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Re: [ARSCLIST] Curious Audio formats and commemoratives



Aaron-

1. Thank you so much for that truly unique story. You are I'm afraid
one of the
few people who could tell the whole story of this curio. But the $64K
remains:
Do you still have one?

2.The Philco story is indeed a sad one but it dovetails perfectly into
why the US car industry itself almost died when faced with the ruthless
innovation and higher standards of our Japanese competitors. Many
American companies were woefully out-of-touch with
their customers and their changing taste and desires. I am happy to
report that now a few
companies like Dell and Apple are proving that exactly the opposite is
true. I only wish
that there were many other examples of "yankee ingenuity" in other
areas. Maybe
our current economic picture is in part symptomatic of this stagnation
and in part a lack of "Made In America" as a part of our modern
vocabulary and destiny.

Aaron
On Thursday, July 10, 2003, at 11:23 AM, Aaron Z Snyder wrote:

Steven C Barr wrote:
----- Original Message -----
From: "Aaron Luis Levinson" <aaron.levinson@xxxxxxxxxxx>
1. the "hip-pocket" flexi-discs of the 60's that could be taken to
the
beach!
I bought a large number of these, unopened, as a group...at a flea
market
in Cedarburg, Wisconsin. They were apparently a product of Philco
during
]the short period when that firm was a subsidiary of Ford Motor Co.
Took
them to a local (Toronto) record show, and had no trouble selling them
for several times what I paid! Still don't know what you could play
them
on, though.

I'm sorry to say that I *do* know what you could play them on. I was working for Philco-Ford at the time (circa 1968), and the company was trying its darndest to come up with innovative consumer products to catch the imagination of the public. It turns out that their marketing people were less than inspired. The company, which was quite influential in the development of TV in the 30s and 40s, now was selling color TVs with commercials featuring a chimpanzee pressing the single-button automatic color control ("We do the rest", the commercial assured us.). Apparently, the public didn't like being compared to their brother primates.

The hip pocket record was another abortive innovation. Small in
diameter and
running at 33.3 rpm, this was supposed to replace the larger and
bulkier 45
rpm discs which were standard for popular music. There were several
problems
with these discs:

1) "Hip pocket" may have been their name, but the marketeers never
thought
about what happens when one sits down with these discs in a hip pocket!
2) All of the music that was legally available to Philco had already
fallen
off the charts, so there were no current hits available in the format.
Thus,
kids, to whom this was being marketed, had little incentive to buy
them.
3) The modulated grooves came much closer to the spindle than those on
regular formats. This caused havoc with average listeners, who tried
to play
these discs on their record changers.

Philco had a special manual record player available for these discs.
It was
quite small, and the platter, if I remember correctly, was the same
diameter
as the hip pocket discs. Nonetheless, the player was large enough that
it
was hardly convenient to carry to the beach. I also don't think that
it was
battery operated.

All of this happened during a period when Philco's consumer products
division was in its death throes. Ford finally got rid of the Philco
line,
giving the name to GTE-Sylvania for their cheap product lines. This
was a
very sad end to a once-great and innovative company.

Aaron Z Snyder



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