海角大神

Before apps, there was a gadget for that

I鈥檝e inherited my father鈥檚 penchant for purchasing 鈥渕iracle鈥 devices, a few of which actually work.

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Linda Bleck

I聽am not a hoarder, or even a collector. But I do like gadgets 鈥 especially those touted as making life easier and 鈥淎s seen on TV!鈥

My latest acquisition is the EZ Cracker. It looks like a lopsided set of white plastic pliers, but it is, simply, amazing. It not only cracks eggs, but it also separates the two halves of the shell and neatly plops the contents into your bowl or frying pan. It has turned breakfast into an adventure.

I know exactly where this propensity for gadgets came from: my father. Despite his having grown up during the Depression, when there were resources for necessities but little else, he developed a love of gadgets. When I was a kid, he began to introduce me to them, usually with the preamble, 鈥淲ait till you see this!鈥

The first gadget he ever wowed me with was a doozy. I must have been about 7. We had a black-and-white TV and couldn鈥檛 afford the expensive new color sets, but no problem. My dad saw an ad for a miraculous device: a plastic sheet that converted black and white to color. And for only a couple of bucks! I recall my family sitting in front of the TV as my father applied the sheet to the screen, and 惫辞颈濒脿! 鈥 鈥淚 Love Lucy鈥 took on a new dimension.聽

The plastic sheet was blue at the top, red in the middle, and green at the bottom (to correspond to sky, earth, and grass). This didn鈥檛 go over well in Lucy鈥檚 apartment, but the experience was still an object of tremendous fascination for a night or two.聽

Despite the limitations of the miracle color screen, my father鈥檚 interest in gadgets continued unabated. There was the soap-impregnated car-washing mitt, the original Veg-O-Matic (鈥淚t slices! It dices!鈥), and the Awesome Auger, a long screwlike device for digging garden holes (鈥淲ithout the blisters, bending, and backache!鈥). One of his favorites was the ShamWow! 鈥 a highly absorbent cloth (鈥4 for $19.95 and a second set absolutely free!鈥) that could apparently drain a lake if not handled carefully.聽

In my home, not all of the gadgets were used as intended. Preeminent was the SaladShooter, a pistol-like contraption that sliced and actually fired vegetables into the mixing bowl. At least, that was its purpose. My brother and I preferred to chase each other around the house with it, shooting potato slices at each other.

Last on my list is Mighty Putty. It was not, technically speaking, a gadget, but it still touted the promise of life transformed. When my father saw it advertised on TV, he quickly ordered the quick-setting adhesive and insisted I be present for the unveiling.聽

鈥淭his is the strongest adhesive in the world,鈥 he announced with a pride suggesting he had invented it. Then he repeated the advertiser鈥檚 line: 鈥淚t has the strength to pull an 80,000-pound tractor-trailer!鈥澛

Maybe so, but we never tested this immense potential, and my father was content when it neatly mended the handle of his favorite coffee mug.

The thing about these gadgets is that 鈥 the instant color TV screen aside 鈥 they actually work as advertised. The battery-operated SaladShooter, when it wasn鈥檛 an instrument of the potato wars between me and my brother, did indeed create a bowl of neatly cut veggies in rapid order; the Awesome Auger did allow my father to plant his tomatoes without bending over; and the soap-loaded mitt gave him endless hours of pleasure in a day when dads washed their cars in the driveway.

I haven鈥檛 bought a gadget in a good long while now, mostly because I don鈥檛 watch much TV anymore. But I recently saw something on the internet: a chair cushion so soft and yielding that one can supposedly place an egg on it and then sit on the egg without breaking it. Do I need such a thing? I鈥檓 tempted. Wouldn鈥檛 it make a nice counterpoint to my EZ Cracker?

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