Ronco
Industry | small appliances |
---|---|
Founded | 1964 |
Founder | Ron Popeil |
Headquarters | Chicago, IL, United States |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products | Stainless steel Rotisserie, Veg-O-Matic, Kitchen Knives |
Website |
www |
Ronco is an American company that manufactures and sells a variety of items and devices, most commonly those used in the kitchen. Ron Popeil founded the company in 1964,[1] and commercials for the company's products soon became pervasive and memorable, in part thanks to Popeil's personal sales pitches. The names "Ronco" and "Popeil" and the suffix "-O-Matic" (used in many early product names) became icons of American popular culture and were often referred to by comedians introducing fictional gadgets.
History
In the beginning, the company chiefly sold inventions developed by Popeil's father, Samuel "S.J." Popeil. Products include the Veg-O-Matic and the Popeil Pocket Fisherman, a product manufactured by S.J. Popeil's company. During the 1970s, Ron Popeil began developing products on his own to sell through Ronco. In August, 2005, Popeil announced his sale of the company to Fi-Tek VII, a Denver holding company, for $55 million. He was expected to continue working with the company as spokesman and product developer, but sold the company in order to have more time with his family. Fi-Tek VII changed its name to Ronco, and maintained the right of first look for Popeil's future inventions.
Ronco still holds the trademark on the phrase "set it and forget it",[2] used in the commercials for the Showtime Rotisserie Grill (and "Household goods, namely, rotisseries, electric food dehydrators and structural parts therefor, namely, dehydrator trays and screens.") The phrase has gone on to be used in popular culture.
On June 14, 2007, Ronco filed Chapter 11 in U.S. bankruptcy court. Paperwork filed showed that Ronco creditors, the largest of which is Popeil himself, were owed US$32.7 million.[3]
In 2011, CD3 Holdings, Inc., a consumer products company, acquired Ronco..
Inventions
Ronco is known for a wide range of products marketed and in some cases invented by Ron Popeil. Among them are:
- Chop-O-Matic: a hand food processor. "Ladies and gentlemen, I'm going to show you the greatest kitchen appliance ever made ... All your onions chopped to perfection without shedding a single tear."
- Dial-O-Matic: successor to the Veg-O-Matic (and very similar to a mandolin slicer). "Slice a tomato so thin it only has one side." "When chopping onions with this machine, the only tears you will shed will be tears of joy."
- Popeil Pocket Fisherman: a small fishing pole. "The biggest fishing invention since the hook ... and still only $19.95!" (According to the program Biography, the original product was the invention of Popeil's father and only marketed by Ronco, but as of 2006, Popeil had introduced a redesigned version of the product.)[4]
- Mr. Microphone: a short-range hand-held radio transmitter that would broadcast over an FM radio. The nearby radio(s) would therefore amplify the sound coming from the Mr. Microphone. In the ad, a convertible rolls past with the FM radio turned up; a young man in the car transmits using a Mr. Microphone, "Hey, good-lookin', we'll be back to pick ya up later!" Mr. Microphone is referenced in Police Academy 2, and is parodied in The Simpsons episode "Radio Bart".
- Inside-The-Shell Egg Scrambler: (self-explanatory) "Gets rid of those slimy egg whites in your scrambled eggs." Popeil has said the inspiration for this product was his lifelong revulsion toward incompletely blended scrambled eggs.[4]
- Six Star 20-Piece Cutlery Set: (self-explanatory)
- Showtime Rotisserie: a small rotisserie oven designed for cooking smaller sized portions of meat such as whole chicken and lamb. "Set it, and forget it!"
- Solid Flavor Injector: used to inject solid ingredients into meat or other foods. A similar product, called the Liquid Flavor Injector, allowed for the injecting of liquid ingredients into meat, e.g., lime juice into chicken. This product accompanied the Showtime Rotisserie.
- GLH-9: hair in a can (Great Looking Hair Formula #9)
- Drain Buster:
- Smokeless Ashtray: a device which used an integrated fan to draw smoke away from the materials in the ashtray.
- Electric Food Dehydrator: (self-explanatory) "Instead of giving kids candy, give them apple snacks or banana chips. And it's great if you're a hunter, fisherman, backpacker, or camper. Makes beef jerky for around $3 a pound, and you know what went in it, because you made it yourself!"
- Ronco Popeil Automatic Pasta Maker: (self-explanatory)
- Ronco Rhinestone Stud Setter: "It changes everyday clothing into exciting fashions and you don't have to spend a fortune."
- The Cap Snaffler: bottle opener. "Snaffles caps off any size jug, bottle, or jar ... and it really, really works."[5]
Awards
- The Ronco Inside-The-Shell Electric Egg Scrambler, from 1978, won 84th place in Mobile Magazine's Top 100 Gadgets of All Time.[6]
- Consumers Digest Award "Best Buy in Rotisserie" Dec. 2010
Records
Ronco, like its rival K-tel, is also known as a record label, mostly issuing compilation albums created for TV advertising and licensed from the major record labels. In the United Kingdom, its first album was 20 Star Tracks, released in 1972. It issued three number one albums, the That'll Be the Day soundtrack in 1973 (which was removed from the chart while at number one as TV-advertised compilations were banned from the chart), Disco Daze and Disco Nites in 1981, and Raiders of the Pop Charts (released at the end of 1982, topping the chart in 1983). Its then-novel marketing techniques made it a major force until the emergence of the Now That's What I Call Music albums and their imitators, after which Ronco rapidly disappeared from the UK album market in 1984 when its parent company went bankrupt. Many of its UK ads in the 1970s and 1980s, whether for its kitchen products or albums, featured the voice of Tommy Vance.
See also
References
- ↑ "The History of Ronco, Inc". Retrieved 26 December 2013.
After its foundation near Chicago in 1964, the firm went public in 1969.
- ↑ United States Patent & Trademark Office - Search for US Serial No: 77982861
- ↑ Jeff St.Onge (2007-06-15). "Ronco, Maker of the Veg-O-Matic, Files Bankruptcy". Bloomberg News. Retrieved 2007-06-15.
- 1 2 Ron Popeil, Biography, aired August 15, 2006
- ↑ John, Jory; Monsen, Avery (2011-05-27). I Feel Relatively Neutral About New York. Chronicle Books. p. 22. ISBN 9781452105628. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
- ↑ The Top 100 Gadgets of All Time
Further reading
- Nolte-Watts, Carolyn (December 20, 1977). "Ronco - Every Christmas they entice the TV viewer with visions of bottle cutters and potato chip makers dancing on airwaves". St. Petersburg Times.
- Associated Press (December 13, 1982). "Ronco slices, dices and sells". The Milwaukee Journal.
- Associated Press (January 19, 1984). "Gadget Master Ronco Facing Bankruptcy". The Palm Beach Post.
- Klibanoff, Hank (December 20, 1984). "Ronco is bankrupt and off the air for first time in 20 years". The Evening Independent.
- McGeehan, Patrick (December 11, 1994). "Profile; He's Back! The Amazing Human Selling Machine!". The New York Times.