Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Faster, higher, weirder
London Games' mascots sorta cute, kinda creepy and not easily understood
Every two years, the Olympic Games use rituals, symbols and truckloads of trademarked swag to showcase the host country's culture, a process that inevitably leads to musings about "national character."
The idea of national character is now mostly discredited, and rightly so. Still, it's hard to get away from the idea that the 2012 Olympics have become one enormous celebration of British eccentricity. Just take the London Olympics' seriously strange mascots, Wenlock and Mandeville.
Yes, the London Olympics' tone was set by the extravagantly nutty opening ceremonies. Seemingly designed to perplex non-British TV commentators, the pageant included a visual history of the Industrial Revolution, a musical homage to the National Health Service, a spooky giant baby, and the Queen doing sketch comedy.
But director Danny Boyle's big show had a crazed genius. The mascots are just crazy.
You can argue that all mascots, by their plushy, huge-headed nature, are destined to be weird. (Or even eerie. My interest in mascot issues partly tracks back to a traumatic encounter between one of my kids and a guy in a lobster suit at the Teddy Bears Picnic.) Wenlock and Mandeville are peculiar even by the peculiar standards of mascotry.
First of all, there are the names. Mandeville and Wenlock could be the new Defence Against the Dark Arts masters at Hogwarts, or perhaps minor Dickens characters. According to official explanations, Wenlock is named for a small Shropshire town that helped to inspire the modern Olympics games, while Mandeville refers to a hospital that held a 1948 athletic event for injured soldiers that eventually led to the Paralympics. Commendable histories both, but they require extensive footnoting.
Then there's the look, which is also deeply perplexing. Supposedly the mascots are drops of metal, and according to their origin tale, they were formed from the last two bits of Bolton steel used for the girders in the Olympic Stadium. The lights on the top of their heads reference London's iconic black cabs, while their blank one-eyed faces are supposedly digital cameras, taking everything in.
Again, nice ideas, but they take a helluva lot of explaining. As most designers and branding experts will tell you, that's problematic.
Faced with these aggressively friendly, completely enigmatic walking cyclopes, people are making up their own stories. Media commentators got in first: The London mascots could be the product of "a drunken one-night stand between a Teletubby and a Dalek," according to Globe & Mail columnist Tabitha Southey.
Meanwhile, an informal survey of random pedestrians on Jimmy Kimmel Live! suggests that the mascots are penises -- happy, happy penises. (This is not an unprecedented association. Schuss, the mascot for the 1968 Grenoble Winter Olympics, was nicknamed "the skiing sperm.")
However one reads the mascots, they seem to be riding that cute/creepy line, and riding it hard. Responding to media suggestions that the mascots might scare small children, London organizers insist that they are kid-friendly, what with their friendship bracelets and their iPhone visages and their love of social media. (Neither Mandeville nor Wenlock has a mouth, but they sure can Facebook and Tweet.)
Many grown-ups view those digital-age electronic eyes as sinister Orwellian reminders of 21st-century security cameras. "Welcome to London," Wen and Mand seem to say. "You're under surveillance." Again, officials counter by saying that the mascots' faces are a metaphor: The one eye suggests how we all see the Olympics together, united in the universal ideals of athletics.
Even the Internet conspiracy theorists are getting in on the debate. Some believe that Mandeville and Wenlock are satanic tools of the Illuminati, giving a jolly, shiny look to the occult society's bid for a New World Order.
I don't know that I'd go quite that far. Global domination seems a bit beyond the mascots' mediocre, molten, big-bottomed scope. But I would say that as official reps of the Olympic Games, Mandeville and Wenlock are very, very odd.
And not in a good British way. Just in a sad, bad-design way.
alison.gillmor@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition August 4, 2012 E3
More Columnists
- Back to Top
- Return to Columnists
More Columnists
(1 of 5 articles for today)
To call 'Cliffy' a character doesn't do him justice
1:00 AM 0Poll
Most Popular Columnists
- Vigneault will be a man in demand
- Changes to CPP rules worth looking into
- Negotiate deal with your wife that works for both of you
- Buck 'goes long' for Winnipeg
- To call 'Cliffy' a character doesn't do him justice
- Blame ad by mayor, deputy for jeopardizing money-saver
- Burmistrov wants out of Winnipeg
- Don't wear yourself out trying to win her back
- You can bet the farm on housebarns
- Harper needs to quit hiding behind his staff
- Burmistrov wants out of Winnipeg
- A new mom's booze-fuelled hell
- Katz bogeys again
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- Harper needs to quit hiding behind his staff
- Political opportunity knocks to abolish Senate
- Tell husband you're not talking to her... maybe tell him why
- Tell the building manager and the peep show will end
- Big Blue will have one helluva punter
- Vigneault will be a man in demand
- Burmistrov wants out of Winnipeg
- Goodbye, Susan; a privilege to know you
- Twins are theirs, but province doesn't agree
- Bun Brouhaha: Kitchen staff's snap firing worthy of reality TV
- Beloved piece of Winnipeg's music history deserves better
- A new mom's booze-fuelled hell
- Facebook pokes Manitoba
- Katz bogeys again
- Dugouts could change the game
- Winter is coming
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- A new mom's booze-fuelled hell
- Changes to CPP rules worth looking into
- New Blue stadium lives up to the hype; now it's up to you
- Tick season means pets at risk of Lyme disease
- Burmistrov wants out of Winnipeg
- Going gluten-free doesn't mean giving up foods you love
- Mount Carmel Clinic: An oasis of acceptance in a judgmental world
- Katz bogeys again
- Harper needs to quit hiding behind his staff
- Twins are theirs, but province doesn't agree
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- Bun Brouhaha: Kitchen staff's snap firing worthy of reality TV
- Dugouts could change the game
- Happily selling shoes at age 89
- Facebook pokes Manitoba
- White sucker right for Manitoba
- New Blue stadium lives up to the hype; now it's up to you
- Selinger's ability to sell case weak link in tax-hike plan
- Emotional roller-coaster
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.