LEGO Masters week 5 exit interview

Posted by ,
View image at Flickr

LEGO Masters USA episode five has finished construction! This week's challenge was "Mega City Block", where teams were requested to build a large city block on a large scale. It appears from the previews that one of the key clips that's been used to promote the series - the top half of a building falling and smashing on the ground - is included in this episode.

Each week we'll be bringing you an exit interview but to avoid spoilers for those of you watching on catch-up or via some illicit website in other countries we won't reveal their names above the fold.

Catch up on episode 5, see the contestant builds, and read the exit interview of the eliminated team after the break.

There was a twist halfway through this episode, just as there was last week. After constructing their city block, the teams were asked to have their block under attack by some pervasive threat. This twist allowed Aaron's and Christian's fallen building (as seen in the promos) to be repaired.

View image at flickr

This week's winning team was Boone and Mark, with their highly imaginative POP's food carts creation. It's based on the very Portland-ish concept of a food truck that's gotten so popular it's created a tower of food trucks. This is the second week in a row Boone and Mark have won!

View image at flickr

Unfortunately, one team had to go home, and this week it was Krystle and Amie. The Brickmasters were clearly quite torn about making this call. Krystle and Amie had a difficult time showing their cyberpunk building creations being attacked by technology monsters, though their first half build was quite stunning.

View image at flickr

Krystle and Amie graciously spent some with us (as well as along with The Brothers Brick, BZPower and True North Bricks) for an exit interview.


View image at flickr

Before we get started, you both recently attended a LEGO fan convention in Portland, Bricks Cascade. Can you tell us about your experience meeting some of your fans face to face?

Krystle: I was in tears of joy. I had to grab Amie on the first day when the doors opened and we got bombarded. We weren’t even at the meet-up booth yet. I had no idea that the line to meet us was going to be as long as it was. Maybe six or seven little girls and boys showed us their own unicorns to support our team, we saw fairy wings and dinosaur stuff, and I started crying! I had to take a moment and walk away because I was honestly way overwhelmed and touched. It was beautiful.

Amie: It’s a very surreal experience. It’s humbling! Before we left, we met two kids who brought Krystle a flower and they brought me a pinecone because they said it reminded them of a dinosaur like me. We saw kids wearing dinosaur shirts with rainbows on the back like a unicorn dinosaur because I wore a dinosaur hoodie on one episode. It’s surreal that you can impact someone’s life in such a meaningful way.

Krystle: One of the coolest things for me was all the parents who told us that we helped spark their creativity once the show started airing a few weeks ago. They said they went out and got a few LEGO sets and built them together, which is super meaningful for Amie and I because we both grew up with our dads and our moms building with us as a way to bond with our families. To know that we were part of something that brings people together and maybe inspires a new generation of creativity, I don’t have words for that, it’s just unreal.

View image at flickr

The last two episodes have both featured twists. How did you incorporate the twist in your creations, and what was it like having two twists in a row?

Amie: The mystery Western mashup - that was a really fun thing. It was completely different genres, it was a small scale. This twist for Episode Five, the one we went home on, we made something that we loved. And then they said, your building is under attack, and we thought, “Oh, but I love what I just made.” We were exhausted and asking ourselves, “What are we gonna do?” It’s interesting because for some teams the twist was their saving grace. They got more time. And it saved us the week before, no lie. When we got Western last week I was into it because I grew up with the Western sets, I know how to build a saloon, and I know how to decorate it. I was very excited about that twist.

Krystle: This week, I will say the robot that I made is the coolest thing that I made on the show. Period. But we were just so mentally exhausted. I would be giving Amie back-rubs and neck-rubs because it’s stressful when you work that much for that long under those conditions. It’s not like working at home. It’s a competition, and so much is on the line. You want to represent well for the women in America, the girls in America, your family, your hometown, your friends, you just feel a big weight on your shoulders. So when Aaron’s building fell down, a small part of me felt, “Yeah, we might actually get in the top two.”

Amie: Scale-wise, this was a massive build, it was really tall. You can see in some of the shots that we were cranking the table down and then having to stand up on stools to reach the top. It was physically a massive build. We were close to the Brick Pit in this episode, so that was nice as far as running around.

