Lego Addictions
randomErr writes "Canada.com has an article about Frank Robinson, an man who is into Lego WAY more than the average builder. Frank said "I still get Lego for my birthday and at Christmas, too. So do my kids." At last count the Robinson family's Lego inventory was nearing 100,000 pieces, a majority of which were tallied and itemized by type and colour on a computer spreadsheet." No Lego story would be complete without a link to something large and useless, say, a Lego harpsichord. Okay, it plays, so it's not actually useless. But the Lego Star Destroyer is.
And you won't be so addicted.
Cunning linguists
It's a prank site publishing disinformation such as extracting sugar from maple trees, snow houses, two-dollar coins, and non-watery beer.
I've never owned any legos and I don't feel I've missed a single thing. They look pretty boring if you ask me. Whoo -- I can build a miniature car out of tiny plastic brightly colored blocks.. whoo.
Actually, I think I had one of those huge oversized sets with the cube-headed people figures when I was like, three years old. But I outgrew legos by the year after, because my IQ is higher than my shoe size.