(RNS) — When Matt Smith introduced his toddler to television in 2022, he selected the show that brought him warmth and comfort when he was growing up in the 1990s: “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.”
Now, the long-running children’s show that once graced the screens of more than 3.5 million televisions a week could again become a household fixture, this time in the form of a Lego set.
Smith, a 31-year-old alumnus of Princeton Theological Seminary currently on sabbatical from his PhD program in American history, built a Mister Rogers Lego prototype that features Mister Rogers’ living room and kitchen on one side and the Neighborhood of Make-Believe on the other. The design includes exactly 1,968 pieces in honor of the show’s 1968 premiere, complete with a red trolley, fish tank, King Friday’s Castle and a green sweater hanging in a closet.
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“Mister Rogers brings out the best in humanity,” said Smith, who told Religion News Service he hopes his design is a tribute to Roger’s cross-generational, nondenominational appeal. “He had a gift for meeting each person where they were and giving everything he had to them in their interaction.”
During the pandemic, Smith turned to Legos as a safe, tactile creative outlet. After he introduced his 3-year-old to Mister Rogers, Smith’s wife suggested the idea of a Mister Rogers Lego design. Beginning in August 2022, Smith used Lego bricks from existing sets to design a physical prototype, watching episodes of the show in the background and using photos of the set for reference. He completed the design using Lego’s free digital design software, and after roughly 125 hours, Smith launched the prototype as a project idea on the Lego website on May 16.
“Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,” which ran from 1968 until 2001, included 895 episodes hosted by Fred Rogers, who also created the show’s hundreds of original songs and 14 puppet characters. The show was groundbreaking both for taking children seriously and for tackling taboo topics, including divorce, death and war.
Smith’s design pays homage to the show’s bold approach by including the kiddie pool that Fred Rogers and officer François Clemmons soaked their feet in during a now-famous 1969 episode. The episode was shot during a time when racially integrated pools were controversial; it was only in December of that year that the Supreme Court ruled swimming pools couldn’t be segregated by race.
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“It is undeniable that he contributed to the cultural conversation around race at pools,” said Smith. He added that while Rogers isn’t responsible for the Supreme Court decision, “I don’t think it’s an accident that seven months after the face of white, wholesome children’s television did this subversive act … that the Supreme Court ruled you cannot deny pool access based on race.”
Smith’s design includes other Easter eggs for the Mister Rogers mega-fans, including a blue-tipped paintbrush that nods to when the show’s living room set was repainted from brown to blue, as well as the show’s signature red trolley. Turning a small crank sends the trolley through the walls of the living room to the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, which is on the reverse side of the Lego set.