Apr
30
2009
Story about Skymall in the New York Times. Sounds like they’re perfectly aware of how absurd their catalog is. A quote that I loved:
“To browse its pages is to understand the essential secret of American consumer life: That we’ve officially run out not only of things we need, but even of things we might plausibly desire.”
no comments | posted in Links
Apr
27
2009
When the robots win the inevitable battle and rule the world at last, all humans will be forced to wear these mind-control caps. Be ahead of the curve and order one today!
no comments | posted in Flight of Fancy
Apr
20
2009

You know, until now, the block and a half that I walk from the subway to my company’s building, and the ride up the elevator every day, all of that was just wasted time.
no comments | posted in Too Specific
Apr
15
2009
Proving that I’m not the only one making fun of Skymall, check out this quiz that asks you to determine which products have really appeared in Skymall. I got 7 out of 8; can you beat my score? It helped that one of the products was one that I’d already covered in this blog, and at least one more is something that I’m going to be covering.
1 comment | posted in Links
Apr
10
2009

“This patented design surrounds the beverage with a powerful triangular-shaped magnetic field, and in just 10 seconds, you’ll taste a premium drink’s smooth, mellow flavor equal to years of traditional slow aging.”
You know, until I picked up the Skymall catalog, I thought that “The Amazing Power of Magnets” had gone away at about the same time as phrenology and “bad humors”. But apparently not, because there are a whole bunch of magic magnet products scattered throughout Skymall. (Come to think of it, bad humors haven’t really gone away either. They just call them “toxins” nowadays in the hopes of sounding more scientific. But I digress.)
The point is, elsewhere in the catalog, magnets held to the skin are supposed to prevent aging, but here they accelerate aging. Those are some pretty smart magnets, that can somehow tell whether they’re near a glass of wine or a person. Or if it’s supposed to be something special about the configuration of the magnets, does that mean that if you put your hand inside this product, it’ll shrivel up like in Indiana Jones? They should probably warn you about that.
“Guaranteed to work 24/7 for 100 years.”
Yeah, I feel comfortable guaranteeing that this will work just as well after 100 years as it does the day you buy it.
no comments | posted in Pseudoscience
Apr
3
2009
When Apple came out with the iMac, it was designed to make it as easy as possible to connect to the Internet. That’s where the “i” came from. The iBook is a laptop that connects to the Internet, the iPod plays music you download from the Internet, you get the idea.
So now I’m wondering what this wallet’s connection to the Internet is. Does it sync with your online bank account? Does it let identity thieves steal your credit card numbers without you even having to open your wallet?
There has to be something, because I can’t imagine that a reputable company like Steinhausen would use the “i” prefix purely as an attempt to sound hip by cashing in on a trend from the late 90s.
no comments | posted in Puffery