Archive for October, 2008

It’s Lift Off 2 that you need for gum

Monday, October 6th, 2008

 Last Friday’s Hospitality Magazine website in Australia reviewed a biodegradable stain removal product, Lift Off, invented by chemist Gregg Motsenbocker for removing stains, including the ongoing challenge of discarded gum.

As the magazine notes, the product has no ammonia or solvent smell and “…it can be used on any surface without damaging or degrading the surface or the environment.”

There are three different varieties available, but when it comes to gum, it’s the second variety that you want:

Lift Off 2 removes oil and petroleum-based stains such as oil, grease, labels, chewing gum and candle wax, all of which will disappear from areas such as metal, plastic, wood, glass (labels), hair (chewing gum), carpet and fabric.

Gum wall | West Lafayette, Indiana

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Upwards, Somewhere, originally uploaded by JohnnyBallgame.

Gumball math | Sesame Street

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Win a race, get a lot of gum

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

 Our friends at Wrigley Airwaves are the official chewing gum sponsors of the FIA World Rally Championship, and are also now supporting FSTi (Fiesta Sporting Trophy International), as reported today on the Italian website DueMotori.com.

This is good news for those who win, as Emre Yurdakul of Turkey discovered after coming in first in this weekend’s Rally RACC Catalunya – Rally de España.

Besides the fame and glory of winning this round, there’s gum to be had, and lots of it:

Following the recent announcement that Airwaves® has become the Official Chewing Gum Sponsor of the FIA World Rally Championship (WRC), the brand (who also count Stobart VK M-Sport Ford Rally Team’s Matthew Wilson amongst their ‘Airwaves® Pro’ line-up), increased their involvement in the WRC this weekend by supporting FSTi and awarding Yurdakul the Airwaves Award of a year’s supply of Airwaves chewing gum for his victory.

Space Invaders chewing gum | Japan

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

space invaders chewing gum, originally uploaded by momentimedia.

An e-mail gone viral, a driveway, City Council meetings and, yes, Sarah Palin…chewing gum

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

IMAGE: Los Angeles Times

Anne Kilkenny (pictured above), who lives in Wasilla (hometown of Sarah Palin), decided to write to 40 of her friends to share her impressions of fellow resident, former mayor, current Alaska governor, and now John McCain’s vice president candidate.

Since it was e-mail, it didn’t stop there, and by the time the Los Angeles Times reported on it last week, she had 13,700 e-mail responses, half a million Google hits (and, one presumes, counting)….an e-mail that had gone viral as only these things can do (you can make it 500,001 by reading it here).

As the Times article notes, Kilkenny crossed paths with Palin, in particular, because of a driveway proposal that needed City Council approval:

It was Kilkenny’s firsthand experience with Palin — who was elected to the council in 1992 and became Wasilla’s mayor in 1996 — that inspired her to craft the e-mail that made her famous.

“I wanted people to be informed,” Kilkenny said. “I wasn’t trying to make a judgment call.”

A 70-foot-long and 30-foot-wide smooth slab of concrete fans out from the garage of Kilkenny’s home to the street. She glances through the window of her tidy kitchen plastered in dandelion-yellow and pumpkin-orange wallpaper. Most of what she knows about local politics started with her fight to pave that driveway.

Until then, Kilkenny rarely paid attention to city issues, though she did vote to put Palin on the City Council. Four years later, the city of Wasilla announced it was going to pave Kilkenny’s street.

She had a fondness for municipal development because her father had been a civil engineer. The family used to drive around their neighborhood in Contra Costa County, Calif., to check out new building projects.

Kilkenny sketched a drawing of how she wanted her driveway apron to look and showed it to planning officials. It was rejected because the footprint was too wide.

“They said, ‘You can only have 12 feet,’ ” Kilkenny said.

At a council meeting, an attorney told her the only way to appeal the ordinance was to rewrite it.

So she did.

Kilkenny showed up at each City Council meeting with her typed driveway ordinance, trying to get it approved. The sessions were held inside a refurbished high school gymnasium. Six council members sat around a horseshoe-shaped table; in the center was Palin, often chewing a wad of gum.

These New Zealand tax cuts, unlike the chewing gum tax cuts of 2005, are here to stay

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

 Last week’s Stuff news site from New Zealand reported that a new round of tax cuts were safe, unlike the “chewing gum tax cuts” that were cancelled two years ago (so called because they brought the average tax payer the equivalent of about 67¢ a week, enough to buy a pack of gum). The cuts in the past had also moved up into block of cheese territory, and at the very least, the Finance Minister assures the Kiwis these new cuts are here to stay, as the article reports:

Finance Minister Michael Cullen reiterated yesterday that tax cuts, due to take effect from today with further cuts scheduled from April 2010 and April 2011, were locked into place by law. That gave people “certainty”, he said.

His comments came after National’s finance spokesman Bill English questioned Labour’s commitment to tax cuts and revived memories of the “chewing gum” cuts, which were cancelled in 2006.

Gum commercial | France

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

From Bubble Tape to chewing gum (awake)

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Today’s Beacon News, from northern Illinois, reports on the latest invention of retired chewing gum inventor (and Wrigley executive) Ron Reams, who has moved on from some of his earlier inventions, which included Mork bubble gum, Ouch bandage-shaped bubble gum, and Bubble Tape — five to 15 new products a year for 30 years, by his own estimation — has shifted his chewing gum invention focus to a new product with a serious intent — first responders who are fighting in the war in Iraq.

His new company, Marketright,  has introduced a new caffeinated gum after a decade of research, as the article reports:

 

Working with scientists at a Florida lab, (Reams) discovered that a stick of gum containing caffeine provided an instant boost compared to a cup of coffee, an espresso shot or energy bars being digested for example.

This past summer, after 10 years of research, Ream’s Plano firm Marketright has distributed a caffeine gum, available only to a very specific consumer: first-responders fighting the war in Iraq.

Ignited by a federal grant secured by former House Speaker Dennis Hastert back in 1998, Ream collaborated with scientists of the Walter Reed Army Institute to research the effects of a caffeine gum containing 100 mg of caffeine per piece. One piece is equivalent to a six-ounce cup of coffee.

“I was the gum man, and they were the clinical testing gurus,” Ream said.

Marketright firm has distributed 500,000 packages of Stay Alert Gum to the military so far, Ream said. The contract lasts two years.

Gum seller | Hanoi, Vietnam

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Anyone want a chewing-gum ?, originally uploaded by ePi.Longo.