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The crew of the Satellite of Love (and it's puppeteer). |
Since high school, I have been obsessed with
MST3K. For Halloween, I decided to finally buckle down and build my own
Tom Servo, to go along with my
Crow T. Robot costume. I also harangued my husband and a friend into portraying
Mike Nelson and
Dr. Clayton Forrester, respectively.
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Push the button, Frank. |
Little
did I realize what a massive undertaking this would be, mainly because
the parts are hard to come by nowadays. Instead of dropping a cool bill
and a half on a Tom Servo kit like
this one, I spent weeks stalking eBay in search of obscure "lamps" (flashlights) that apparently only exist in Australia.
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The pieces - that's a barrel of monkeys barrel, a CD spinner, plastic bowl, PVC pipe, and a cut up Mr. McFarty or whoever he was. The slinky arms and plastic tubing were really what I was after. |
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After sourcing the materials, I followed
this online tutorial
in assembling a working replica. Yes, the head moves, the mouth opens
and the arms flail about as if independent from his robot body.
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Becoming Servo. |
I
ended up ordering the head piece and the vacuum-formed shoulders and
skirt decorations online, since they proved to be the most difficult to
obtain. The shoulders were from the same headlamp that makes up Gypsy's
eye, and which, again, can only be found online in hardware stores in
Sydney or Melbourne. Luckily, the kind man I found online who sourced
out Servo parts had molds and forms for all of the pieces. The black
decorations on the skirt were molds from a train-set no longer in
production, and cost I think $6 for all 6 (he threw in some extras since
I bought a bunch). The head piece came fully assembled - I just needed
to match the paint for the body, which I found at a local hobby store.
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My messy garage. You can't work without Dr. Pepper. See Tom's head chilling up on the shelf? |
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Rare pic of me working. I think I was using rubber cement in my closed garage here, hence the mask. |
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Getting there - sans hands, hoverskirt and decorative pieces. |
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Aside
from the custom pieces and the head setup, the rest was fairly easy to
come by. I
had a few plastic bowls on hand, which was great cause I totally
botched the first one. The plastic hands and slinky arms came from the
pants-dropping doll (eBay purchase), the torso a barrel of monkeys
(Parker appreciated playing with the monkeys), and the bowl skirt. Some
PVC insulation served as the skirt hem, and PVC pipe went through the
body to turn the head which was mounted on the CD spinner. The cord for
the mouth was threaded through with
a washer, allowing control of the mouth. I found a toy car engine
randomly in Toys R Us for about $3. Total cost came in around $60,
including custom ordered pieces.
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| Love the seamless paint match! Testors FTW! |
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Servo was a HUGE hit out on the town. I brought him to work, but no one knew who he was. Philistines.
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Mike, Servo and Amy Winehouse in the background. |
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Servo does not appreciate being licked, Steve Jobs. |
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Majestic. As. F*ck. |
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Servo gets the ladies... |
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An assortment of characters opting for a pic with the Misties. |
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