**Lisa Bueno** (0:00)
Okay, our friends, so today we are reading through the LEGO Jurassic World 5-Minute Stories book. And if you know anything about Story Time with Philip and Mommy, you know that a 5-Minute Story is not a 5-Minute Story. It's like a 12-Minute Story, or somewhere in there, because we talk about stuff. So buckle up, you guys. If you like dinosaurs, and we have got the book for you, you gotta check it out, and then you can follow along with us as we read the books. So today's story is called Dinosaur in Training, and it's based on a story by Margaret Wang, and it's using the characters from the Jurassic World franchise, okay, as if they were in LEGO form. So LEGO and Jurassic World are working together to create this story, and we love both of those things.
**Philip** (0:53)
Imagine LEGO land in the Jurassic World.
**Lisa Bueno** (0:56)
Ooh, yeah, dinos. Are you ready? Yeah.
**Philip** (1:01)
Imagine Isla Nublar was a real place, and you could take a ferry down to it, and it even had a little place just for LEGOs, like for like a LEGO Jurassic World park.
**Lisa Bueno** (1:14)
Yeah.
**Philip** (1:14)
We can actually like where there are this stuff from this book.
**Lisa Bueno** (1:19)
Yeah, that's what this is.
**Philip** (1:21)
Wait, what if we actually made a real Isla Nublar? Like we went down to-
**Lisa Bueno** (1:27)
Out of LEGO?
**Philip** (1:29)
No, no, no, no. We got real metal, and we like made an Isla Nublar, like how Mexico is floating, like Isla Nublar.
**Lisa Bueno** (1:41)
Oh, you mean how Mexico City was built on a lake? And so you're suggesting like Venice, we would build a city in an island? I think that you wouldn't be able to make an island big enough to hold that many dinosaurs. I think you actually have to have like real land.
But there are 30,000 islands in the Pacific Ocean. You could probably just pick one.
**Philip** (2:04)
Yeah.
**Lisa Bueno** (2:05)
Yeah. But for right now, let's circle back on this and read today's story, shall we?
**Philip** (2:11)
Yeah, we should.
**Lisa Bueno** (2:12)
Right. So, today's story, Dinosaur in Training, is read by Mommy and?
**Philip** (2:21)
Owen Grady.
**Lisa Bueno** (2:22)
Owen Grady? Oh my gosh, you're featured in this book.
**Philip** (2:26)
What?
**Lisa Bueno** (2:26)
Yeah. You have to tell me if I do a good job of impersonating you, okay?
**Philip** (2:32)
I could just, no, but I guess.
**Lisa Bueno** (2:36)
Will you tell me if I do a good job?
**Philip** (2:39)
Yeah, at the very end.
**Lisa Bueno** (2:40)
All right, here we go.
New and interesting people were always coming and going at Jurassic World. One day, Claire Dearing and Owen Grady received a very special guest.
**Philip** (2:52)
Yay, you said my name.
**Lisa Bueno** (2:56)
Welcome to Isla Nublar, Claire said warmly to the visitor. She shook the actor's hand enthusiastically. The young actor nodded and took a sip of her wheatgrass smoothie. Hey, Owen said suddenly. You were in that film, Dog Days, right? You played the pineapple. You're Amy as you're. The actor smiled at being recognized as you're, she said, rolling the R. But you can call me Amy.
Uh, OK, said Owen. What brings you to Jurassic World today, Amy? My agent has lined up a new role that will put me on millions of screens around the world. It's top secret, but you can probably guess who or what I'll be playing. Uh, she said. Uh, another fruit? Owen asked. A dinosaur! Claire said flatly. Well, let's get started then. Claire pointed to the door, to the laboratory. This is where we create dinosaurs, in our exclusive research center. Dr. Wu stopped his work to greet them. Welcome to my lab, Ms. Azur. I'm Dr. Wu, Chief Scientist. I read one of your interviews that you research your roles very thoroughly.
Amy nodded. Acting is a very serious profession.
Indeed, Dr. Wu agreed, as is science. What can I tell you about the science of dinosaurs?
I'm a method actor.
Amy said, looking around the room, I don't like to be told about an experience. I like to leave the experience.
Of course, Dr. Wu agreed. That's exactly what we create here, life. But something got Amy's attention, and she stopped at an incubator with large dinosaur eggs in it. What is an incubator?
**Philip** (5:22)
An incubator is like, an incubator is something that you put eggs in, and it keeps the eggs warm until they hatch. It's like a makeshift mama.
**Lisa Bueno** (5:36)
You are very correct.
That's exactly what it is. These are Ankylosaurus and Triceratops eggs. Dr. Wu said proudly, would you like to hold one? But to Dr. Wu's surprise, Amy got down on the floor and folded her body as if she were an egg in the incubator too. The actor began jutting out her mouth, peeking from the inside of an imaginary egg shell. Uh, I see. Dr. Wu said, raising an eyebrow, as he watched her most unusual behavior. Yes, the dinosaurs used their beaks or claws to break out of their shells.
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