Krystle: I don’t know if it was shown on TV, but we actually dropped the robot. He shattered and took part of the building with him. So having to rebuild him was extremely heartbreaking because I knew that that took at least 45 minutes to an hour out of our build. Having to redo something, like when Boone broke the shark in episode 4, it’s so disheartening. As any LEGO fan builder knows, when you break something and you have time to fix it, it can be a beautiful learning lesson. The beautiful thing about LEGO is it’s never truly broken. But when you’re in this time crunch and you know you might be going home it’s a totally different feeling.

Amie: From my perspective, I really loved the cyberpunk world and the futuristic and the tech side of what our build brought. This is a build that we both really love and are proud of.

Krystle: Even if we didn’t have lime pieces.

Amie: And the magenta. That’s such a hard brick to build with. I think we only had maybe three different types of bricks in different shades of that color. So we had to be very creative and imaginative with how we were going to incorporate that color. We really needed that color to tie the buildings together. I think that Brick Master Jamie was very impressed with the end result. He complimented us on those buildings, and he said that they were some of the best buildings he had ever seen, especially the big skyscraper one. I was so flattered.

View image at flickr

As a team, you started the city building challenge well. But, in the second half, it seemed like something started to go wrong. What happened?

Krystle: I don’t think anything actually went wrong with the build. I think that we were a little bummed because we were in a really solid place before the twist. We thought for the first time we might actually be in the top two. Now that will be a feeling that I will never know! [Laughs] I can imagine it feels pretty awesome. To know that everyone else had time for redemption really messed with our minds quite a bit. To be honest, I think that the cyberpunk city was by far the coolest build that we did. Of course, I like the other builds for different reasons, but I felt like we really poured ourselves into this one. It was a beautiful mash-up of Amie and my relationship. But, at that time in the competition, you’ve been building for many hours and are working on very little sleep. You’re up all night thinking about ways to build the next piece, you’re thinking of new techniques, you’re playing things back in your head.

Amie: Yeah, at some point it is such a long day and a long build. Before the twist, we pushed the table in place, and we were one of the few builds that didn’t have something fall or break. We were like, “Wow – we actually might have a chance.” It was like a sigh of relief. Then Will said, “It’s a good start.” No one else picked up on that when we were standing there. I think everyone was so drained. I was like, “Wait, that’s not how you END a conversation, by saying that’s a good start.” I think they showed that clip where I was like, “What?” It was exhausting.

View image at flickr

If you could go back, would you do anything differently in that challenge?

Krystle: I would use my words better [laughs]. Believe it or not, I can tell a story. I’m actually a writer of a comic book. As an artist and a writer, I’m sad because I can tell a good story. But this showed the opposite. As far as the build goes, I think it was awesome.

Amie: We had this idea of technology taking over, and we had all of these cable wires coming down from the main robot. Then busting out of the museum was this technology motherboard. I spent a lot of time thinking about how we need a processor, we need RAM, we need all this computer technology. But, one thing that I have learned is to ask, “What message are you trying to get across?” In my mind, all of the components of something from a technical build make sense to me, but it doesn’t to everyone else. It’s hard because we really did like this build. We loved it. But, we don’t know the judges’ conversations, what they’re conveying, and what they’re deciding.

Krystle: Yeah, they were talking to other teams about not having enough in their buildings. We were the opposite, maybe we had too much.

Amie: But we always had bananas! Always.

Krystle: [Laughs] We had bananas in every single one of our builds through the entire season.

View image at flickr

How did you feel during the judging portion of your last episode?

Krystle: I knew we were going home. If you watch the episode, you can see me crying. Because the Brick Masters started nitpicking things that didn’t really make sense to me. I just knew we were going to go home. So when they started asking questions, I couldn’t find words to answer them. I knew no matter what I said, with the questions they were asking, I knew our time was over. It was really disheartening, especially on a build they had complimented so much in the first half. It was definitely mentally challenging for us to go through that process in the last build.

View image at flickr

On your last episode, Brick Master Amy got quite emotional announcing you were going home. What was your interaction with the judges like that led to that moment?

Amie: Brick Master Amy and her team are responsible for designing a lot of the Friends sets with lots of colors. She really shared our passion for color and fantasy and our enthusiasm that we would bring to the builds. She gave us phenomenal advice that Krystle and I are using in post-show life. She would ask us to think of whatever we were working on as a movie poster that has to sell a story. Does it show what you are trying to convey? That’s phenomenal advice to use in everyday aspects of life, not just storytelling. Plus she is such a gorgeous, beautiful individual. Jamie had to stand next to that incredibleness every day! We really look up to her.

