Top 10 Crazy Olympic Mascots
It’s Olympic season, which means only one thing: people
dressed up in funny outfits. And that’s not referring to the athletes
themselves. Ever since the first official mascot was unveiled in 1972
(‘Waldi’ the dachshund for the Munich Olympics in Germany), mascots have
become a fundamental part of the Olympics; a crowd-pandering means to
celebrate the hosting nation’s rich, historically-based sense of
tradition, as well that of the Olympic games themselves. While that all
sounds properly-motivated, sometimes the products of such overbearing
enthusiasm aren’t quite as pleasant as the sentiment. And thus, here
are ten of the craziest Olympic mascots to date.
10. Schneeman the Snowman
When Innsbruck, Austria hosted the 1976 winter Olympics, they needed a mascot that best represented their country as well as the chilly-season games, so they went with a stubby sort of snowman – who wears a Tyrolean, cowboy-looking hat – named Schneeman. He is, after all, supposed to represent what was referred to as the ‘Games of Simplicity.’ While Scheenman may indeed be categorically a snowman, he looks a lot more like one of the M&Ms mascots, with his torso-head hybrid and molded shoes/gloves where twigs and a large ball of snow should be.
9. Hidy and Howdy
Named deliberately after folky sorts of greetings, these
cowboy-dressed polar bears aimed to represent Western Canadian
hospitality. Employed during the 1988 Calgary Olympics, these giant,
furry bear suits came off less hospitable than they did just plain
creepy, looking like cheap teddy bears with five o’clock shadows –
creepier still knowing a grown (and likely sweaty) man was hiding
inside.
8. Magique
The 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France brought another weird
winter symbol to the proverbial snow lodge via ‘Magique the snow imp,’
which was a part-man part-star hybrid, that sounds biochemically
impossible. And for that reason, this mascot represents imagination,
dreams, and the idea of ‘shooting for the stars’ – a sort of reminder
that these games aren’t all about the scoreboards and rulebooks. Side
note: Magique was opted for over a much more earthbound ‘Chamois the
mountain goat.’
7. Hakon and Kristin
These Norwegian children served as dual mascots for the 1994 Winter
Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway. While their innocence is implied –
shown holding hands, smiling and waving – it is lost to a degree as they
are also shown wearing traditional viking clothing; vikings, of course,
renowned for their brutality and savagery (at least according to
popular conception, and largely biased historical accounts). Topically
Norwegian as it is, you’d think a more pleasant slice of history could
be evoked.
6. Izzy
Izzy might as well have been a giant question mark. Izzy was first
introduced at the end of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, at the time going
by the name “Whatizit.” Created by a design firm called DESIGNefx, the
mascot was later modified into its final form – an oblong, amorphous,
indefinite blue mess of thing with a face and tennis shoes – for the
1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. Not reflective of any kind of U.S.
nationalism or tradition, it was the first computer-designed mascot and
likely meant to somehow represent the budding silicon age, although it
look more like a melted computer mouse. Izzy has been the subject of
T.V. specials and video games, all of which underscore the overall
meaninglessness of the mascot.
5. Athena and Phevos
The 2004 Summer Olympics were the second official Olympic games held
in Greece since the ancient games, held originally by the Greeks as a
means to honor Zeus. This tradition of traditions had to be honored
somehow, and the way they elected to do it through two children – named
Athena and Phevos – who were supposed to be from present-day, but also
fashioned after ancient Greek dolls (as a way to merge the ideals of
antiquity and modernity). The result is a Erlenmeyer flask-looking
pair, with disproportionately wide feet and long necks. Maybe children
actually looked like this in ancients times… (unlikely).
4. Neve and Gliz
Cute as these mascots are – used in the 2006 Olympics in Turin, Italy
– Neve and Gliz symbolized winter. And how simply: Neve (meaning
‘snow’ in Italian) was a man with a personified snowball for a head;
Gliz (short for the Italian word meaning ‘ice’ – ‘ghiaccio’) was Neve’s
ice cube-equivalent and counterpart. The two in the end looked
something like the Blockheads from Gumby. Oh yeah, and the snowball is
supposed to be a chick, while the ice cube is most definitely a dude.
3. The ‘Fuwa’
As if one mascot (or even two weren’t enough), here are five. Named
Beibei, Jingjing, Huanhuan, Yingying, and Nini (in order) – and
appearing during the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China – the names
are arranged to form the Chinese phrase “Beijing huan ying ni” which
means ‘Beijing welcomes you.’ As far as each personality goes – a fish,
a panda, an Olympic flame, a Tibetan antelope, and a swallow – they
represent each of the five Olympic rings, as well as the five Feng Shui
elements.
2. Miga, Quatchi, Sumi, and Mukmuk
As Olympic mascots have started becoming more Yo Gabba Gabba!-like,
these four (well, three and a ‘sidekick’) are no exception; created for
the purposes of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia
in Canada, they each represented mythical creatures appearing in
Canadian and Northwestern U.S. urban legends (which makes sense seeing
as how they were designed by a Canadian and an American pair, which
comprises Meomi Design). Miga is a sea bear (Orca whale-kermode bear
hybrid) that likes to surf and snowboard in the Vancouver region.
Quatchi is a big-foot- or sasquatch-type character that carries a
camera, likes to travel, and dreams of being a hockey goalie. Sumi, a
‘spirit animal’ with Thunderbird-wings and black bear-legs, is a
nature-lover. Mukmuk is a friendly Marmot (a.k.a their under-developed
side-kick), whose name comes from the Chinuk Wawa word which means
‘food’/’to eat,’ Mukmuk being typified by his large appetite.
1. Wenlock and Mandeville
This year’s mascot for the London 2012 olympic games boasts a
certainty to be as head-scratching as tradition will allow. Named
Wenlock and Mandeville (as tributes to the locations of the first two
London-hosted Olympics), the two are characterized simply as ‘steel
drops with cameras for eyes,’ symbolic of the Industrial Revolution in
London (although the Terminator/T-1000 are evoked more effectively).
source : http://listverse.com/2012/07/24/top-10-crazy-olympic-mascots/
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