Under the Influence with Terry O'Reilly - S6E11 - The Frankenstein Factor: Inventors Who Regret Their Inventions
Episode Date: March 16, 2017This week, we analyze inventors who later came to regret their inventions. Sometimes it's because the product ended up being harmful. Other times it's because of the way their product was used. And in... most cases, the creators simply lost control of their creations. We'll look at why the inventor of the K-Cup doesn't own a Keurig machine, why the creator of Mother's Day later tried to have it rescinded and how the Wright Brothers lost control of the airplane. It's one of the most unwieldy aspects of marketing - you create a product, you inform the public, you put it into the marketplace, and it's out of your hands. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi, it's Terry O'Reilly.
As you may know, we've been producing a lot of bonus episodes while under the influences on hiatus.
They're called the Beatleology Interviews, where I talk to people who knew the Beatles, work with them, love them, and the authors who write about them.
Well, the Beatleology Interviews have become a hit, so we are spinning it out to be a standalone podcast series. You've already
heard conversations with people like actors Mark Hamill, Malcolm McDowell, and Beatles confidant
Astrid Kershaw. But coming up, I talk to May Pang, who dated John Lennon in the mid-70s.
I talk to double fantasy guitarist Earl Slick, Apple Records creative director John Kosh.
I'll be talking to Jan Hayworth,
who designed the Sgt. Pepper album cover. Very cool. And I'll talk to singer Dion,
who is one of only five people still alive who were on the Sgt. Pepper cover. And two of those
people were Beatles. The stories they tell are amazing. So thank you for making this series such
a success. And please do me a favor, follow the
Beatleology interviews on your podcast app. You don't even have to be a huge Beatles fan. You just
have to love storytelling. Subscribe now and don't miss a single beat. new year new me season is here and honestly we're already over it enter felix the health
care company helping canadians take a different approach to weight loss this year weight loss
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Peloton. Visit Peloton at with Peloton. Find your push. Find your power. Peloton. Visit Peloton
at onepeloton.ca. From the Under the Influence digital box set, this episode is from Season 6,
2017. You're so king in it You're loving it in its
Your teeth look whiter than noon, noon, noon
You're not you when you're hungry
You're in good hands with us.
You're under the influence with Terry O'Reilly.
This gunfighter was the law for 20 years,
until a hate-ridden town took the law into its own hands
and turned on the gunfighter.
Richard Widmark, rebel with a badge in Death of a Gunfighter.
That little-known movie, released in 1969,
changed a fundamental aspect of Hollywood.
Star Richard Widmark wasn't getting along with director Robert Totten and arranged to have him replaced with director Don Siegel.
Both directors claimed Widmark had overruled their decisions
and neither director was happy with the final film.
More important, neither director wanted to take credit for it.
A Directors Guild meeting overseeing the dispute
agreed that the film did not represent the vision of either director.
So, a proposal was tabled.
The directing credit was to be changed to protect the reputations of the filmmakers.
Instead of using their real names, a fictional name would be used.
The name Al Smith was suggested,
but it was discovered there was actually a director named Al Smith.
So, the Directors Guild settled on Alan Smithy.
From that point on, whenever a director had lost creative control of a finished film,
he could file a grievance, take his name off the film,
and Alan Smithy
would be credited instead.
So, within Hollywood,
whenever a director's credit
said Alan Smithy,
it was instantly understood
the original director
had disavowed the film.
If you search
the Internet Movie Database,
you'll find over 20
very bad Alan Smithy films.
In 1998, director Arthur Hiller shot a mockumentary on this very subject called
An Alan Smithy Film, Burn Hollywood Burn. The plot revolves around a director named Alan Smithy,
who directs a film starring Sylvester Stallone.
The studio eventually takes control
of the film away from Smithy and
re-edits it. Smithy
wants to disown the film, and when
he tries to take his name off the movie,
he discovers that his name is
the same pseudonym the Directors
Guild uses when a director wants to take
his name off a movie. So,
he has no option but to steal
the film and burn it.
But get a load of this.
The director of this mockumentary,
Arthur Hiller, didn't get along with
the producer on the film.
