So freakin' cool.
For those of you not in Japan, a run-down from my wife's journal:
TV Champions is a show where they find six people who are really good at something--building furniture, making chocolate sculptures, redecorating an interior, whatever--and give them increasingly harder challenges. They get voted off until there's only three people left. The last challenge is always really interesting. In one, they were pitting sushi chefs from several national chains against one another. In the last challenge, they and their handpicked teams had to make as many nigiri sushi as they could. Any that were malformed were discounted. AND the other team could run over and EAT their sushi to bring down their count!
This particular TV Champion was fascinating since it involved Brian's favorite thing in the world--Legos! From the start, Alison and I were rooting for the one lady in the sausage party. It slowly became clear that she was far more inventive and faster than the rest. Even before the show, we were awed by things she'd made in the past, like a Doraemon that opened up to reveal his robot interior. For the first challenge, which was creating an animal, she made a surprisingly lifelike, free standing koala with posable arms. The second challenge was to make something nice to put in the home. She made a little white tree with colored fruit hanging from each branch. Inside the tree was a rainbow fruit. Inside each fruit, a little kit she'd created to make sea creatures of lego! The next challenge was to make something with a "trick" to it. She made this "katamari" (ball of stuff) of lego that nobody could figure out for awhile. Then it became clear--as you turned the ball, a picture would appear on each side, one for each season. Then you could open it up, and inside was a beautiful night scene made with glow-in-the-dark legos! The last challenge was to design a mini theme park with moving parts. She built a child-sized VW Bug. When you opened the roof, inside there was a little town, each building shaped like food--pudding, cheeseburger, fried shrimp, everything kids like! Then you lifted off this layer, and inside the car there was a train station with a train shaped like a hamburger! She'd even included a little Lego Playland inside the train station. You should have seen the kids in the audience swarm around her design.
For those of you not in Japan, a run-down from my wife's journal:
TV Champions is a show where they find six people who are really good at something--building furniture, making chocolate sculptures, redecorating an interior, whatever--and give them increasingly harder challenges. They get voted off until there's only three people left. The last challenge is always really interesting. In one, they were pitting sushi chefs from several national chains against one another. In the last challenge, they and their handpicked teams had to make as many nigiri sushi as they could. Any that were malformed were discounted. AND the other team could run over and EAT their sushi to bring down their count!
This particular TV Champion was fascinating since it involved Brian's favorite thing in the world--Legos! From the start, Alison and I were rooting for the one lady in the sausage party. It slowly became clear that she was far more inventive and faster than the rest. Even before the show, we were awed by things she'd made in the past, like a Doraemon that opened up to reveal his robot interior. For the first challenge, which was creating an animal, she made a surprisingly lifelike, free standing koala with posable arms. The second challenge was to make something nice to put in the home. She made a little white tree with colored fruit hanging from each branch. Inside the tree was a rainbow fruit. Inside each fruit, a little kit she'd created to make sea creatures of lego! The next challenge was to make something with a "trick" to it. She made this "katamari" (ball of stuff) of lego that nobody could figure out for awhile. Then it became clear--as you turned the ball, a picture would appear on each side, one for each season. Then you could open it up, and inside was a beautiful night scene made with glow-in-the-dark legos! The last challenge was to design a mini theme park with moving parts. She built a child-sized VW Bug. When you opened the roof, inside there was a little town, each building shaped like food--pudding, cheeseburger, fried shrimp, everything kids like! Then you lifted off this layer, and inside the car there was a train station with a train shaped like a hamburger! She'd even included a little Lego Playland inside the train station. You should have seen the kids in the audience swarm around her design.