Krystle: When you’re on set, especially at the beginning, there is a lot of pressure and stressful situations with building on time and watching the clock. When we both met Brick Master Amy, we geeked out. We both collect the Friends sets and I try to buy used bulk LEGO just to search for the pinks and purples. She helped mastermind these sets and we have a deep respect for her not only as a LEGO creator but as a human. We bonded, and I think that deep down she knew we had a lot more to show and that we weren’t ready to go home. We were finally managing our time well and I think if it were our first time in the bottom we wouldn’t have gone home. But because it was our third time, I think it was time for others to showcase their work as well. It was hard for all of us. The whole cast cried. Will cried. Jamie cried. We could hear everyone else crying behind us, I think because Amie and I really tried to bring the light and sunshine and the rainbows and glitter to the show, and they knew that the room was going to be a little duller and color-less from then on.

View image at flickr

We’ve seen the tablets you sketch on during the show. Did you have any access to other reference materials or the Internet as well?

Amie: We didn’t have access to the Internet. Those were purely just for our sketches--which I can tell you, I draw a really good stick figure. The sketches helped. Communication is a big part so you’re not working in your own head. You have to communicate with your partner and that was something that Krystle and I were really talking about. And you get into conversations like, “Does a giraffe have ears? What are those things on its head?” And you’re just overthinking everything. It definitely puts you in a place where you realize what you’re capable of and how you’re trying to communicate across what you see in your head. And that’s the one nice thing about being able to at least get something out there to see. But no access to the Internet.

View image at flickr

What would have been the perfect challenge for you two that would have drawn on both of your strengths?

Amie: I don’t think LEGO always has to be on the table. I’ll make costumes and pieces from LEGO and I’ve made outfits that have wearable LEGO EV3 Mindstorms wings on the back with sensors. I understand that wearable LEGO definitely would have been a very hard challenge to figure out. But I love the idea of using bricks for their unintended purpose. I think so many people think they’re just for the table but I’m already playing with some of the new DOTS sets because they have flexible bands now that can easily make things wearable. I love thinking outside of the build table.

Krystle: I think that if we had a wearable challenge, I am pretty sure that Amie and I would have been in the top two for sure. Amie and I met through the LEGO cosplay community which is very interesting. We had a mutual friend, Alan, who’s into LEGO and he sent me a picture of Amie with her wearables at Dragon Con. He knew that I had a huge collection of LEGO and that I was in the cosplay, and that’s literally how we met. I think that we both love the fairy tale aspect of LEGO and costuming. So, I think if we had had that challenge we would have just knocked it out of the park for sure.

It’s interesting because at Bricks Cascade we had a good amount of people bring their wearables to show us, which was amazing. Bricks Cascade even had a LEGO cosplay display table. It’s definitely something that I know for a fact that the LEGO community will be seeing a lot more of!

View image at flickr

What has the reaction been like from your friends and family, seeing you on the show and watching along with you on your journey?

Amie: My dad said, “Oh yay, my LEGO college fund paid off!” I think in general, if you don’t have friends that build with LEGO they don’t really understand. They’re just like, “Okay, we get it – Amie and Krystle are on this weird show for these weird things that they like,” but not they are thinking, “Maybe they’re not so weird.” [laughs]

Krystle: Honestly, that’s the biggest takeaway for me.

Amie: Our dads are really tickled pink. They’re so proud of us. It’s probably one of the best feelings in the world--you’re making someone that you admire and you care about proud. You worked your butt off and you stay true to what you love and what you can do and what you can’t do. The discussion I’ve always had about failure is that failure is never really failure; it’s just this iteration of improving upon what you’re doing and what you’re working on. And I did have a talk with my dad about that. I was like, “this is different - we know the future!” We knew when we finished filming a few months ago that in three months, however many millions of people were going to watch us fail, and it was interesting to just talk about that.

