cyanmagentayellowblack man markets fab four … · eight to 10 hours of battery storage on top of...
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By Michael BoothThe Denver Post
From a solar-powered batterycharger that fairly shouts “eco-friendly rawk!” to a clock-radiofit for a space odyssey, thereare better ways to run youriPod.
Feeding, clothing and caringfor your iPod with accessorieshas become a major Americangrowth industry, seeing as howApple sold 21 million of its me-dia players in the last threemonths before Christmas.
Estimates put the sales mar-ket for iPod add-ons at $1 bil-lion a year, and growing fast.
Companies like Griffin,Belkin, JBL and Bose have ei-ther launched or revived entirebrand names by jumping onthe iPod’s goodwill marketingtrain.
Many of the accessories areridiculous, of course. Do youneed the $40 iFish, that ampli-fies your iPod and flops aroundon the floor in time to the mu-sic? Or the iPod dock for the
bathroom that also dispensestoilet paper? We think not.
Ah, but that $100 sun-pow-ered battery charger from So-lio.com — that’s a winner.When you want to be off thegrid but remain in tune, thecharger gives you one hour ofplay time for each hour soaksin the sun. It also provideseight to 10 hours of batterystorage on top of your regularcharge.
The most useful iPod toolsthese days put the sound whereyou want it, when you don’twant it in your ears: throughyour car stereo.
Industry product reviews callthe Belkin TuneFM a cheap,decent-sounding option forwireless transmission of youriPod’s signal into your carstereo and speakers.
The TuneFM model ($40 to$50 online) plugs into the cig-arette lighter as a charger foryour iPod, and mounts on thebottom of the iPod to send themusic signal through an un-used FM frequency.
But many users of the wire-
less transmission gizmos arefrustrated by static, or con-stantly searching for better fre-quencies as they roam a signal-filled city. Hard-wiring youriPod to the car stereo is a bet-ter option if you spend a lot oflistening time in the driver’sseat.
There are a few basic op-tions for car owners. Car Toyswill hard-wire an FM modula-tor that connects your iPod toyour existing stereo, leaving aconnecting cord danglingthrough the dashboard.
You’ll still have to control the
music on your iPod’s panel, adangerous pastime while mov-ing at 65 mph. The equipmentcosts about $49, and the in-stallation is about $75.
Newer cars and separately-purchased car stereos includean auxiliary or headphone jackon the front panel of the tuner.Your iPod can hook directlyinto that jack from the iPod’sheadphone jack; you are stillcontroll ing the playliststhrough the iPod itself. Newradios with that set-up includea Panasonic model starting at$120.
February 25, 2007 25LSunday Gazette-Mail
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Boomer women gather on InternetBoomerGirl.comgeared toward50-somethings
By Korky VannThe Hartford Courant
There’s a new girl in town —or in cyberspace, to be exact.
BoomerGirl.com, launchedlast month, offers news, blogsand tips on health, fashion,family, finances and fitness —all geared toward “women of acertain age.’’ The Web site grewout of a Kansas woman’s week-ly column on her own midlifemisadventures and the chal-lenges and humorous happen-ings of being a female over 50.Cathy Hamilton, who wroteBoomer Girl Diary for a localpaper, was surprised when shesearched for similar contentonline and found little.
“My kids are all over face-book.com and Myspace.com,which offer relevant contentand a community experiencefor teens and twentysome-things,’’ says Hamilton, 51. “Iwanted to find the same thingfor women my age, but therereally wasn’t much out there.’’Hamilton took her idea for aWeb site geared toward middle-
aged women to the marketingfolks at her paper. They sawthe potential and helped get theproject up and running.
“The reaction to my columntold me there was a need forsomething like this on the In-ternet,’’ Hamilton says.“Women over 40 just aren’tseeing themselves in today’smedia.’’
Hamilton’s venture joinsBoomerwomenspeak.com,launched by empty-nester Dot-sie Bregel in 2002, andeons.com, created in 2006 byJeff Taylor, founder of Mon-ster.com for the over-50 audi-ence.
Sandy Berger, author of“Great Age Guide to the Inter-net,’’ a handbook for “boomersand beyond,’’ says such sitesmake good business sense.Born between 1946 and 1964,boomers have more politicalpower, education, discretionaryincome and cultural impactthan any other generation. Thelast wave of boomers turns 43this year. The oldest turns 61.