The film was taken away from Hiller
and re-edited. It was
art imitating life
imitating art. So guess
what Arthur Hiller did?
He took his name off the film.
Which meant that an Alan Smithy film, in the end, was directed by Alan Smithy.
Believe it or not, there are quite a few Alan Smithies in the world of business, too.
Inventors and business people who created products they later tried to distance themselves from.
Sometimes it's because the product ended up being harmful.
Other times, it was because of the way their product was used. And in most cases, the creators simply lost control of their
creations.
And it just may surprise you to learn what those inventions are.
You're under the influence. Architect Victor Gruen had an interesting idea.
As cities started expanding to the suburbs,
he wanted to create a place where shoppers could run errands
without the drawbacks of driving downtown.
He wanted to model these communal areas
like the old town squares of yesteryear
with promenades, green spaces, fountains,
supermarkets, schools, and post offices.
He prioritized pedestrians over cars.
Gruen's creation became known as the shopping mall.
The first one Gruen designed was in suburban Detroit in 1954. It caught on,
and Gruen quickly became one of the busiest architects in the country.
But other cities took Gruen's idea and began twisting it into something he hated and opposed.
They took out the green spaces, enclosed the malls, packed them with stores, and surrounded them
with seas of asphalt parking.
Over time, Gruen went from being the shopping mall's inventor to its most vocal critic.
He called them harmful, hideous, soulless shopping machines that alienated people instead
of bringing them together.
The father of the shopping mall refused to claim paternity.
To his dying day, Victor Gruen despised what became of his invention.
He wouldn't be the first inventor to feel that way.
One day back in 1995, John Sylvan was sitting in his car outside an ATM when he started feeling ill.
His heart was pounding. His head throbbed. He began experiencing tunnel vision.
He suspected he was having a heart attack, so he rushed to the nearest hospital.
In the emergency room, doctors did a number of tests on Sylvan
and determined he wasn't having a heart attack.
So they began asking him questions.
Are you sleeping well? Are you eating properly? Are you exercising?
Then they casually asked him how many cups of coffee he drank a day.
Sylvan answered, around 30 or 40.
The doctors just
stared at him.
37-year-old John Sylvan was suffering
from caffeine poisoning.
But you have to understand something.
Caffeine poisoning
was an occupational hazard.
For the three years
leading up to that hospital visit,
John Sylvan had been trying to revolutionize coffee making.
Previously, Sylvan had been working a low-level job at a tech firm in Massachusetts.
Part of the job entailed going around,
collecting money from his co-workers for the office coffee fund.
More than that, he hated the office coffee.
Everyone did.
And the coffee vendors not only delivered bad coffee every week,
they had a monopoly on the office market.
Every day, bad coffee would sit in the pot, growing stale and cold.
As coffee companies will tell you,
the biggest consumer of coffee is the kitchen sink.
So Sylvan had an idea to create single-serve coffee pods. The biggest consumer of coffee is the kitchen sink.
So Sylvan had an idea to create single-serve coffee pods.
That way, people could brew one cup of coffee of their choosing.
Coffee and water wouldn't be wasted.
All he needed to do was invent a machine that could brew single cups.
First, Sylvan created single coffee pods,
then tried prototype after prototype of coffee machines to
brew them. Many of them
exploded,
plastering his kitchen with coffee grounds.
Sylvan was also the
official coffee taster, hence
the 40 cups per day.
When he finally managed
to create a semi-reliable brewing
machine, Sylvan christened the company Keurig, which was a Dutch word for excellence.
The coffee pods were to be called K-Cups.
When he started looking for investors, no one was interested.
As a matter of fact, major coffee companies told him his invention would never catch on.
But Sylvan believed in the potential of single-serve coffee pods.
Even if he just managed to capture a fraction of the $40 billion coffee market,
it would mean untold millions.
And Sylvan had his eye on the office market.
Eventually, Keurig found investors.
The plan was to make inexpensive coffee brewing machines.
The real money was in the K-cups.
Early Keurig machines kept breaking down.
But an interesting thing happened.
When the machines broke, office workers would beg for a replacement.
The convenience was catching on, and catching on in a big way.
Sales started to explode, but so did the relationship between Sylvan and his investors.