Krystle: And it’s not a failure—we don’t see it like that. We see it as a really awesome stepping stone. I hope we didn’t disappoint the young girls. I know that I got a lot of messages from a ton of parents that said they had to rock their kids to sleep, and that hurt so deep. I did feel really bad for not getting further for them. But I am really happy because a lot of my family members have thought I was really weird for a really long time because of the sheer amount of bricks that I own and build with. But because of this show, my grandmother for the first time ever was super proud of my LEGO obsession and that meant so much to me. She was telling her friends that her granddaughter was on a LEGO show, and that’s just something that I never thought that I would hear. A lot of my family are super proud.

View image at flickr

On the show, you talked about wanting to show that women build LEGO too. Can you talk about the reactions you’ve experienced from women seeing you and your builds on LEGO Masters?

Krystle: We’ve been super excited to be representatives for women out there. I’ve heard nothing but very positive things. We got to meet a lot of the women through the Women’s Brick Initiative at Bricks Cascade. The interactions were real quick, real brief, but we got to talk to the women a little bit throughout the convention. I knew that we were representing women on the show, but I did not realize at what scale.

Amie: It’s also very humbling. When we were at Bricks Cascade, we were walking out to meet this group of girls, and in my mind, I’m thinking, “Oh my gosh, I’m so nervous to meet everyone.” Then afterward they were saying, “Oh my gosh, we’re so nervous to meet you!” It’s this interesting feeling because all of them have seen us on TV so they feel like they know us. So it makes them nervous to meet us, but in my mind, I’m thinking, “I don’t know you, and you are all already part of this community. I feel I’m coming in just representing a small part.” So, it’s very humbling to see that.

How do you bridge that gap to make people feel comfortable enough to come into the LEGO community? Just start talking and showing your stuff--bring the diversity to the LEGO community. Not just building on a table, there are other things you can do like jewelry, and lighting (part of the WBI workshop).

Krystle: I was a closet builder, and if LEGO Masters had existed when I was in college I don’t think I would have ever had a Dark Age. I think that it (LEGO Masters) really shines a new light on LEGO, women in LEGO, and that women can build just as creatively as men. I think we’re going to see a really big change in LEGO in the U.S. after this. I’ve taken a lot of women our age to the LEGO store and they’re not just buying sets, but off the Pick-a-Brick wall too. It’s so cool to see. It’s fabulous to see them interacting with us and geeking out over bricks that before the show, only Amie and I geeked out over. I can’t wait to see in a year how many women come out as fantastic builders because of this.

Amie: Krystle and I set a new bar building for a 15-hour challenge in cosplay, running around the Brick Pit encased in fairy wings. I want to see someone raise the bar every year, and I want it to be someone who’s really bringing their personality.

View image at flickr

What was your biggest takeaway from being on the LEGO Masters?

Krystle: The friendships we made on the show are going to last a lifetime. The cast talks every day and every night. We have a group text that is always there when you need it. It’s really a support system with 19 other LEGO fanatics that all went through the same experience, and we will always be there for each other.

Amie: For me, it is the general support of a community. For example, Krystle and I live 10 minutes from each other, and she has always been a LEGO friend. But when other people come over to my house and see my LEGO collection they ask, “How many kids do you have?” And I’m like, “None! These are mine.” So meeting other people in the community that love the same things you do is refreshing. We can geek out about small parts and how things are built. It’s a very surreal feeling.

Krystle: At Bricks Cascade, we got to geek out openly with other people about everything like salmon-coloured bricks or LEGO Dots. Before the show, I was more of a closet builder and Amie was the one person I showed like my entire collection to. Now the rest of America knows and I feel comfortable and confident talking about LEGO and what it means to me.

View image at flickr

What advice would you give to any future LEGO Masters contestants if there’s a season two?

Krystle: If you can dream it, you can build. Get your portfolio started today.

Amie: I guess being the first season, we had no expectations going into the show. It’s not something you can really prepare for. I would say prep and build. Learn a few techniques. I think good things come from taking apart LEGO sets that you already own to figure out how they’re built - their build techniques, how they’re put together, and how they’re structurally sound. Another thing I think you should do is share your work because there’s good feedback that comes from the community and something very positive can come from that.

Krystle: Sharing your work is a huge thing. Amie and I both teach in different aspects of life and we are hopefully funding a website called Special Beads, where you can go and showcase your creations and get feedback from the community. Go to LEGO conventions or exhibitions and learn by looking and talk to the people who have their MOCs on display. Really build from the heart – build for you - and if you like it, others will come because that’s just how LEGO is. Oh, and make sure you wear comfy shoes for when you run to the Brick Pit! [Laughs]

View image at flickr

Did you ever go through a period where you stopped building with LEGO?

