tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post3948602282664543653..comments2024-02-03T06:01:51.760-08:00Comments on #StuckInPlastic: Parental Advice: LEGO inside.Me2http://www.blogger.com/profile/00876209562167060846noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post-4068083494690761012022-09-13T14:33:38.620-07:002022-09-13T14:33:38.620-07:00Hi ,
Ryan Axel.
I am a huge fan of your site (http...Hi ,<br />Ryan Axel.<br />I am a huge fan of your site (http://theoldblog.stuckinplastic.com/) and have really been enjoying your<br />writings.<br />I’m not here to waste your precious time, instead, I have some new post ideas<br />that your readers would certainly love to read. And, I was wondering if you’d be<br />open to a guest blog post.<br /><a href="https://kamalifestyles.com/products/get-her-crazy-in-bed/" rel="nofollow"> Get Her Crazy in Bed</a>Ryan Axelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16199605639950060839noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post-1009790306342973172022-09-13T14:21:11.859-07:002022-09-13T14:21:11.859-07:00Hi,
I'm (Shop Volga Hair).
This blog is very i...Hi,<br />I'm (Shop Volga Hair).<br />This blog is very informative to me.<br />I came through your website(http://theoldblog.stuckinplastic.com/) this morning while researching for<br />a (Parental Advice: LEGO inside.<br />).<br />And, I must admit – it’s great.<br />Thanks for sharing your experience.<br /><a href="https://shopvolgahair.com/" rel="nofollow"> Shop Volga Hair</a>Pure Marthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15787728844796412253noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post-2606101214078796182014-11-26T14:10:03.341-08:002014-11-26T14:10:03.341-08:00Would be an honour, if you'd ever do...Would be an honour, if you'd ever do...Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post-33605808656844622482014-11-26T12:48:47.846-08:002014-11-26T12:48:47.846-08:00So true. Spaceships and dollhouses alike :)So true. Spaceships and dollhouses alike :)Me2https://www.blogger.com/profile/00876209562167060846noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post-57217428793068595302014-11-26T12:47:21.774-08:002014-11-26T12:47:21.774-08:00Wauw.
Impressive walkthrough of the history of th...Wauw. <br />Impressive walkthrough of the history of the minifig.<br />You mind if I move this from comments to a full blown post ?Me2https://www.blogger.com/profile/00876209562167060846noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post-70778710255130475862014-11-26T04:52:27.229-08:002014-11-26T04:52:27.229-08:00I believe that the Lego Group are also dealing wit...I believe that the Lego Group are also dealing with the same concern everyday, from a commercial point of view since their target sales heavily relies on the answer(s) to this question.<br /><br />Since Lego produced the ancestors of today’s modern minifigures back in 1978, they used almost no features to distinguish the characters, rather than those basic hats for the stereotype male and ponytail hair for his female counterpart. They had identically smiling faces with black button eyes, and their skin color was chosen yellow on purpose so that it does not reflect any racial difference. (Note that only a decade back, the people were being killed on streets of US depending on their skin color. –maybe not very different than today..) This may be considered a very clever move for the company for many coming years.<br /><br />But things started to change with the first Pirates theme (one of my all time favourites) released back in 1989. The figs were still those yellow guys (and a few gals) but since you could not think of any pirates without eyepatches and long beards (mascular reference, again), the faces began to change. The expression on their face was still that same euphoric smile, but now the men had beards and moustaches while the first female fig with lipsticks came into ranks. In a few years, they would start to differ in terms of facial expressions and this would spread in nearly all Lego themes, Castle and Town to just name a few.<br /><br />But the female population were still short in number according to men. Think of all those knights, henchmen, cavalary, pirates and soldiers.. This was not a world for cute ladies! Except of course, the unmistakable “Maiden” of Castle series, the female forest ranger and the female pirate. You will see that these are still amongst the highest priced figs on the web if you can find them in good shape. <br /><br />Even the Western series did not attempt to change the iconic yellow skin color in 1996 when they introduced the Indians (natives of America, not that of India) But in time, another iconic property of all figs would start to differ: Their age! Those tiny people were ageless for a long time, and now they started to show their experience of life with white hair and likes, while we were about to see the first children characters with shorter and unmovable leg parts in the coming years.<br /><br />Yet, as always, what changed the game was again the commercial concerns. In 2003, Lego Group decided to release the NBA star players theme, an officially licenced one. Now we had figs that resembled the real players, and they had to introduce new skin colors to manage that. (Btw, need one of those heads to make my Bob Marley fig!) After that, Lego Group spread into many officially licenced themes ranging from Super Heroes to the Lord of the Rings, and inevitably new tones of colors spread amongst the figs, reflecting the variety of humanbeings in real life.<br /><br />However, the subject was the gender inequality of minifigs, wasn’t it? The introduction of Collectable Series, which took many of us AFOLs back in the game, used the opportunity to fix the problem quite successfully. I did not personally count them but I’d guess at least 1/3 of them or more are females in each series. Add to that the female characters from licenced series (ah, the Wonder Woman!) and dedicated series such as Friends, now it seems a little more balanced, doesn’t it?<br /><br />So, let’s go back to the original question and finally finish this unlikely history lesson: Is Lego trying to stereotype the minifig nation and favoring the macho male against the outnumbered females? I believe not. Because I really do not think of them as male or female characters when I shuffle up in my collection. I see them as representatives of real people, and just like in real life, they are humanbeings for me first... Before being male or female, old or young, even hero or villain.<br /><br />p.s: Sorry for a comment that exceeds the original post twice in lenght! :)<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8635045944898925218.post-74589952383217900202014-11-25T12:21:49.104-08:002014-11-25T12:21:49.104-08:00I'm obviously a huge fan, and I don't thin...I'm obviously a huge fan, and I don't think LEGO has ever done anything to stifle me - it's stretched me. I made women, they were dead easy, you took the legs off and added a sloping brick - which was always red because it would be a roof part. I was actually gutted when I got the first LEGO Family that there wasn't a Grandad, so I used to make one of those too. I don't see stereotyping in LEGO is any different to the rest of the world, in fact it's actually less restrictive than almost any other toy. <br />My 4 and 6 year old boys are both green vision deficient,so their favourite bricks are red and pink, and in fact one of the most popular sets in our house is the Heartlake City Pool, which will feature in my Minifig post tomorrow, or the next day, or when I get chance to write it up! <br />Parents and the public gender-stereotype by criticising free-thinking and personal preference, if we let the children be then they can be whoever they want, and with LEGO if they can't see it, they can make it. Women, Men, Aliens or Hobbits or anything else can rule the World. :)Jenny at The Brick Castlehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00090208734161519771noreply@blogger.com