“Back when I started teach-ing boomers computer skills, Iactually had folks pick up themouse and put it on thescreen,’’ says Berger, creator ofcompukiss.com, which featurescomputer tutorials, technology
Man markets Fab Four clothesStitch-for-stitch copies help outfit Beatles tribute bands, fans
By John KellyThe Washington Post
WASHINGTON — One day, alittle over five years ago, RussLease decided that what theworld needed was historicallyaccurate, reasonably priced re-productions of Beatles clothing:stitch-for-stitch copies of the dis-tinctive outfits the famous mu-sicians wore in concert.
Luckily, Russ was in the po-sition to provide them. With hisbrother, he had owned the PantsPlus clothing store in a subur-ban Maryland mall from 1976until the mall closed in 2001.Russ knew the clothing industry.And he knew the Beatles. A fansince childhood, he’s a leadingcollector of high-end Beatlesmemorabilia: signed letters, rarealbums, old performance con-tracts, one of “The Beatles”drumheads from the front ofRingo’s bass drum.
At a Sotheby’s auction in1994, Russ had paid about$5,000 for a tailored tan jacket,size 39 regular, with epaulets,pleated breast pockets andNehru collar. It was the so-called “Shea jacket,” the veryjacket Paul McCartney worewhen the Beatles performed atShea Stadium on Aug. 15, 1965.
Recently, Russ, 50, slipped ona pair of white cotton gloves andeased a headless mannequinout of a locked display case. Heunbuttoned the Shea jacket andremoved it from the form. Thefabric was clean and unwrin-kled, although there were sweatstains on the acetate lining.
Russ’s idea was to reverse-en-gineer the jacket and create anexact duplicate.
“All of the tailors I spoke withwanted to take it apart,” hesaid. “I said, ‘No you can’t dothat.’ ”
Finally he found a master tai-lor in Lehighton, Pa., namedPete Camioni. The two spentfour days poring over the jack-et, taking measurements, mak-ing sketches. Today, you can buyyour own Shea jacket — in tanor black, sizes 38 to 50 — for$295 from Russ’s company,www.beatlesuits.com.
Next, Russ duplicated thefrock coat Ringo wore on thecover of the “Abbey Road” al-bum. (The original — size 34short; Ringo is tiny — is in an-other display case.) Russ alsosells the collarless suits from theBeatles’ early days, the narrow-lapel jackets and drainpipetrousers they wore on “The EdSullivan Show” and the velvet-collared sharkskin suits seen atthe end of “A Hard Day’s Night.”
These outfits are a godsendfor people whose job requiresthem to dress as John, Paul,George or Ringo. These are thehardworking Beatles tribute
bands, made up of musicianswho comb their bangs over theirforeheads and master not onlythe chords of the Beatles’ songs,but also the distinctive bounceof the Beatles’ heads, theirknees-bent joggling stance, theslight eyeball flutter that ac-companies a lusty “Woooooo!”
These groups — with suchnames as the Mersey Beat, theBeat Club, BritBeat, the Beatalls,the Beatlads, the Fab Four, theFab 5, Fab Forever and AlmostFab — were cruising thrift shopslooking for clothing that couldbe altered and made to lookvaguely Beatlish.
About a third of Russ’s suitsgo to “trib” bands. More recentrockers including Elliot Eastonof the Cars and Doug Fieger ofthe Knack are also customers.So, too, are relatively normalfolks.
“Some of it is kind of back instyle now,” Russ said of theclothes, made at a factory in
Pennsylvania that also sews po-lice uniforms. “Then I thinkthere are people who just wantto have it to hang in the closet.I have a fair amount of womencustomers who want (the Sheajacket) in Paul’s size — not towear it, not to give to their hus-band, just to have it in their col-lection, to put it on a man-nequin in their Beatles room.”
There is something Shroud ofTurin-like about the clothes.Looking at them brings a floodof associations. And Russ’smemorabilia-filled basement islike a reliquary, adorned as it iswith various slivers of the truerock-and-roll cross.
So, Russ, have you ever puton Paul’s jacket?
“I’d be lying to you if I said Ididn’t,” he said. “When you getPaul McCartney’s Shea jacket,you have to put it on and slapon a Hofner bass and look inthe mirror and see how it looks.”
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah!
The Washington Post
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Accessories for iPods are proliferating