Guaranteed NOT to give children nightmares



The first time I cam face-to-face with a dinosaur I was so scared I ran around the corner and hid, peeking out to see my parents try to reassure me that I would not be gobbled up, impaled, trampled, or otherwise harmed by the roaring robots. I had bugged the hell out of them to go see the animatronic dinosaurs traveling exhibit at the Morris Museum but when I finally got to see them it was too much for me to handle. I don't remember how old I was exactly, probably about five or six, but even though the synthetic creatures were downsized they still towered over me. The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County has done one better, featuring a chubby, fuzzy Tyrannosaurus that waddles the halls. I think it's pretty cool, but at the same time I can't blame some of the children for being upset when confronted with a tyrannosaur smile.



Free-roaming dinosaurs that shuffle through the shadowy hallways of museums break one of the "rules" about dinosaurs; they're supposed to be dead. As scary as their skeletons might be when we're young they are just the remains, they don't move and they can't come and get us. Someone in a theropod suit can, though, allowing dinosaurs to step over the gulf of millions of years to smile their toothy smiles. Most of us who are afraid when young grow out of our fear, thinking that the robotic dinosaurs are more silly than scary, but I didn't know that when I thought the anamatronic Tyrannosaurus was fixing to have me for lunch twenty years ago.

Not all robotic or puppet dinosaurs are so scary, though; although somewhat cartoonish "Lucky" was a rather impressive robotic dinosaur puppet that roamed the Disney parks.;



Tags

More like this

An ebony langur (Trachypithecus auratus), photographed July 23th, 2008 at the Bronx zoo. Of all the animals at the zoo people stop to watch primates more than nearly any other group of animals. The monkeys & apes watch the primates on the other side of the barrier, too."What's that animal?" "…
A mother Tyrannosaurus rex and her offspring at the end of the WWD live show.Robotic dinosaurs have long been a thorn in the side of students of paleontology; the rigid, roaring robots of the "DinoMotion" craze of the 1990's did little more than get more people into museums without providing them…
The Flying Spaghetti Monster would not be pleased to learn that the world's first (and I desperately hope, only) Creationist museum will soon open in a bustling part of backwood Kentucky. This $25 million Disney-fied, anamatronic monstrosity is dedicated to presenting the biblical creation story as…
The trailer for the film The Land That Time Forgot.My first impression of what a dinosaur was conjured up images of creatures impossibly big and toothy, real-life monsters with names that sounded like they could very well have been out of mythology rather than science. I didn't know that they…

There's a fuzzy Gordo wandering the halls of the Royal Ontario Museum now that they've mounted the awesome "Gordo" barosaurus that was missing in the basement for so long.

Friendly and pale green, but tall enough to give the really little ones pause.

Ah ah,really cool! I wish they'd do something similar here in Italy.

But,anyway...Why they made it "fuzzy"?