Yada-yada-yada!
All these cuttings are from two
publications, the 'i' Newspaper
(surviving, and increasingly expensive, tabloid-rump of The Independent) and the Metro
free-sheet.
And: have all been culled in the last three
months.
There is more written about Lego in any given time-period in the
British press (and I suspect elsewhere?) than is written about Hasbro, Hornby (Airfix, Corgi and Scalextric), Mattel, and Tomy -Takara . . . put together! This 'accidental' plethora of coverage
is probably no accident!
Other,
better systems exist!
Dr. Who from Character Options
While there is no evidence of collusion,
other than the circumstantial evidence before our eyes in the first image, all
that publicity - if paid-for as declared advertising - would be worth a fortune
to some agency, and the fact is some of the other names have been having
similar stories, without getting the same level of coverage.
Indeed, the board-room battles at Hornby Group this year (a UK-based
company with several iconic names in its stable) were far more newsworthy than
the Lego lay-offs, yet garnered no
more than a few column-inches across the year - mostly confined to the 'i', while Lego's recent 'press' release got two pieces, in each paper.
All
aboard the License please!
Lego - DC
And while these are the papers I take; I'm
sure the picture is the same across the media.
Speaking of which, one of the stories with
a more legitimate claim to column-inches was the TV series Lego Masters on Channel4
(second time I've mentioned them (C4) in a few days - I'll have to post against
my own pro-bias next!), but I'm not sure it warranted the full-page,
fully-illustrated, product-friendly fluff we actually got . . . "I'm a Legoista" wrote one
journo-tosser; pass the sick-bucket!
Mega Blok's mini car;
figure unknown
but
probably the same maker's earlier efforts
Then we had to endure the excruciating pain
of watching David Beckham spend three days building a castle you should be able
to finish in a few hours . . . and I'll bet my shirt that was an on-line,
global 'news' story, with social media live feeds, regular updates and
sycophantic commenting, 'liking' and sharing to boot!
Then there was the 'good news' story of the
little seven-year old who wrote to Lego
asking for a job and got a day's 'work experience' at Legoland Windsor. Now - I don't know how many kids write to Lego every year asking for a job, or
giving them 'ideas', but I bet if they were all given a day's work experience, Lego would become the largest employer
of unpaid kids in the known universe, ever!
No; he was the lucky-one, drawn from the
pile of hopefuls at random (or at 'photogenic' random!) by the press-office to
provide a feel-good story the week [two days] before the redundancies
were announced, it's not just hidden advertising - it's cynical, capitalist
shit, generated by the Evil Empire, lapped-up by a supine media, that makes ME
look like a happy-go-lucky, eternal optimist!
Lego 'technical' person.
Technically
soulless!
Another way in which both papers (and the
rest of the media?) treat Lego differently
to other toy firms is in the fact that the letters sections often carry
follow-up stuff, which you never see for the Hasbro or Hornby stories
(when they occur); somehow Lego has a
given for more column-inches than any other toy company!
There has been 'editorial' coverage of both
Bricklive in Birmingham (over now,
sorry but September went so fast I was expecting another week to get 'News,
Views' out!) and the Hotel at Legoland
Windsor, while a Serina Sandhu managed to write 19 column-inches in the 'i' about Ageism (!) which mentioned Lego more than four times!
Meanwhile over at the BBC World Service we had a 'reporter/foreign-correspondent' telling
us her little-kid's non-Lego set
(bought by [useless] husband - of course!) "Fell apart", naming the branded/licensed range so we'd know
which brand she was talking about; well - I know the brand - it fits together
just as well as Lego, indeed most of
the clones are fine, while old Lego
falls-apart just as easily as early clones.
Oh
how the Legoland minifigure 'rules'
have
been broken in recent years!
However it's not all bad-news and you won't
have missed the big story - that sales are down, profits are falling, a second
boardroom shake-up in less than twelve-months (Brit-out, Dane-in) was announced
unexpectedly and 1,400 redundancies/not-to-be-replaced-wastage will occur in
the global toy giant's staffing-levels (around 8% for the workforce) in the near future.
We have seen in recent years companies
which have become 'too big to fail'; European banks, US motor manufacturers and
steel companies mostly; the odd airline (Boing
last week!), but really, if you follow the tenets of Thatcherite-Raganomic,
'New-Blairist' free-market capital (that which we are all struggling under);
they should be allowed to fail?
"Let
the market decide" is the great cry from the establishment when people want to keep a school
open, or save 'Woolie's' or BHS from disappearing, yet large
corporation's run-off to government and explain (bitch, blub, threaten and
cajole) that they must be bailed-out for the good of the economy!
Well, no! While I'm not suggesting Lego would seek a rescue package from
the Danish Government, and it's not got to that point yet; still, Lego grew too big, too greedy, too
litigious for a company with basically one product, a product they stole and
which they saturated the market with, at prices well above their competitors
So if they go bust they should be left to
disappear, to - hopefully - create space for a hundred new companies to have a
go? That's free-market, entrepreneur-driven capitalism! Not a few behemoths
kept-going beyond their years - and yes - I am also thinking of the recent Toysaurus storyline!