Krystle: The infamous “dark age?” I did. Amie, did you go through a dark age?

Amie: I never went through a dark age, as you call it. [Laughs] My mom homeschooled me and my brothers, and she used LEGO as part of our play and education, from engineering to history lessons. To me, that was just a normal part of everyday life. When I got older and I went to college, it ended up being my escape because it was something that was comforting to me. So, that was my relaxing therapy time if I was really stressed when I was at university, or as I got older it was a job, or when I moved away from home. It was a tinkering, building, therapeutic part of my life. Some people spend money on shoes, I spend it on LEGO. [Laughs]

Krystle: I definitely went through a dark age. I think that as I got older, I saw less and less of my friends playing with bricks, and I felt like I was definitely getting judged a little bit as I aged. When I went to college, I had a little time away from LEGO. I still had LEGO on display in my room, but I didn’t really build or buy sets for a while. Sadly, I missed a lot of the Elves sets which I’m really depressed about. Maybe six years ago, really soon after college, I started getting back into LEGO. I think my dark ages lasted maybe three or four years. Then I actually had a really big buying habit, and I was spending half my paycheck on LEGO! [Laughs] My family was really proud of me because I started to really get it under control about a year ago. Then Amie called about LEGO Masters [laughs]. So, I think I had two to four years of not purchasing new bricks.

View image at flickr

What are your favorite LEGO sets?

Amie: I love the monster stuff but my favorite is Indiana Jones from Raiders of the Lost Ark (7623 Temple Escape). It had a sliding door and huge boulder rolling all the way to the idol. It is a smaller set, but really was the set that sparked my imagination seeing all those interactive pieces. Now I am really enjoying the Hidden Side sets. They remind me of Scooby-Doo. [Laughs]

Krystle: My favorite sets growing up were the Egyptian ones, Pirates and Islander sets. I think one of my favorite sets of all time is 5978 Secret of the Sphinx. It was the first set I got a new box for and still today, that baseplate is my favorite of all time. I built all kinds of stuff on that baseplate. I also spent summers growing up on Antigua so the Islanders sets reminded me of home with all the palm trees and plants and animals. For now, I love the Ideas sets. They feel so sophisticated and you can put them on your desk at work and not feel silly about it. The Ship in a Bottle is so gorgeous. Oh, and I missed the Elves sets so I’m trying to go back and hoard all of those!

View image at flickr

Is there anything extra that you’d like to add?

Krystle: I use LEGO to teach adults with special needs. Each month, Amie and I put out the bat signal and we ask people to donate LEGO or time or anything that they would like to help with. I’ve done a ton of LEGO therapy sessions with my students. I even do LEGO therapy for myself. I just take a set and build it. It’s a nice way for me to unwind and relax. For me, being on a show meant so much to not just me, but for my students. They have all been rooting for me and Team Unicorns. I love that because of the show I have been able to get a lot more eyes on my students and get that awareness out. Not only for women but also for the educational purpose of LEGO, which is, I think, the coolest and most unique part about LEGO. I hope that the educational part of LEGO will explode and blossom and bloom because of LEGO Masters.

View image at flickr

Where can we follow you and your LEGO creations online?

Amie: I have a web page at AmieDD.com and all my social media is there as well as my GitHub. I have a few things on Rebrickable, and I have a few tutorials on incorporating tech and interactive elements into LEGO builds.

Krystle: I build LEGO on Twitch (twitch.tv/krystlestarrwars) Instagram and Twitter too under KrystleStarrWars.

17 comments on this article

Gravatar
By in United States,

Thanks for the great in-depth interview! That cyberpunk city was great w/nice contrasting colors. Sad we didn't get to see more of that robot, and hindsight being 20/20 had it been a huge focal point of the build they would've stayed in contention. I could tell they brought a lot of good vibes to the set though, and our family will miss seeing them for the rest of the show.

Gravatar
By in United States,

Sad to see them go. Hard to watch anyone go now, everyone is so talented. Really thought they had a unique perspective. I didn’t want to say goodbye to Mel and Jermaine yet, either. I’m glad I wasn’t the one making the call here! If it was judged at the break I imagine Sam and (I forget) would have gone.

