Veg-O-Matic

{{Short description|Pioneering kitchen appliance marketed via infomercials}}Veg-O-Matic is the name of one of the first food-processing appliances to gain widespread use in the United States. It was non-electric and invented by Samuel J. PopeilGladwell in 1963, Malcolm: What the Dog Saw, page 20. Little, Brown, 2009. and later sold by his son Ron Popeil along with more than 20 other distributors across the country, and Ronco, making its debut in 1963 at the International Housewares Show in Chicago, Illinois. It was also sold in Australia by Philip Kives, who purchased it from Samuel Popeil and sold it as one of the first products through his own marketing firm, K-tel.Mateja 2013, p. 26.

Made famous by saturation television advertising in the mid- and late 1960s, Veg-O-Matic is a manually operated food slicer, primarily made of injection-molded plastic, which held two sets of parallel cutting blades. The Veg-O-Matic had an integral operating handle. The item to be cut, such as a potato, is placed on the top set of blades, and then is pushed vertically down through the blades by the handle, while the user's hands are kept safely away from the cutter by the shape of the handle.

The steel cutting blades are contained in a circular, cast-metal holder several inches in diameter. By rotating the top holder, the blades could cut flat slices or square strips, such as for French fries. By putting the slices through the machine a second time, they would be diced into small cubes. In the ads, Popeil would rapidly demonstrate this, with the now well-known catchphrase "It slices! It dices!".

Sales were nearly exclusively via direct marketing, and Veg-O-Matic was one of the first products (if not the first) to bear the red-and-white "As Seen on TV" logo on the box.

File:VegOMaticWBoxManual.jpg

Notes

{{Reflist|refs=

{{cite book | last=Evans | first=H.M. | last2=Evans | first2=M. | title=The Best American Magazine Writing 2001 | publisher=PublicAffairs | year=2009 | isbn=978-0-7867-4718-4 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kqkBbjk_t6oC&pg=PA218 | access-date=October 21, 2017 | page=218}}

{{cite book | last=Harry | first=L. | last2=Stall | first2=S. | title=As Seen on TV: 50 Amazing Products and the Commercials that Made Them Famous | publisher=Quirk Books | year=2002 | isbn=978-1-931686-09-9 | url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781931686099 | url-access=registration | access-date=October 21, 2017 | page=pt15–16}}

{{cite book | last=Gladwell | first=M. | title=Obsessives, Pioneers, and Other Varieties of Minor Genius: Part One from What the Dog Saw | publisher=Little, Brown | year=2009 | isbn=978-0-316-08614-1 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X0BUMoIotK8C&pg=PT14 | access-date=October 21, 2017 | page=14}}

{{cite book | title=Start Your Own Green Business: Your Step-By-Step Guide to Success | publisher=Entrepreneur Press | series=StartUp Series | year=2009 | isbn=978-1-61308-076-4 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PkNL7HQsUJ4C&pg=PA129 | access-date=October 21, 2017 | page=129}}

{{cite book | last=Grant | first=T. | title=International Directory of Company Histories | publisher=Cengage Gale | series=Gale virtual reference library | issue=v. 80 | year=2006 | isbn=978-1-55862-584-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FQi7AAAAIAAJ | access-date=October 21, 2017 | page=320}}

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Bibliography

  • {{cite book|last=Mateja|first=Andrew|title=The Rise and Fall of the First Popeil Gadget Dynasty|year=2013|publisher=Tate Publishing|isbn=9781625103628}}

Category:Kitchenware brands

Category:Food preparation appliances

Category:Products introduced in 1963