2011년 3월 2일 수요일

the hula hoop! ( 50's fad )

   Richard Knerr and Arthur "Spud" Melin, founders of the Wham-O Company, are the architects of the biggest fad which is the 'hula hoop' of all time. In 1957, an Australian visiting California told them, quite casually, that in his home country, children twirled bamboo hoops around their waists in gym class. Most of us would have thought, "how nice" but for Knerr and Melin an idea spawned. They understood how popular such an item could be and proceeded to manufacture one made of plastic, Marlex specifically, a lightweight but durable plastic then recently invented by Phillips Petroleum. The name "hula hoop" came from the Hawaiian dance its users seemed to imitate.
   Wham-O sold 25 million hula hoops in two months. Almost 100 million international orders followed. They were manufacturing 20,000 hoops a day at the peak of popularity.
Not all nations thought this was such a spiffy idea. Japan banned the hoops thinking they might promote improprieties.

The fad was short-lived. But our young entrepeneurs were already onto another hot idea they had

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