
Celebrating the Dachshund Bobblehead
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0
Rating
4.5★
Categories
Toy
About
Today’s interactive Doodle celebrates the dachshund bobblehead, an iconic weiner dog doll with a wobbly, spring-attached head that originated in Germany as a friendly vehicle accessory. The first verifiable reference to the breed traces back to this date in 1723, with its inclusion in Johann Friedrich von Flemming’s book “Der vollkommene teutsche Jäger” (“The Complete German Hunter”). The dachshund has long been recognized as a popular German symbol. That special status was only strengthened in the 1970s with the manufacture of the first daschund bobbleheads, known affectionately in German as the “Wackeldackel”–or “wobbling dachshund” in English. The agreeable canines could soon be found perched on the rear dash of traditional German notchback cars, nodding along to every twist and bump in the road. After the Wackeldackel was featured in a late-’90s German advertisement, the bobblehead came howling back to prominence with over 500,000 sold in just eight months. Keep an eye out for these four-legged passengers on the road! You never know when you might spot a hot dog in the back of a hot rod. ;) Q&A with lead engineer David Lu Q: Why was this topic meaningful to you personally? A: As an engineer, what interested me most was the physics involved in the bobblehead. Not only is the wackeldackel a celebration of an iconic German dog breed, it is also an example of German tinkery. I spent hours debating the implementation of the bobble; whether it should be a spring, a pendulum, or a simple sine wave. It was worth it to relearn Grade 10 physics just for this Doodle. Q: What were your first thoughts when you heard about the project? A: What the heck is a wackeldackel? I learned some German that day. Q: Did you draw inspiration from anything in particular for this Doodle? A: Because this Doodle celebrates a German icon, my inspiration was the entirety of German culture. I tried to squeeze in as many German things as possible in the background, such as the Autobahn and the Bavarian Alps. Q: What do you hope people take away from your Doodle? A: I want all non-German speakers to appreciate the word wackeldackel, which perfectly encapsulates what this Doodle is about. It's also way more descriptive than "German Wiener dog Bobblehead".
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Game Studio
Category
Toy
Type
Mini Game
Released
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Players
0
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