Magic 8 Ball
The original Magic 8 Ball was produced by the Alabe
Crafts company in the late 1940s, and billed not for its swami
abilities, but as a conversation piece and a paperweight. Tyco got
hold of the prediction toy after that, and nowadays, toy giant Mattel
is the place the Ball calls home.
It is made now, as it was then, to look like the eight
ball from a pool table, but about four inches high. And we certainly
don't have to spend a lot of time talking about how the thing works:
Just ask the Ball any "yes or no" question, give it a good shake, and
peer into the "Spirit Slate" window for your answer. The triangular
plastic answer piece will emerge out from the blue water and butt
right up against the Spirit Slate, and there, in mere seconds, is your
answer.
There are some emphatic responses: "You May Rely on It" or "My Reply
is No". There are also the less emphatic: "Signs Point to Yes" or
"Outlook Not So Good". And of course - and this is when no one is able
to put the Ball down - there are the deliciously coy: "Reply Hazy, Try
Again" and "Better Not Tell You Now". The Ball will always give you
some kind of answer (and that's more than we can say about parents or
teachers) and it will never need batteries and probably never break
(more than we can say about most toys). And maybe best of all, it
won't tumble off the coffee table it's perched on, because the flat
Spirit Slate window also acts as a handy flat anti-roll device.
Some
people believe they can influence the Ball's answers by the length of
time they shake; some people have very specific rituals that they
perform before actually asking their questions (if you've ever seen
those rhythm gymnastics routines that incorporate balls, you get the
idea).
Some choose their Saturday night dates by the Ball,
some choose their stocks, and some just give the Ball an occasional
whirl to see if it will rain tomorrow or not. Whatever the depth of
your question and whatever your asking-methods may be, the Magic 8
Ball is here to stay. |
|