Posted August 7, 201212 yr His father wondered how he did it, we as AFOL's probably too. We also wonder what tire he got in his nose? Probably a slick one? Luckily there are pictures in the original article. Here is the article: http://translate.goo...us.html&act=url Original article: http://www.ksl.com/?...566&nid=711 I don't know that part actually: So will this make TLG abolish wheels like they did with the loose magnets?!
August 7, 201212 yr Yikes! Three years with a Lego tire up your nose? How can you just forget about that, or live with that much discomfort, for three years? Granted, he was young, but it's still crazy.
August 7, 201212 yr Author In that one pictures, it looks like next thing will be him eating that tire++ (tire with some gross stuff I mean ;))
August 7, 201212 yr I don't think that's actually LEGO. I certainly don't recognize that tire, and I can't find anything on BrickLink that appears to match. And, in theory, this part is from 2009 or earlier, so it shouldn't be a new part. I'm guessing it's a Mega Blok tire, or some other clone brand. DaveE
August 8, 201212 yr It certainly doesn't look like LEGO. Imagine having MegaBloks stuck in your nose, that'd be even worse!
August 8, 201212 yr It's most definitely not Lego. As many others have aready mentioned across the internet wherever this story was reposted, this looks more like the protective covering of an in-ear headphone bud. Looks like a combination of dumb people (doctors?) and non-critical, gullible media are giving Lego a bad name. I guess fact-checking isn't really necessary to be a journalist anymore.
August 8, 201212 yr It's most definitely not Lego. As many others have aready mentioned across the internet wherever this story was reposted, this looks more like the protective covering of an in-ear headphone bud. Looks like a combination of dumb people (doctors?) and non-critical, gullible media are giving Lego a bad name. I guess fact-checking isn't really necessary to be a journalist anymore. LEGO produce the most types of wheels in the world, it is an understandable mistake, to a degree.
August 8, 201212 yr Well that doesn't look like LEGO, but seriously why were his parents letting a 3 year old play with such small toys?!
August 8, 201212 yr but seriously why were his parents letting a 3 year old play with such small toys?! I'm going to guess you don't have kids :) I think it's sort of silly that it was "assumed" to be LEGO. I can only imagine that the doctor or the parents suggested this, and from there on out, that's what everyone was told. DaveE
August 8, 201212 yr I posted the following comment on the video: Okay, first of all, the proper term is "Lego bricks" or parts, and second, IT'S NOT EVEN A LEGO PART! The Lego group has never made a wheel like that. Please oh please do the research next time. Anyway, the part with the guy asking for his tire back was funny. Oh, and a message for all of you Lego nuts in the audience: Store the parts in a box, not your nose. Although, it's from "Broken News", so that should tell you a lot about how serious these guys are. It's still an error, but understandable. Not everybody on this planet can be bothered to know what every kind of Lego tire looks like. It would only be natural for a normal parent to assume it was a Lego part, as those are very common.
August 9, 201212 yr True story, when i was 4 or 5 (can't remember) i put one of those lego canon bullet in my ears. at the hospital they use some sort of water jet gun and flooded my ear with water. lucky they got it out
August 10, 201212 yr I dont know what it is with kids and orifices. I'm sure my observations are not varied enough but I have never seen or heard of an Asian kid eating toys or putting things in orifices that dont belong there. I'm Asian and Im pretty darn sure I never shoved things up my nose beyond the occasional finger for gold mining haha.
August 11, 201212 yr How is it even possible to stand that being up your nose for that long? The irritation would be unbearable.
August 11, 201212 yr He must have been pretty tyred of it! (EDIT: I know it's not a tyre, but the phase "he must have been pretty earphoneproctectored of it didn't sound as funny!) Edited August 11, 201212 yr by allanp
August 11, 201212 yr The closest thing I can think of is, it looks like the wheel part of the steering wheel.
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.