Here's another oooold one: The story of Blue Bluestreak. We already had Prowl's "Diaclone" stickers and Smokescreen's racing number, might as well cover the third Datsun brother as well.
Yeah, I know what a lot of you will say: That story is said and done. Everyone knows that Blue Bluestreak is a myth.
But wait! There's another myth buried within that story: The myth that Bluestreak's name had nothing to do whatsoever with his color, he's simply named that because of the antiquated phrase "talking like a blue streak".
That is all sorts of bass-ackwards.
So, here's the full story.
In their Diaclone line, Takara initially released No. 7 "Fairlady Z" (aka "Fairlady Z 280Z Tbar roof") in blue, sporting a silver hood. According to Fred's Workshop, this version came out in November 1982.
In January 1983, the figure was given a running change to silver, now sporting a black hood.
Then Hasbro got involved, created "Transformers" along with Griffin Bacal and Marvel, and Marvel's Bob Budiansky created names and personalities for the characters.
The foreword for Volume 8 of IDW's "Transformers: Classics" reprints of the Marvel comics quotes Budiansky as follows:
So toys first, then names, and then personalities.
So what did the toy Bob was supposed to create a name and personality for look like?
Bob himself had this to say last year on Twitter:
Bob is of course referring to the packaging art, which was recycled from the original "Diaclone" release:
Though the Hasbro briefing binder (which can be found at the Sunbow Marvel Archive) is in black and white, it's still evident that the toy shown features a hood in a lighter color than the rest of the car.
So following the mental process as outlined above, Budiansky decided to call the blue figure "Blue Streak" (initially spelled in two words), and then crafted a personality based on that name that described him as a fast talker, based on the (now antiquated) phrase "talking like a blue streak". In other words, the idea for the character was that he would have been blue and a chatterbox, thus making the name "Blue Streak" a literal pun.
The spelling of "Blue Streak" as two words still appears in issue 1 of the Marvel comic (which even references the "talking like a blue streak" phrase), as well as in issue 1 of Marvel's "The Transformers Universe" profile series, which features Budiansky's original full-length bio for Bluestreak.
Yeah, I know what a lot of you will say: That story is said and done. Everyone knows that Blue Bluestreak is a myth.
But wait! There's another myth buried within that story: The myth that Bluestreak's name had nothing to do whatsoever with his color, he's simply named that because of the antiquated phrase "talking like a blue streak".
That is all sorts of bass-ackwards.
So, here's the full story.
In their Diaclone line, Takara initially released No. 7 "Fairlady Z" (aka "Fairlady Z 280Z Tbar roof") in blue, sporting a silver hood. According to Fred's Workshop, this version came out in November 1982.
In January 1983, the figure was given a running change to silver, now sporting a black hood.
Then Hasbro got involved, created "Transformers" along with Griffin Bacal and Marvel, and Marvel's Bob Budiansky created names and personalities for the characters.
The foreword for Volume 8 of IDW's "Transformers: Classics" reprints of the Marvel comics quotes Budiansky as follows:
My primary inspiration for the Transformers characterizations I created were the toys themselves what they looked liked, what they transformed into, were they good or evil, etc. Once I had that information, I would play word association games in my head to generate possible character names. The names themselves would often suggest personalities. Sometimes I would associate a character with a fictional television or movie character to come up with some personality traits.
So toys first, then names, and then personalities.
So what did the toy Bob was supposed to create a name and personality for look like?
Bob himself had this to say last year on Twitter:
Blue Streak must have been blue in the early stages. The painted art on the original toy box shows him as having blue components, even though the toy is grey. So I worked with whatever I was given, even though Hasbro apparently changed color scheme later.
Bob is of course referring to the packaging art, which was recycled from the original "Diaclone" release:
Though the Hasbro briefing binder (which can be found at the Sunbow Marvel Archive) is in black and white, it's still evident that the toy shown features a hood in a lighter color than the rest of the car.
So following the mental process as outlined above, Budiansky decided to call the blue figure "Blue Streak" (initially spelled in two words), and then crafted a personality based on that name that described him as a fast talker, based on the (now antiquated) phrase "talking like a blue streak". In other words, the idea for the character was that he would have been blue and a chatterbox, thus making the name "Blue Streak" a literal pun.
The spelling of "Blue Streak" as two words still appears in issue 1 of the Marvel comic (which even references the "talking like a blue streak" phrase), as well as in issue 1 of Marvel's "The Transformers Universe" profile series, which features Budiansky's original full-length bio for Bluestreak.
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