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Just Give It A Shake

To Change Your Course

By Kelli Sheckler-AmsdenPublished 3 months ago 1 min read
Just Give It A Shake
Photo by Pau Casals on Unsplash

And the 8 ball says:

"The outlook does not look good"

Check the ouija board.....

***

A/N

In the 1940s, a clairvoyant by the name of Mary Carter, in Cincinnati, inspired her son with an object she used with her clients – a container with a small chalk slate inside it. She would shake the container and open it to reveal the clients answer to the question, written on the slate. Her son, Albert Carter, advanced the design into an easier to operate device – the Syco Seer. A simple cylinder with both transparent ends, filled with molasses, and two dice with answers written on each face – a TOTAL of 12 answers. When it was shaken and up-ended, one of the dice would drift to the top, revealing a random face/answer.

Albert Carter took his idea to a local merchant, with the intention of getting it mass-produced. The merchant, Max Levinson, with his brother-in-law, Abe Bookman, altered the design by reducing the number of windows to one, changing the molasses to inky water and naming in Syco Slate. This version now had only one 6 sided die with answers – a TOTAL of 6 answers.

A standard Magic 8 Ball has 20 possible answers shown in the table below, including 10 affirmative answers , 5 non-committal answers, and 5 negative answers, such as Concentrate and ask again and Reply hazy, try again.

It was Bookman who then decided to change the overall shape to that of a crystal ball, in collaboration a Chicago-based company called Brunswick Billiards, in 1950. An 8-Ball variant was made, which was so successful that it eventually became the Magic 8 Ball that we see today, with a 20 sided die inside it – a TOTAL of 20 answers, manufactured and patented by the toy store, Mattel.

Haiku

About the Creator

Kelli Sheckler-Amsden

Telling stories my heart needs to tell <3 life is a journey, not a competition

If you like what you read, feel free to leave a tip, I would love some feedback

Find me on twitter @kelli7958958

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Comments (6)

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  • Karen Cave3 months ago

    This was so interesting! I love learning the history of things.

  • Aarish3 months ago

    This short piece dances between curiosity and creativity, it’s a reminder that innovation often comes from reimagining the simple and strange.

  • A. J. Schoenfeld3 months ago

    Very clever Haiku and I loved the history lesson.

  • Hannah Moore3 months ago

    How interesting!

  • Mark Graham3 months ago

    I had one of them and they were fun to play with. What a great article.

  • Raphael Fontenelle3 months ago

    That's pretty cool. :3

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