Kill'em-off, kill'em-all-off and lets go
back to little toy-shops, back in those currently-empty retail-units littering
our high-streets and malls, selling toys sourced from a hundred suppliers, from
local craft sources, from catalogues with an internet portal and - why not - a
local drone- delivery service!
Action-figs,
not Minifigs
Mega Bloks do Marvel & Halo
Lego also featured in stories about super-heroes
recently while the TfL (Transport for London) 'travel page' of Metro managed to push us Lego stationary like little multicoloured
acid-tabs!
Another good news story is Mayka Tape (maykaworld.com) - designed in Cape Town,
SA, by Anine Kirsten and Max Basler of Chrome
Cherry Design Studios - an adhesive tape on a roll, with studs gauged to
marry with the blocks of 'all leading brands' of building block. It's one of
those 'Why didn't someone come-up with this 30-years ago and why didn't I think
of it first' moments!
You can run the tape up walls, across
work-surfaces, out the dog-flap into and around the garden, next-door and back
(seek parental approval first!) obviously there will be distortion on corners
or curved-surfaces, but just use single-stud bricks to anchor things, or cut
for sharp-corners! There are base-plates with the same re-usable, low-tack
adhesive in the range as well.
Zuru (the New Zealand company marketing Mayka) says there are already 30/40 Chinese factories producing
knock-offs of the originally crowd-funded tape for the Christmas rush - thus it
ever was! And you can bet some of them will be using that crumbly synthetic
rubber being used for erasers at the moment, totally the wrong material for
high-stress brick-clicking!
Clockwise
from T/L; mad-dog Lego's called-in a
vet!
Hagrid
threatened by Mega Blocks rats!
Boom
goes Lego and the Wizard's
outta-here!
There are those who think I shouldn't 'do'
politics, there's even one bloke out there who thinks I shouldn't do polictic
(I don't know, some sort of nervous condition he thinks I develop when I eat Polenta?), but this stuff is our lives,
and no man . . . or 'thing' is an island; one of the biggest threats to Liberal
Democracy is 'fake news'.
The fact that so many Lego stories are
being carried, whether or not you compare them to other stories about other toy
makers, is either because someone is paying for all the stories (in which case
it would be False Advertising - in law - without the 'advert' notifications) or
because the journalists . . . aren't.
Journalism'ing, that is, and I fear it is a
case of the latter with lazy journalists and lazy editors; sucking-up every
story pushed-out by a consummate PR operation; whether based in Denmark or the
UK.
"What's on
the wire?"
"There's a
Lego-PR thing just come in Boss - some puff-piece about a Dachshund who howls
if you take his Lego away?"
"Yeah? Great
- run with it, fluff it to six column-inches, add imagery - four-by-two - page
15, and use Septimus Fuckwit
as a byline - everyone loves Lego!"
"For the
headline Boss: Sausage-dog Serenade?"
"Err...no
. . . try: Lonely Lapdog Laments Lost Lego"
"Oh good-one boss,
you're the best!"
When you see such obvious 'fake news' you
realise these awful Trumpundbreixt
right-wing loons (as the Germans are calling them!) actually have a point,
which legitimises their parochial, flag-waving, false nationalism and
xenophobic desire to return to the golden-haloed uplands of 1950's rationing,
small cars, long hours and the cane!
The media are responsible for what's
happening with the West's crisis of confidence in liberal democracy, by dint of
their A) giving-up on actual journalism and B) giving all sides an easy-ride
under some misplaced PC belief in equal coverage which leaves someone like
Farage (rhymes with C**t) being invited on to serious political magazine
programs as often as people from the two/three main parties!
And yes; in a world where 'all publicity is good publicity', I am
well away of the hypocritical incongruity of this post - so buy Cobi, buy Mega Bloks, try Mayka, buy
those big sets for bugger-all money in Wilko's
or the Works, or even Poundland, it's all just ripped-off Hestair-Kiddycraft interlocking building
bricks!
Next time you see a Lego piece in your 'newspaper'; ask yourself if it's a legitimate
news story, or just a page-filler because no celebrity-bimbo's had a
nipple-slip in the previous 24 hours, neither of the Delavigne sisters left the
house over the editorial print-period, no UKIP'er was caught doing a Nazi
salute, no cow was rescued from flood-water, Boris kept his mouth shut for a
day . . .
Tear-down the Lego wall, and demand better news!
Hugh, the second picture of this entry shows how evil the Daleks are! They are mobile LEGO Cones. That's what those round things are up their bodywork.
ReplyDeleteEvil Daleks from the Evil Empire! You could be on to something there Terra....where's a doctor when you need one!
ReplyDeleteH
After Brexit The Doctor as an alien will not be able to intervene to save the UK. LEGO WILL DOMINATE
ReplyDeleteDon't laugh . . . some of the guy's going to the Chicago show were turned away at the airport and had their Visa's revoked, after years of same-old-same-old, same flight, same hotel, same room, same routine; the insidious fingers of what the Germans are delightfully calling Trumpundbrexit extend everywhere as the little gauleiters get the power they crave to fuck people about!
ReplyDeleteH