Metro Australia – July 2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Above:Lego Masters contestants Maddy Tyers (left) and Jimmy James Eaton (centre) with host Hamish Blake (right)


LEGOMASTERS: REALITY TVWITH
A DISTINCTLY LOCAL FLAVOUR


Liz Giuffre

Whilethere’snothingparticularlyAustralianaboutLegoorreality
TV, there’ssomethingbeautifullyAussieabout the first seasonof
LegoMasters. Originallydevelopedin 2017 for Britishtelevision
by Channel4, in partnershipwith Tuesday’sChild and The Lego
Group,theshowhassincemadeit toGermanyandAustralia,
with a debut on Americanscreensnot far away. Its premiseis a
cross­marketingdream:show off as much Lego as possibleto
a group of would­be masterbuilderswhile also inspiringthe audi-
ence at home to dust off their old sets (or, better still, get out and
buy more,more,more!).
TheAustralianversionofLegoMasters, whichpremieredonthe
Nine Networkthis year, is hostedby comedianHamishBlake.The
tasks requiredof the reality­TV host are quite specific– build drama,
mediatebetweencompetitorsandthecompetition,drawtheaudi-
ence in. Blake successfullydoes all of these,but he also provides
meta­commentary,regularlybreakingthe fourthwall to talk directly
toviewers(somethingusuallyreservedforcontestants)anddraw-
ing attentionto realityTV’s conventionsby settingfake challenges
and artificialdeadlinesas well as addressingthe ‘hiddencamera’.
Towardsthe end of the first season,Blake even inviteshis own mum
onsettoprovide‘supportfroma lovedone’– a stuntthatis particu-
larlyfuntowatch,butperhapsa littlecruelforthoseactuallycaston
theshow.Afterall,the‘supportfroma lovedone’tropetendstobe
invokedwhen a trappedcelebrity,isolatedcontestantor housebound
competitoris givena littlerelieffromtheirreality-TV life through this
reminderoftheworldoutsidethestudio.
Anotherexampleof Blake’suniqueapproachto reality­TV host-
ing is seen in the episode‘The Bridge’,whichtasks contestantswith
buildinga bridgemadeofLego;thestructurethatcanbearthemost
weightwouldwin the challenge.Upon the bridges’completion,Blake
and the show’sjudge,Ryan ‘Brickman’McNaught,go about testing
eachcreation– butit soonbecomesclearthattheseries’producers
have underestimatedhow much weighta Lego bridgecan take. The
pre­arranged 1 ­, 2­and 5­kilogramweightsare easily withstood,
and, soon, 10­, 15­and 20­kilogrampieceshave to be found.While
this scramblefor additionalweightsis the kind of thing that might
have otherwisebeen pre­testedor editedout in other realitypro-
grams,Blake embracesthe apparentchaos.‘We actuallydon’t
have a plan B,’ he proclaims,with a distinctlack of the confidence
that reality­TV hosts are meant to display.


BrickmanjoiningBlake providesviewerswith a perfectTV pairing.
As one of only fourteenLego CertifiedProfessionalsin the world,and
the only one basedin the SouthernHemisphere,Brickmancertainly
possessesunusualcredentials.Buthisexperiencein andpassionfor
buildingextremelycomplexitems out of Lego combineto make him a
captivatingcharacter,too. Unlikethe archetypal‘meanprofessional’on
otherrealityshows– theIdolfranchise’sSimonCowellperhapsbest
exemplifiesthis – Brickmanoften appearslike a puppyecstaticover
the chanceto go for a walk. This is not to say that his masteryisn’t evi-
dent, as displaysof his own work, includinga life­size car made solely
out of Lego, are just outstanding.Rather,like Blake,Brickmanhas a
particularunaffectednesstohisscreenpresence.A reality-TVjudgeis
expectedtobestoic,strongand,ultimately,impartial– perhapseven
somethingof a smilingassassin(think:MasterChef’s GordonRamsay,
orevena pre-presidentialDonaldTrumponTheApprentice). However,
duringLegoMasters’ first eliminationround,Brickmanbecomes nos-
talgic,evenvisiblyteary,whenpresentinghisverdict.
Bynow,realityTVhasbecomea well-troddeninternationalform.
It’swidelysyndicatedandfranchised,meaningthatlocalversionsare
difficultto identify– in fact, outsidethe UK,LegoMastersis ownedby
theEndemolShineGroup,aninternationalproductionpowerhouse
specialisingin whatit calls‘non-scriptedsuperbrands’suchas
MasterChefandBigBrother. ButLegoMasters’ Australianiteration
does give us somethingdistinct:that Aussiebrand of irreverence,evi-
dent in Blake’sand Brickman’sendearingpassionand disregardfor
convention.There are plentyof jokes, but they’renever at the expense
ofanyoneparticipating– offeringrarelittle moments of joy for both
contestants and audience.

•••


RochelleSiemienowiczis a writerandcriticwitha PhDin Australian
cinema.Sheis a journalistforscreenhubandwas co-host of the long-
running film podcastHell Is for Hyphenates.

Dan Goldingwas, from 2014to 2017,the directorof the Freeplay
IndependentGamesFestival,and is a seniorlecturerin mediaand
communicationsat SwinburneUniversityof Technology.He is also a
freelancearts and videogamesjournalist,and the co-authorofGame
Changers:FromMinecrafttoMisogyny,the Fight for the Future of
Videogameswith Leena van Deventer.

Dr Liz Giuffreis a seniorlecturerin communicationat the University
of TechnologySydney as well as a freelance arts commentator
and journalist. m

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