It got so bad that Sylvan left the company in 1997, selling his shares for just $50,000.
By 2010, Keurig was on track to sell 3 million K-Cups.
By 2014, that number jumped to 9.8 billion.
The reason? The company had cracked the home market.
But even though his idea became a multi-billion dollar operation,
Sylvan doesn't look back with pride.
The problem? Those 9 billion K-cups aren't biodegradable and
can't be recycled.
Founder John Sylvan never imagined
K-cups would be used outside
offices. But today,
40% of Canadian homes
and 25% of American ones
have single-serve coffee makers
in their kitchens.
Recent estimates say the amount
of non-recyclable K-cups
currently in landfills
could circle the earth
more than 12 times.
And that's why John Sylvan
regrets his invention.
While Keurig says
it is working on a sustainable K-cup,
Sylvan doesn't believe
the product will ever be
fully recyclable.
He says he feels bad sometimes
that he ever invented it.
And today, John Sylvan doesn't even own
a Keurig coffee maker.
Back in the late 1800s,
Milton Wright was a traveling preacher.
He would often bring home toys for his children from his travels.
One day he brought home a toy whirlybird.
Made of cork, bamboo, and paper, the whirlybird was powered by a rubber band
which twirled its blades and made it airborne.
It fascinated his two sons, Orville and Wilbur.
When they grew up, Orville and Wilbur started a bicycle repair shop
and began coming up with their own designs.
The Wright brothers were tinkerers,
but they never lost their fascination with flight.
Around the world, some other inventors were having moderate success with gliders.
That's when the Wright brothers decided
to experiment with motorized
flight. Through many
prototypes and designs, the Wright
brothers continued to refine
their idea. Then,
on December 17, 1903,
Orville and Wilbur Wright
made history with a powered,
sustained, and controlled airplane
flight that remained airborne for 59 seconds at a distance of 852 feet.
It was an extraordinary achievement.
Surprisingly, their invention didn't find a receptive audience in the U.S.
Many people didn't believe the accomplishment.
The press said the flights were too short to be important.
One headline said,
Flyers or Liars.
So Wilbur traveled to Europe and found a much more receptive audience there.
Almost immediately, they started selling planes in Europe.
Eventually, the Wright brothers sold their first airplane
to the U.S. Army in 1909.
Even though Wilbur died in 1912,
Orville continued with the company.
He sold 14 more planes to the Army for observation missions.
Orville truly believed airplanes would prevent wars.
He felt with aerial observation,
it would be impossible to have surprise attacks.
And because both sides would know what the other was doing at all times,
the desire for war would wane.
However, the military had other ideas.
In 1911, Italy became the first country to use airplanes in warfare.
It was in a war with Turkey and dropped hand grenades on enemy troops from the sky.
While it's kind of shocking to imagine, early aerial dogfights were really pistol duels.
Pilots actually carried handguns and rifles to try and shoot other pilots.
In one noted encounter in 1914, a British airman ran out of ammo
Blimey! Take that!
and simply threw the handgun at a German pilot.
Ouch!
By the end of World War I, there were observation planes, fighter planes, and multi-engine bombers that could carry thousands of pounds of bombs.
Orville Wright was mortified at the destruction his beloved planes were inflicting.
During World War II, over 300,000 warplanes were built. On his 74th birthday in 1945, Orville Wright's lifelong optimism about the role of the airplane as an instrument of peace had faded.
While he loved his invention, he deplored the destruction it had caused.
He said, something that would bring lasting peace to the earth. But we were wrong. We underestimated man's capacity to hate
and to corrupt good means for an evil end.
It would be a sentiment shared by
quite a few other inventors in history.
We'll be right back to our show.
If you're enjoying this episode,
why not dip into our archives,
available wherever you download your pods.
Go to terryoreilly.ca for a master episode list.
Even as a kid, Philo Farnsworth was fascinated by electricity.
At 13 years of age, he figured out how to use electricity
to operate his farm's washing machine, sewing machine, and barn lights.
One day, he found a stash of popular science magazines
in the attic of his family's Idaho farmhouse
and read about the possibility of television for the first time.
The thought of sending pictures through the air enthralled him.
