obwnn: A frequent filler on late night commercial slots...

Barry Becher, of Ginsu Knives Fame, Dies at 71

By MATT SEDENSKY Associated Press
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. June 27, 2012 (AP)
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/barry-becher-ginsu-knives-fame-dies-71-16662626

Barry Becher, a marketing mastermind and infomercial pioneer best
known for bringing Ginsu knives to the American public, has died. He
was 71.

Becher had been suffering from kidney cancer and died Friday at a
hospital of complications from surgery, his stepdaughter Stacy
Paradise said Wednesday. He had lived in Parkland.

Though Becher brought many campaigns to the airwaves with his business
partner Ed Valenti, they are forever linked with Ginsu, the ubiquitous
knives shown slicing through tin cans and chipping a wood block.

Millions were sold from the commercial's debut in 1978 into the early
1980s, with audiences mesmerized by images of an exotic-sounding knife
that seemed able to cut through anything. The infomercial promised a
50-year guarantee and "much, much more."

Becher was born in Brooklyn. His father was a chemical engineer; his
mother an opera singer. He left for Rhode Island after high school,
passing broken-down cars on the highway. He figured he might be able
to make a living in the auto business.

Becher was running two AAMCO franchises near Warwick, R.I., when he
met Valenti, an account executive for a local television station who
was handling the auto shops' advertising. They drove the same Datsun
240Z, had wives who were schoolmates, shared a passion for sales and
became fast friends. They decided they wanted to find a product they
could market through an extended TV commercial, the way some records
were sold. Becher found a mohair-bristled paint pad that prevented
splatter and cut work times.

They were roundly rejected when they pitched the product to Madison
Avenue firms and ultimately produced it themselves through a joint
company initially run out of Becher's garage.

Their first two-minute commercial was on the air, and the Miracle
Painter was born.

They sold more than a million units and repeated their winning formula
with products others created. But the duo rechristened and
popularized: Armourcote Cookware, the Miracle Slicer, Lusterware
Silverware and Royal DuraSteel mixing bowls.

"We tried to find the most unique products in the world," Valenti
said.

In the course of a decade, the men said they amassed more than $500
million in sales. Armourcote was the most profitable, but Ginsu
remains the most widely known, a household name across the U.S., and
fodder for countless comedians.

Sam Craig, a marketing professor at New York University's Stern School
of Business, said Ginsu stands apart from most other infomercial
products because it was popular for so long and it had common sales
methods that are used to this day.

"They're taking these things that were done at state fairs and
carnivals where it could be demonstrated to a group of maybe 10, now
you could demonstrate the same thing to a million people or more at
the same time," Craig said. "And it takes something that's relatively
mundane and makes it appear dramatic."

Becher and Valenti eventually shifted their business to become mainly
a media buying firm, PriMedia, but their legacy was sealed. They
helped popularize the use of credit cards and 800-numbers for over-the-
TV sales and their work is seen as a precursor to extended 30-minute
infomercials and round-the-clock shopping channels, including Home
Shopping Network.

Becher's funeral was Monday and his family is considering etching in
his tombstone one of the catchphrases he helped popularize: "But wait,
there's more."

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "World 
News Now Discussion List" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/wnndl?hl=en.

Reply via email to