Stuff for Sports Fans

September 1, 2011

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees

Filed under: New York Yankees — Tags: , , — Paul Battle @ 3:03 pm

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees at Amazon

Let’s pause for a moment to celebrate three distinctive innovators who passed from physical life this year: Curtis Allina, Art Clokey, and Walter Morrison.

What–you haven’t heard of them? I bet you know their creations well: Pez, Gumby, and Frisbee.

I dare you not to grin when saying those three words! Pez, Gumby, and Frisbee collectively represent fun, silliness, play, and a lot of more happy emotions we want in our lives today.

When each of these gentlemen’s obituaries appeared within a month of each other, it made me pause. What lessons did their inventions teach? As I strive to be more originative and innovative, what inspiration may I take from their journeys? After exploring their lives and legacies further, here are the top three things I discovered:

1. Great Innovation Can Happen Even if Life’s Hard

You’d think that if you were a master of something as creative, as inventive, as FUN as any of these three playthings, that you probably lived a charmed life. But that was far from the truth:

  • Clokey was sent to live in a children’s home when his mom’s new husband rejected him after his natural father passed from physical life in a car accident.
  • Allina’s family perished in concentration camps in the 40s, leaving him as the sole survivor.
  • Morrison, a WWII pilot, was shot down and expended 48 days as a prisoner of war in Stalag 13.

Those setbacks didn’t get in their way–in fact, they may have led to even dandier creativeness and innovation. For example, Morrison’s aeronautic achievements helped him tweak his primary flying disc. The abandoned Clokey was finally adopted by a well-known composer who introduced him to an artistic life that surely led him to pick up a handful of clay.

2. Accept Whatever Comes

Gumby’s 1956 debut on “The Howdy Doody Show” led the stop-motion reputation to his own short-lived series and ongoing syndication. But his popularity faded in the 70′s, and creator Clokey was struggling financially, according to published accounts.

Then a young comedian named Eddie Murphy played a foul-talking Gumby on Saturday Night Live in the 80′s. Many expected Clokey–the man who formulated TV’s religious-toned “Davey and Goliath” and who once planned to become an Episcopal priest–to be shocked and penitent at how his creation was mangled.

But according to interviews, he loved it, though he was happy it was on late at night when children were sleeping (remember, this was the pre-TiVo era.) By accepting somebody else’s interpretation and going with the affectionate outpouring, the edgy performance rejuvenated Gumby, and put the green guy in the hands of a whole new generation.

3. You Don’t Have to Create to be Creative

Pez was in the first place a Viennese mint, marketed to adults as an substitute to smoking. In fact, the stemmed dispenser was designed to look like a cigarette lighter. When the idea emerged to repackage the candy for children, company exec Allina had to persuade the conservative, European home office that the alter would make sense.

Pez historian (now there’s a job!) David Welch told The New York Times that no one genuinely knows precisely whose idea it was to put heads on Pez dispensers. However, Welch shared, “The idea came from the United States. And for the idea to have come out of the United States and made it to Austria where it could be approved, Allina was the only guy who could have made that happen.”

So whether Allina actually prevised a Santa head on a stack of peppermints, we’ll never know. But he was the one to enable the originative move, to in truth make it happen, and in the end, is credited with making the now multi-million dollar industry come to life. Not a bad legacy.

Speaking of legacy, it is worth noting one other thing these three men had in common. They all lived long lives: Pez’s Allina passed away at 87. Gumby animator Clokey passed away at 88; and Morrison, Frisbee’s father, passed away at 90. They left behind not only their respective innovations, but also buckets of inspiration for the originative spirit in all of us.

Where do you find your innovation inspiration–at work, outdoors, or at home in your garage? From music, TV, or a stroll through the mall? Who inspires you most–people you know well, or people you’ve only known from afar?


Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees

Pez Candy Dispenser 12ct – These blister packed dispensers are packaged with 3 packs of PEZ candy. 12 pieces in 4 color counter display. Super standard PEZ dispenser features a baseball with team logo.

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees Picture

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees Photo

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees Image

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees

Pez Dispenser Candy York Yankees Pic

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