By age 14, he had theorized the principles of electronic television.
When I was 14, I was doing...
Nothing.
Precisely.
Everyone in his family had farm chores,
and young Philo's was to plow the family potato field,
which gave him a lot of time to think.
One day, he stopped to survey the parallel rows of crops behind him.
In that moment, he realized that a large image could be composed
from smaller repeating lines
if they were viewed from a distance.
It was a profound insight.
He noodled that insight for the next few years,
and in 1927, at the age of 21,
he generated the first electronic television image through the air,
from one room to another,
by scanning the image in a series
of lines going back and forth.
A breakthrough inspired
by his potato plowing.
Television as we know it
was born that day.
Philo Farnsworth had a hope
for his invention. He saw television
as a marvelous teaching tool
that could help eliminate illiteracy.
He wanted it to allow people to see and learn about each other. That way, differences could
be solved around conference tables without going to war. But it didn't turn out that way.
When Philo Farnsworth looked back on his invention many years later, he wasn't a happy man. He felt he had created a monster.
He believed very few people were being educated,
that the world's problems had not been solved.
He believed people wasted their lives
spending so much time watching television
because it was nothing worthwhile on it.
He regretted his wonderful invention.
Philo Farnsworth lived until 1971.
When he died, the average TV set
still contained over 100 components he had patented.
By that time, almost every house in the nation
had a television set.
Except one.
Philo Farnsworth never allowed a TV set into his home.
When World War II ended, industry boomed in North America.
With that came expanding workforces.
Most office spaces at that time were open bullpens,
with only executives enjoying offices with doors.
Industrial designer Robert Probst felt the open-concept office was a wasteland.
He believed it sapped vitality, blocked talent,
and wasted effectiveness, health, and motivation.
So, in 1968, he offered a better solution.
He came up with a flexible three-wall design that could be reshaped to any given need.
It included multiple work surfaces,
and the movable partitions provided a degree of privacy
with a place to pin up works in progress.
It let companies react to change quickly and inexpensively. He called
his new design Action
Office. The world
called it Cubicles.
Initially, Cubicles launched
to great reviews. People
who had worked in noisy open areas
welcomed the change. But that
applause didn't last long.
Soon companies looking to save money began cramming a lot of people into small spaces.
The cubicles got smaller and smaller and smaller.
Robert Propst didn't like what he saw.
First, cubicles were never designed to be square.
They were meant to be fluid and interesting.
Secondly, his movable walls were designed to be raw material to be built on.
But office managers saw them as finished furniture.
Where the action office was meant to be shapeshifting, motivating, and inspiring,
cubicles ended up being boxy, boring, and soulless. As one writer said,
nothing conjures up dread and drudgery quicker than the word cubicle.
Propst was outraged.
He said the cubicalizing of people in modern corporations was monolithic insanity.
He said the egg carton geometry created barren hellholes and a rat maze of boxes.
Even though it was hated by workers and cursed by interior designers,
the cubicle still claims the largest share of office furniture to this day.
By the time Robert Props died in 2000,
over 40 million people were working in cubicles.
It would be the biggest regret of his career.
If you're looking for flexible workouts, Peloton's got you covered. Summer runs or
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Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca One day at Sunday school,
Anna Jarvis' mother told
stories about notable mothers in the
Bible, ending the lesson with
a prayer that maybe someday
someone would create a day to
celebrate all that mothers have done
for humanity.
That lesson had a profound impact on Anna.
When her mother passed away years later, Anna Jarvis was devastated and decided to work to promote a day that would honor all mothers.
In 1908, Anna celebrated the first Mother's Day with a speech in the church where her mother had taught.
She designated white
carnations as a symbol of a mother's love, as carnations were her mother's favorite flower.
The concept of Mother's Day caught on quickly because Jarvis was a zealous letter writer.
She wrote to the president, she wrote to politicians, she wrote to dignitaries. She was
soon assisted by deep-pocketed backers like John Wanamaker
of Wanamaker's department store
and H.J. Hines of ketchup fame.
The floral industry
fully supported the movement
and Anna Jarvis accepted their donations
and spoke at their conventions.
