A whimsical look at modern consumer culture examines one hundred obscure products and services, from kitsch novelties to offbeat food products to unusual functional items, including toothpick dispensers, dental floss, and blue M&Ms. Original.
Paul Lukas began writing a fantastic homemade 'zine called Beer Frame in 1993. Paul Lukas is my hero. Why?
1. He is a hit at parties! (I always credit I Consumption/Beer Frame for my knowledge of all things obscure and AWESOME!)
2. He loves to lick the Twinkie scum off the Twinkie cardboard thingy. (This was even BEFORE the Twinkie Debacle of 2012.)
3. I think he inconspicuously wears a cape and Superman underpants. (The original ones produced at a factory in Michigan, not that other crappy place that starts with an "M" and rhymes with "dysplasia".)
4. He knows stuff about crazy stuff that I care about deeply. ("Crazy" in the relative sense, of course.)
He is the reason I know many vital life altering facts like, why Diamond Crystal® single serve salt and pepper come in weird little wavey fluted packets. It has nothing to do with serving size.
I am a collector of old, odd, useful and useless artifacts. How could Paul NOT be my hero! Beer Frame no longer exists, so I have to get my Paul fix from various sources. Slate carried a series of fantastic articles: "Permanent Record: A trove of 1920s report cards and the stories they tell". And, Paul currently writes for ESPN Playbook Fandom blog.
From the zine Beer Frame comes a book of the "everyday stuff we take for granted." I love this book. Compilations of all sorts of gadgets, logos, products, etc. You know that thing that measures your foot at the shoe store. It's called a Brannock Device, invented in 1926 by Charles Brannock. If you find that as fascinating as I do this book is rare find.
Lukas brings more deliberation and insight to his essays about Pringles and tampon packaging than most critics do when they're talking about high art. You'll never look at a can of cat food the same way again.
Paul Lukas for many years edited and mostly wrote a small 'zine called "Beer Frame" dedicated to the most obvious and yet rarely missed of pursuits: the reviewing of everyday, household items. We have reviews of movies, beer, wine, albums...here I am writing a review of this book...but it took a man of Lukas' genius to compare and contrast different brand of pork rinds; OTC cold medicines; tape; weird canned meat that most of us would never touch; Japanese sodas; etc. He also occasionally reviewed CDS and books -- for their physical construction, not for their content, typically. The reviews are sometimes quite straightlaced, sometimes deliberately over-the-top and funny, though the more "serious" reviews often seem to end up being the most laugh-inducing. I don't know if he's still publishing (I sure hope so) but this wonderful small collection of the best of the magazine, published in 1997, will do the trick for pop-culture devotees interested in something beyond Flintstones lunchboxes.
Among the items covered in this compilation of articles from the zine Beer Frame, are the Dial-A-Pick toothpick dispenser, the classic mousetrap, the Brannock device (for measuring your shoe size), body glue, fake mistletoe, and other odd items. For each he tries to get a sample of his own (sometimes with no luck), and correspond with the manufacturer about the item's origin & popularity. Many reviews are humorous, some are straight-forward and fairly serious. Even though it's a 1997 publication, it's still fairly current, covering Pringles, Hostess Twinkies & cupcakes, and animal crackers. He doesn't cover just the U.S., though. He finds obscure flavors of LifeSavers: apparently Australia has (or had) flavors called Musk, and Thirst, which one Aussie called "an acquired taste." Recommended for trivia buffs and lovers of the obscure.
This series of essays struck me more as love stories than object lessons- I feel as though one could replace the subject's names with women's names and this book would seem like an account of the author's past girlfriends. Inconspicuous Consumption is a quick read, and has many amusing accounts of products, services, and other random things that are extremely amusing, but usually overlooked. If you're looking to read something light and entertaining, this is perfect!
This is a fun read. Must have been on my bookshelf for a couple decades. I actually bought an item on ebay after reading about it in this book. Would have given it four-stars, but I feel it didn't end nearly as strongly as it began. Instead of items and products, it ended with paperwork and manuals, which quelled my excitement for the book.