See
'N' Say
In the 1960's, toys that could talk were all the rage. Chatty Cathy
started the trend when she was released in 1959, but it wasn't until
1965 that Mattel released what would become a staple in the
educational toy market.
The See 'n Say used the same technology as Thomas Edison's original
gramophone to bring the sounds of barnyard animals to children
everywhere. The circular plastic See 'n Say typically had a
clock-face-like arrangement of cartoon animal portraits. In the centre
of the portraits a rotating arrow pointed at one of the animals. When
you pulled a string (or sometimes a lever) on the side of the See 'n
Say, a low, soothingly garbled voice said "The rooster says . . . "
(or whatever animal to which the arrow pointed), followed by a long
vocal representation of the particular animal's sound. A crow in the
case of the rooster, a moo for the cow, a gobble for the turkey, etc.
For many children, it was the first time experiencing the sounds of
animals that were not usually found roaming the streets of the average
urban area. Of course, because the recording was roughly the same
quality as those original Edison gramophones, the animal sounds
weren't exactly the same as you might find out on the farm. But See 'n
Say didn't do too shabbily for using hundred-year-old technology.
Originally, the See 'n Say was a pre-school aged educational tool,
focusing exclusively on the sounds that animals made. But as the toy
evolved into a signature product, several variations were introduced.
Licensed characters such as Mickey Mouse got into the act, and soon
there were See 'n Say's that vocalised everything from popular cartoon
characters to letters of the alphabet.
Eventually, as the 1970's and 1980's spawned the age of personal
electronics, the See 'n Say went digital, abandoning the gramophone
technology for the electronic equivalent. See 'n Say even had distant
relatives in the computer age - Speak & Spell by Texas Instruments is
one apple that didn't far too fall from the See 'n Say tree.
Even though the first See 'n Say sold over thirty years ago, the
relatively basic toy is still sold to kiddie barnyard enthusiasts
today. And the Mattel executive says, "Ker-ching!". |