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Detroit has a RoboCop statue. I watched it go in myself on Wednesday. It's a real thing.
An amazingly detailed, 10-foot tall, 2.5 ton bronze behemoth will be greeting future generations coming to Eastern Market.
For more of the story, I sat down with three of the key people who refused to let this long-running project die:
Together, we unpack how a jokey tweet comparing Detroit to Philadelphia's Rocky statue turned into a nearly decade and a half odyssey that pulled in Hollywood effects legends, local foundry artisans, a major studio, and countless twists and turns.
Brandon explains how the idea leapt from a viral Facebook page into a real public art commission through the old Imagination Station, and why the team was adamant that the statue be made in Detroit.
He walks through the early missteps, the learning curve on how you actually build a 10-foot bronze figure, and the multi-year collaboration with Venus Bronze Works, the shop behind many of Detroit's landmark sculptures.
Pete gets into the legal and technical hurdles: getting MGM on board, putting up his own money to show good faith, and insisting on screen-accurate detail by restoring Peter Weller's original armor from a warehouse in Houston with artist Mark Dubois and the legendary Tippett Studio.
One of the most interesting points for me, from a community perspective, is that he talks about "defictionalizing" Robocop's Directive One — serve the public trust — by turning the statue's plaque itself into a QR code that can connect visitors to community causes, donating straight from their phones.
Jim shares how Free Age became Robocop's eventual "roommate" after other locations, including the Science Center, fell through during the pandemic.
He and Walley talk about the symbolism of placing Robocop on the edge of Eastern Market as a welcoming figure, arm extended, and how they're bracing — in a good way — for fans who donated years ago, people honoring loved ones, and visitors from around the world to show up on their Russell Street patio.
Throughout, the group reflects on the grind of seeing a wild idea through nearly 15 years, the friendships and collaboration that kept it alive, and what it means for Detroit to finally have a pop-culture monument that is both deeply nerdy and deeply rooted in the city's perseverance and generosity.
You're not going to want to miss this conversation, or your chance to see a bit of movie history right here in the Motor City.
More on Eastern Market's website: https://easternmarket.org/robo-cop-statue/
More on Omni Consumer Products: https://www.omniconsumerproductscorporation.com/
Free Age: https://www.instagram.com/thefreeage/?hl=en
Brandon Walley: https://www.instagram.com/brandonwalley/?hl=en
Cover art photo by Ryan Southen.
Feedback as always - dailydetroit -at- gmail -dot- com or leave a voicemail 313-789-3211.
Follow Daily Detroit on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/daily-detroit/id1220563942
Or sign up for our newsletter: https://www.dailydetroit.com/newsletter/
Daily Detroit is made possible by our members on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/DailyDetroit
By Daily Detroit4.8
171171 ratings
Detroit has a RoboCop statue. I watched it go in myself on Wednesday. It's a real thing.
An amazingly detailed, 10-foot tall, 2.5 ton bronze behemoth will be greeting future generations coming to Eastern Market.
For more of the story, I sat down with three of the key people who refused to let this long-running project die:
Together, we unpack how a jokey tweet comparing Detroit to Philadelphia's Rocky statue turned into a nearly decade and a half odyssey that pulled in Hollywood effects legends, local foundry artisans, a major studio, and countless twists and turns.
Brandon explains how the idea leapt from a viral Facebook page into a real public art commission through the old Imagination Station, and why the team was adamant that the statue be made in Detroit.
He walks through the early missteps, the learning curve on how you actually build a 10-foot bronze figure, and the multi-year collaboration with Venus Bronze Works, the shop behind many of Detroit's landmark sculptures.
Pete gets into the legal and technical hurdles: getting MGM on board, putting up his own money to show good faith, and insisting on screen-accurate detail by restoring Peter Weller's original armor from a warehouse in Houston with artist Mark Dubois and the legendary Tippett Studio.
One of the most interesting points for me, from a community perspective, is that he talks about "defictionalizing" Robocop's Directive One — serve the public trust — by turning the statue's plaque itself into a QR code that can connect visitors to community causes, donating straight from their phones.
Jim shares how Free Age became Robocop's eventual "roommate" after other locations, including the Science Center, fell through during the pandemic.
He and Walley talk about the symbolism of placing Robocop on the edge of Eastern Market as a welcoming figure, arm extended, and how they're bracing — in a good way — for fans who donated years ago, people honoring loved ones, and visitors from around the world to show up on their Russell Street patio.
Throughout, the group reflects on the grind of seeing a wild idea through nearly 15 years, the friendships and collaboration that kept it alive, and what it means for Detroit to finally have a pop-culture monument that is both deeply nerdy and deeply rooted in the city's perseverance and generosity.
You're not going to want to miss this conversation, or your chance to see a bit of movie history right here in the Motor City.
More on Eastern Market's website: https://easternmarket.org/robo-cop-statue/
More on Omni Consumer Products: https://www.omniconsumerproductscorporation.com/
Free Age: https://www.instagram.com/thefreeage/?hl=en
Brandon Walley: https://www.instagram.com/brandonwalley/?hl=en
Cover art photo by Ryan Southen.
Feedback as always - dailydetroit -at- gmail -dot- com or leave a voicemail 313-789-3211.
Follow Daily Detroit on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/daily-detroit/id1220563942
Or sign up for our newsletter: https://www.dailydetroit.com/newsletter/
Daily Detroit is made possible by our members on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/DailyDetroit

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