If I’m honest, those two teams are probably the next to go regardless.

The remaining four teams are just a cut above everybody else that was on the show. Picking just one winner from all of them is going to be really tough.

I wish instead of people going home they broke the mold and made a new, more inclusive formula. Something like a points system? Splitting the field? Some way for everyone to push each other forward, where - like a convention - teams and builds are honored as winners, but everyone is celebrated.

Gravatar
By in United States,

^^Agreed, it's hard to watch them go. They're all so good and fun to watch. It was fun to see them at Bricks Cascade (though I didn't get to meet them in person), and there were several other teams who made appearances there too. I'm glad that Aaron and Christian got the chance to fix their building, because I think that they needed it (in a bit of an emotional sense, if you get my meaning).

As for food trucks being a "very Portland-ish concept", I can 100% confirm that! We have those things everywhere.

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

They kicked up the fake dramatics a notch this episode. Aaron running off and crying over the collapsed building was the worst piece of acting I've ever seen. Too bad the Americans pour this scripted reality-tv sauce over something as cool as Lego masters. It's absolutely cringeworthy to watch grownup men cry and get "emotional" over every little thing. Just build some cool stuff, show your best, win some gold bricks and leave the dramatics for hollywood please!

Gravatar
By in United States,

Though these ladies weren’t my favorite team, I again think the judges focused on the “twist” and not the overall build. When you get ten hours to build a building and then four hours to add an attack and the judges focus completely on the attack portion, it just doesn’t strike me as fair. They had a fantastic build this time, and though they weren’t doing a good job verbalizing the story, I think it played rather well. It reminded me a little of Welcome to Apocalypseburg.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@ChrisBricks81 said:
"They kicked up the fake dramatics a notch this episode. Aaron running off and crying over the collapsed building was the worst piece of acting I've ever seen. Too bad the Americans pour this scripted reality-tv sauce over something as cool as Lego masters. It's absolutely cringeworthy to watch grownup men cry and get "emotional" over every little thing. Just build some cool stuff, show your best, win some gold bricks and leave the dramatics for hollywood please!"

Hey, if you spent ten hours building something for a chance to win a whole lot of money and then it literally tipped over, slipped through your hands, and smashed on the floor, I'm pretty sure you'd feel much the same way. I certainly would.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@ChrisBricks81 said:
"They kicked up the fake dramatics a notch this episode. Aaron running off and crying over the collapsed building was the worst piece of acting I've ever seen. Too bad the Americans pour this scripted reality-tv sauce over something as cool as Lego masters. It's absolutely cringeworthy to watch grownup men cry and get "emotional" over every little thing. Just build some cool stuff, show your best, win some gold bricks and leave the dramatics for hollywood please!"

As one who has hated the dramatics & the crying of past episodes, this instance wasn’t that. You can very likely chalk the tears up ti the pressures of the competition.

As for the girls going, I think it was that robot, and the fact that they couldn’t explain it. I felt if they went more with that one on the street with the arms going everywhere, they would’ve been fine. That read well.

Gravatar
By in United States,

Great interview once again. I just love them and what they brought to the show.

Gravatar
By in United States,

Strike 3, you're out! Who's next?

Gravatar
By in United States,

I gotta say, this is the first team that I was actually sad to see leave. The previous three teams all clearly fell short of expectations, but at the end of the first build session I felt their block and the Newlyweds' were the two strongest contenders. But as always, this is a contest where you have to be a strong builder, a good storyteller, and build to satisfy the specific challenge(s) at hand. When they were asked to explain the attack that was taking place, and they said they didn't really know what was going on, that had to have weighed heavily against them, in spite of the fact that they were one of the few teams that picked up on Amy's bonus challenge and made a really colorful build.

One thing that I was personally disappointed by was that from the very first time I saw a picture of Krystle and read that she was into cosplay, I fully expected to see her dressed as Harley Quinn (though especially with Disney being involved, IP may have been a problem, and I just realized we've never seen any graphic tees).

@MrKoshka:
Jessica.

