Advertisement
Home Entertainment Reality TV

EXCLUSIVE: Hamish Blake on why hosting Lego Masters Australia is the best job in the world

Why Lego Masters is a dream come true for Hamish Blake.
Hamish Blake's hilarious storm out on Lego Masters
0 seconds of 56 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:56
00:56
 

In a rare quiet moment on the set of LEGO Masters, host Hamish Blake is watching the contestants work.

Advertisement

Heโ€™s not plotting the next challenge with his LEGO expert co-host Ryan โ€œThe Brickmanโ€ McNaught, nor counting down to the moment he calls for them to step away from their build and have their creations judged. Heโ€™s just watching, genuinely fascinated to see what the concentrating builders are coming up with.

โ€œI have the best job!โ€ Hamish, 39, tells TV WEEK when he catch up with him on set in Melbourne.

โ€œI get to come in and see people just be endlessly creative and have fun โ€“ and I get to be a nuisance all day.โ€

For funnyman Hamish, itโ€™s all just part of a dream run that started three years ago when he was asked to host LEGO Masters โ€“ solo and not with his long-time TV partner Andy Lee.

Advertisement

Saying yes was easy โ€“ he knew he loved playing with LEGO bricks and thought it could be fun to watch others do the same โ€“ but he admits he wasnโ€™t sure if viewers would agree.

โ€œThere was a moment in the very first episode where everyone had to build a city block, but ran out of time,โ€ Hamish says.

โ€œThe contestants went home and it was just Brickman, me and the crew wandering around the studio looking at what theyโ€™d been building.

โ€œNobody said, โ€˜Cheers, that was a long day!โ€™ and left. We were all just fascinated by what we were seeing. In that moment, I knew this was great. It was exciting that day and itโ€™s been exciting every day since.โ€

Advertisement

Hamish isnโ€™t alone in his enthusiasm for LEGO Masters, which launched in 2019 and became one of the most-watched series of the year.

That led to a second โ€“ and now third โ€“ season. Even better, Hamish says, it led to families picking up LEGO to build things together.

Best job in the world: โ€œI get to come in and see people just be endlessly creative and have fun โ€“ and I get to be a nuisance all day,โ€ Hamish says.

(Image: Channe; Nine)

โ€œItโ€™s incredible the number of times people say, โ€˜I had a crack at that challenge myself,'โ€ he says.

Advertisement

โ€œI love that theyโ€™re being inspired to play. I donโ€™t know if Scotty Cam [The Block host], for example, gets a lot of people saying, โ€˜I had no interest in building, but then I watched The Block and I built my own apartment.'โ€

That enthusiasm is a feeling Brickman knows well. The only officially certified LEGO builder in the Southern Hemisphere, Ryan, 48, admits to being a proud AFOL (Adult Fan Of LEGO). He built his mate Hamish a LEGO Logie in his spare time and still eagerly rips into every new LEGO kit that hits the market.

โ€œA new kit might have a new colour or new piece that opens possibilities,โ€ he says.

โ€œSo of course I want to see whatโ€™s in there!โ€

Advertisement

Hamish with co-host Brickman on the show.

(Image: Channel Nine)

Itโ€™s those possibilities that make LEGO Masters so much fun, Ryan explains.

โ€œIf we set a challenge like โ€˜Make a beeโ€™, weโ€™d get one bee riding a motorcycle, one on a throne, one in a helicopter and more. Even if you give everyone the same starting point, they go in massively different directions.โ€

He and Hamish are making sure that continues in season three, with more than 3.5 million pieces in the LEGO Masters brick pit for the builds in 2021.

Advertisement

โ€œItโ€™s funny, because youโ€™d think three-and-a-half million bricks is more than anyone would ever need,โ€ Hamish says.

READ NEXT: Lego Masters Australia 2021: Meet the cast

Hamish has been hosting the much-loved reality show since 2019.

(Image: Channel Nine)

โ€œBut then with something like a big tree, itโ€™s possible to use all of one colour.โ€

Advertisement

โ€œThere are actually moments when we get dangerously low of something such as grey two-by-two bricks. How does that happen?โ€

And the challenges this season are tipped to be bigger than ever.

Without giving anything away, Hamish points out the current task is to add to a construction that took Brickman and his team more than 500 hours to build. Itโ€™s complex, surprising and is what has him glued to his studio monitor.

โ€œEvery time I imagine something, they give me a whole bunch of examples I would never have thought of and theyโ€™re all brilliant,โ€ he says.

Advertisement

Related stories


Advertisement
Advertisement