Photos: Going for the Lego gold - TechRepublic

Photos: Going for the Lego gold

  • Mikhail Blokh

    Los Angeles actor Mikhail Blokh contemplates which brick to add next during the first-round skill test Thursday at the Master Model Builder finals in Carlsbad, Calif. Blokh said the plastic bricks were his “fantasy place” as a child.

    Daniel Terdiman/CNET News.com
  • Arthur Gugick, a high school math teacher from Cleveland, made this Lego face during the first round of skill tests at the Master Model Builder competition in Legoland California.\r\n

    \r\nOn Tuesday, the finalists will square off in a two-hour “build-off” in which each will be tasked with building a model based on something they think would fit in well at the theme park.

  • Sarah Hall, a finalist in Legoland California’s Master Model Builder competition, poses with her bin of bricks. Hall is a 23-year-old insurance claim processor from Louisville, Ky.

  • Jason Poland, a recent college graduate from Houston, shows off his model after the first-round skill test. Poland also draws cartoons in his spare time.

  • Hall was one of eight members in the group of Master Model Builder competition finalists who had to build a face in a first-round skill test.

  • Gugick shows off his model of a face during the Master Model Builder competition at Legoland California.

  • After finishing his model of a face, Blokh poses for a picture.

  • Master Model Builder competition finalist Gary McIntire poses with the model of a parrot that won him a spot in the finals after the regional event in Phoenix on March 17. McIntire, a 25-year-old construction professional from Highland, Utah, has been a Lego addict since age 4.

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Bill Detwiler is the Editor for Technical Content and Ecosystem at Celonis. He is the former Editor in Chief of TechRepublic and previous host of TechRepublic's Dynamic Developer podcast and Cracking Open, CNET and TechRepublic's popular online show. Previously, Bill was an IT manager in the social research and energy industries. He has bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Louisville, where he has also lectured on computer crime and crime prevention.