In 1914,
President Woodrow Wilson
signed legislation officially
designating the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day.
Anna Jarvis had finally realized her dream.
But that dream started becoming a cash cow for corporations.
In the beginning, carnations cost half a penny each.
Four years later, florists were charging 15 cents each.
Greeting card companies started issuing Mother's Day cards.
The confectionery industry began creating Mother's Day chocolates.
Soon, Anna Jarvis quit her job as the first female advertising editor
at an insurance company to campaign full-time
against the commercialization of Mother's Day.
To her, Mother's Day was to be a day of sentiment.
She encouraged people to spend the day with their mothers
or write them loving letters.
Now all she saw was profiteering.
Beginning in 1920, she urged people to stop buying flowers.
She couldn't stand those who sold or used greeting cards.
She even turned against her commercial supporters.
One day, while dining in the Wanamaker's department store,
she saw they were offering a Mother's Day salad.
She ordered it, dumped it on the floor,
left the money for it, and marched out.
She threatened lawsuits.
She tried to trademark a carnation with the words Mother's Day, but was denied.
Jarvis referred to florists, greeting card companies, and candy makers as,
quote, kidnappers, and termites that would undermine with their greed one of the finest and noblest of celebrations.
FTD, the floral company, offered her a lucrative commission
on the sale of all Mother's Day carnations as a peace offering,
which only infuriated her further.
She spent the next years going door-to-door for signatures to rescind Mother's Day.
Older, worn, and frail from the long fight, Anna Jarvis spent her last days deeply in
debt living in a sanatorium.
She regretted the commercialization until the day she died in 1948.
Anna Jarvis was the mother of Mother's Day, but never married and never became a mother.
And she was never told one interesting fact.
The bill for her time in the sanatorium was paid for by a group of grateful florists. When directors lost control of their films,
they were able to take their name off the credits,
use the Alan Smithy pseudonym,
and walk away anonymously.
But inventors rarely got that option.
Victor Gruen's shopping mall became a suburban cliché.
Orville and Wilbur Wright's invention
has become a big chapter in military history.
Philo Farnsworth's invention
was often referred to as an idiot box.
Robert Propp's cubicles
have been called satanic offices.
And Anna Jarvis' beloved Mother's Day
has turned into a $21 billion sales frenzy.
That was the consistent theme today.
Each inventor lost control of their creations.
And the way their inventions went on to be used and misconstrued broke their hearts.
That's one of the most unwieldy aspects of marketing.
You create a product, you inform the public,
you put it into the marketplace, and it's out of your hands.
The world will do with it what the world wants.
As they say, the herd will be heard.
It makes you wonder what kind of a world it might have been if only we had listened to those inventors.
But it's hard to hear them when you're under the influence.
I'm Terry O'Reilly. Under the Influence was recorded at Pirate Toronto.
Series producer, Debbie O'Reilly.
Sound engineer, Keith Oman.
Theme music by Ari Posner and Ian Lefevre.
Research, Abby Forsythe.
See all the visuals from this episode at cbc.ca slash undertheinfluence.
See you next week.
This episode brought to you by
Singer's complete line of fine vacuum cleaners.
Remember mother with the gift of a lifetime.
Um, do you wear clothes when you listen to our show?
If so, have we got a t-shirt for you.
Go to terryoreilly.ca slash shop. New year, new me. Season is here and honestly, we're already over it. Enter Felix,
the healthcare company helping Canadians take a different approach to weight loss this year.
Weight loss is more than just diet and exercise. It can be about
tackling genetics, hormones, metabolism. Felix gets it. They connect you with licensed healthcare
practitioners online who'll create a personalized treatment plan that pairs your healthy lifestyle
with a little help and a little extra support. Start your visit today at felix.ca. That's F-E-L-I-X dot C-A.
Whether you're in your running era, Pilates era, or yoga era,
dive into Peloton workouts that work with you.
From meditating at your kid's game to mastering a strength program,
they've got everything you need to keep knocking down your goals.
No pressure to be who you're not.
Just workouts and classes to strengthen who you are.
So no matter your era,
make it your best with Peloton. Find your push. Find your power. Peloton. Visit Peloton at
onepeloton.ca.