.

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BaitoHELL

In Japanese, the word for “part-time job” is arubaito, which comes from the German word for “work,” arbeit. Arubaito is often shortened to baito. There’s a Japanese PSP game called “Beit Heller 2000,” which apparently includes a minigame called “Ballpoint Factory.”

This guy has figured out an ingenious method of getting the high score:

Click the image to view the full series of hilarious pictures. Thanks to mumu for finding this!

(Yes, this is LEGO-related!)

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Giancarlo Verrecchia

Name: Giancarlo Verrecchia
Occupation: Taxi driver in Rome.
Interests: Freestyle skiing. Winning a gold medal in the Torino 2006 Olympics. Viva Italia!

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Melinda Tottinghouse

Name: Melinda Tottinghouse
Occupation: Debutante.
Interests: Ponies. Show-jumping. Sparkly things. Unicorns. Rainbows. And uh, debuting? (Sheesh, I have no idea what a debutante’s interests are!)

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MisterZumbi’s LEGO Unimog

One of my favorite vehicles is the Mercedes Unimog. I’ve seen two of them in real-life. One was in Nagano Prefecture, in Japan. That one was all tricked out for Arctic explorations or something (it was white and it had lots of compartments; I was ten; I made assumptions). The other one was on the Microsoft campus when I interviewed there back in 2001. It was dark green and orange (hand-painted, for some reason — very distinctive). I saw it again at the apartment complex we lived in a few months later.

Aaaaanyway, Brickshelf user MisterZumbi has made a really cool LEGO Unimog:

It looks a lot like the one I saw at Microsoft. Given how many configurations this vehicle is available in, how coincidental is that?

Note how he used the steering wheel as the Mercedes symbol. Very nice.

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Non-LEGO Blogs

It seems that everybody has a blog these days. Last summer, I set up a placeholder blog in case I felt like blogging about my dogs. I haven’t, but my wife does, so she’ll be taking over PB and Jo.

Three writer friends also have blogs — none of them about writing. AikiThoughts presents musings on Aikido; Foggy Terrain chronicles a life with fibromyalgia; and Postcards from China documents travels (and adventures) in China.

My friend and coworker Sky, who Photoshopped the header for this blog and PPB, just launched BAM!!! NINJAS!. If you’re a gamer, tech junkie, or you just like cool things (like ninjas!), head on over there and check it out.

I’ve added all of these blogs to a new “Everybody Has a Blog” section on the right, but I’d be remiss in my blogging duties if I didn’t highlight a couple other non-LEGO blogs while I’m at it. If you’re interested in language and linguistics, check out Language Log. For political commentary, head on over to The Blog From Another Dimension. If you have a soul, you’ll fall in love with Cute Overload! and Adorablog.

That is all. Now, back to our regularly scheduled LEGO programming.

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Brett Carmichael

Name: Brett Carmichael
Occupation: Daredevil.
Interests: Strapping himself to rockets! Crawling on the outside of an F-18 fighter jet! Jumping between helicopters! Outrunning a freight train in a tunnel! Leaping tall buildings in a hot rod! Riding to the grocery store on a motorcycle!

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Van Force Pictures and Instructions from gabriel

Ask and ye shall receive! In my recent post on the alternate Exo-Force design by anime director and mecha designer Shoji Kawamori, I asked if any Japanese LEGO fans knew of any better pictures of a completed Van Force mecha.

Azumu (of LEGO-BINGO, who it seems is much more consistent about checking Brickshelf than I am) responded:

Regarding instructions for Kawamura-sensei’s “Van Force,” gabriel-san customized the model a bit and uploaded them:
http://brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=161353
There were a few places in the magazine that were hard to figure out, so it’s not a complete recreation, but I think it’s pretty much complete.

Thanks Azumu-san! So without further ado, here’s a bigger picture of Van Force:

Click the image (or the link Azumu-san provided) for the full gallery, complete with step-by-step building instructions! Awesome.

Oh, and those aren’t custom decals. Japanese LEGO specialty store Click-Brick handed out Van Force sticker sheets with the purchase of any Exo-Force set. Since The LEGO Company worked with Mr. Kawamori to design Van Force, I believe the sticker sheet is “official.”

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Jacko, a Tramp, and a Monk by Michael Jasper

Another update to Michael Jasper’s Characters gallery:

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Girls’ Day Vignette by Nelson Yrizarry

The name Nelson Yrizarry should be familar to regular readers of VignetteBricks and LUGNET (as well as The Brothers Brick). He and his brother Patrick are well-respected members of the LEGO community, and their creations are admired by LEGO fans everywhere. One of Nelson’s latest vignettes features a distinctly Japanese theme — the Hina Matsuri or Girls’ Day Festival.

Here’s what Nelson has to say:

In this MOC, a family gathers to celebrate the day with the pounding of mochi (rice cakes) in the traditional style – hammering it inside a large stone bowl. For those who have never seen this before, one person wets their hands and reaches into the bowl between hammer blows to fold the mochi over – timing is crucial! Everyone else helps to roll the mochi into smaller pieces.

A hina-ningyo doll is on display inside the house, along with something else… Don’t forget to enjoy the cherry blossoms!

Click the image to see the full gallery.

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Japanese Proverb Vignettes “Ra” through “Wa”

Today we’ll wrap up translations of Izzo’s series of Japanese proverb vignettes. I’ve said before that he’s presenting them in hiragana order, which means he created a LEGO vignette for each kana character in the Japanese syllabic alphabet. Some of you may be expecting 50 vignettes, but there are only 44. Let’s have one last Japanese lesson to explain why.

The Japanese alphabet, or Gojuon, is represented in two scripts (or kana), hiragana and katakana. Goju means “fifty,” and on means sound, implying that there are fifty kana in the Gojuon. Children memorize the Gojuon in tables. There are ten columns of five kana each. The first column contains the vowels; the next nine contain consonants combined with those vowels (plus an N sound in its own eleventh column that nobody counts). However, the “Ya” column includes two duplicate vowels, and the “Wa” column includes another duplicate vowel, two archaic kana (unused in modern writing), and the vowel “Wo” that never begins a word. Thus 44 instead of 50.

(Now combine hiragana with their corresponding katakana forms, Latin letters and numbers, and nearly 2,000 Kanji characters derived from Chinese — each with multiple possible readings depending on context, and you get an idea of how complex the Japanese written language is.)

Now, on to the final batch of Izzo’s vignettes:

Japanese: The seed of pleasure is pain; the seed of pain is pleasure.
English: No pain, no gain.

Japanese: A flower in each hand.
English: Have one’s bread buttered on both sides.

Japanese/English: Like attracts like.

Japanese/English: There’s an exception to every rule.

Japanese: Evidence instead of discourse.
English: The proof of the pudding is in the eating.

Japanese/English: Fortune enters by a merry gate.

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