Also, I was thinking it might be interesting to see the full field compete until the end, with a points system. The trick of a weekly elimination is that, just based on the order in which the challenges are presented, you might wash out in the first week, or you might win the big prize (assuming everyone who could do a better job than you had already been sent home). If everyone competes in every challenge, you'd get a better idea of who is the best all-around builder. But, this style of show is really built around single elimination being a focal element each week, and running a point total would likely make it obvious long before the season is ended who is likely to win and who is outclassed. With a weekly elimination, all it takes is one really bad week to knock a true contender out, and no challenge can be taken for granted.

@ChrisBricks81:
No, these challenges are trialed to make sure they keep the time limits tight enough to not be easy. The build times so far have been 15 hours, 11 hours, 12 hours (with a forced break at the midpoint), 8+5 hours, 14+4 hours, and 0.5/7 hours. Mega City Build was actually the longest day by far at 18 hours of build time, plus any time spent filming "off the clock", and who knows how long any of the contestants had been up before they walked on stage. Note that except for the forced breaks starting with the third episode, any personal breaks you want to take come out of the allotted build time. That includes any trips to the bathroom, hitting up craft services to get a bite to eat, or just pausing a bit to get your head sorted out. And knowing that every minute you spend away from your build puts you at a disadvantage against the other teams simply encourages you to push yourself to your limits. After being up, and on your feet, and active that whole time, I imagine a lot of these people are getting a bit loopy by the end of the longer challenges. There's a $100,000 check on the line, and anyone who hasn't been taking this seriously is probably gone by now. A lot of these contestants also got picked based in part on their personality and how videogenic they are, so you're unlikely to see any emotionless robots. The camera crews are going to try to capture everything, so _any_ moment like that is going to be editing room gold.

Gravatar
By in United States,

I am SO SURPRISED that this week's bridges could hold SO MUCH WEIGHT!

1000+ Lbs? WOW!

Gravatar
By in United States,

The bridge episode was very cool. It was tough to see Mel & Jermaine go, but they made a miscalculation and it cost them. You might think “wow, their bridge only held that much”... but the thing is that if their measurements weren’t off, that bridge would have been strong. Just shows how much accuracy in engineering matters. A quarter of an inch can make a big difference to structural integrity.

Gravatar
By in Canada,

@ChrisBricks81: Hey, guess what? Turns out that "grown men" have actual feelings! And a lot of them even express those feelings in honest, human ways, instead of bottling them up out of some inane obsession with hard-hearted macho posturing.

I've known Aaron for some time now (both of us got our start in the online LEGO community via the Bionicle forum BZPower), and have never known him to be insincere. After all, feeling like you might have let down a teammate or friend and undermined all the hard work both of you put in is genuinely upsetting to anybody with a healthy sense of empathy.

What's more, even a lot of professional actors struggle to turn on the waterworks on command, and doing so usually takes a lot of focus — for instance, concentrating on memories of a genuinely distressing experience to outweigh your physiological awareness of your current situation and state of mind.

Ordinary people in a reality show environment engineered to put them under extreme pressure (especially right after a startling slip-up like Aaron's) aren't in a great place to maintain that sort of unclouded focus. So if anything, the fact that these people AREN'T Hollywood actors ought to clue you in that most of the contestants' emotions shown on screen tend to be legit.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@Aanchir:
And in Aaron's case, I'm sure the thought that went through his head in that moment was that he had just got them eliminated. They _had_ the Golden Brick which could have allowed them to laugh that off, but gave it up the week before. So, they just went from having a lifeline to catastrophic failure, and no way to know that they were about to get a second chance. As viewers, we had an easy clue when they were being called to bring their models over so early in the episode, but they just know that they're reaching the end of the allotted build time.

Gravatar
By in United States,

The Brickmaster Judges questions and feedback are some of the worst things about this show. That and the forced laughter at some of Arnett's dad jokes. But we really enjoy as a family watching the teams build.

Gravatar
By in United States,

LOVE the show.
Amy is a lovely lady, fun to listen to her comments. Her accent is so charming :-)
But I am a bit disappointed that Jamie is relatively quiet among all the episodes. He doesn't seem to have as much screen time. I am a big fan of his LEGO sets. Would love to hear more of his opinions.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@1360:
Based on the Week 7 exit interview, it sounds like they kept the judges at arm's length, to prevent accusations of bias, so there probably wasn't much of them left on the cutting room floor. I'm guessing she's more of an extrovert than he is. And yes, her accent is one of the best parts of the show. Where is it from?

Return to home page »