“它总能让我想到生活有意思的一面,但同时也引导我客观地看世界。乐高并不是什么超然的东西,但是它十分有趣,它可以让你思考什么是真正重要的事物。”
At home in Enfield, he has two technicolour crates of loose childhood Lego tucked away under a bed, but also various large “sentimental” models ornamenting the house. For instance, there’s a Lego VW campervan (worth £85) he and Adele received as a wedding present last summer, reminding them of the full-size version they drove across New Zealand. Or the Star Wars’ ‘X-Wing Fighter’ his youth group recently clubbed together to get him as a thank-you present. Privately, he adds to his collection with a new model every two months or so, normally from the infrastructure-for-fun Lego City range – which isn’t as babyish as some.
在恩菲尔德的家中,他在床底下存放着两只彩色箱子,里面是童年时代已经松动的乐高玩具,他还用各式各样怀旧的大件模型来装饰房子。比如有一只大众牌露营车的乐高玩具 “In a way, this comes around with each generation,” says Lou Ellerton, a brand consultant with considerable experience tracking consumer trends. “A decade ago, people might remember board game cafés being all over the news. That was Generation X experiencing the same nostalgia and backlash against work; we called them ‘greenagers’ – grown-up teenagers. What we’re seeing now is Generation Y having the same feelings, and they’re less ashamed about it.”
【玩具不再专属儿童 “童心未泯的一代”崛起】相关文章:
最新
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15