Saturday, May 19, 2012
Chen Guangcheng to the United States
Looks like the Chinese Government permitted activist
Chen Guangcheng to depart China for New York University. I hope that removes
this as an issue in the American presidential campaign. I support human rights
and our Government's efforts in support of human rights. By the same token, I
was troubled that the plight of one activist in one repressive country
threatened to become a political issue. In my view the United States cannot be
put in the position of being some kind of guarantor of human rights throughout
the globe and American politicians and other Americans should be criticized for
trying to use the plight of activists around the globe as a domestic political
football. That holds true, for me, whether the politician be Republican or
Democrat. I'm sure some of you will disagree!❖
On Hush Puppies and Shoe Laces
Now when is the last time you changed shoe laces? Seemed like I used
to do it often decades ago but seldom if ever anymore. Because of
loafers? Or that shoes wear out sooner and fashions change? Or that,
as an adult, I am more careful in handling my shoes? Whatever the
reason, I had occasion this evening to want to change shoe laces in an
ancient pair of Wolverine Hush Puppies that I haven't worn in a long time.
Oh how I loved my Hush Puppies. I found the attached article in European Car from
May 2011 that talks about the shoes' history with a photo of the very shoes I
still have. Started in the late 1950's and died out but revived in the
mid-1990's for a spell. Gone again. While I had some in the late
1950's my current pair likely dates from the mid-1990's!
But this
story is more about the laces than the shoes! I had a few pair of laces
that I had never used but, not knowing where they were, I bought a pair
at Ralph's Super Market the other day for $2.50. I found the laces I
bought years ago this evening only to discover that a pair of laces
purchased at Fedco (you remember Fedco don't you? Yesteryear's Costco)
cost $0.37. The label was still attached. Yikes!! And one of my old
pair of laces worked fine for the Hush Puppies. Like new again! Well,
almost.❖
Hush Puppies - Icon
By Colin Ryan
It’s
supposed to be cats that have nine lives, not basset hounds. But in the world
of iconic footwear, it seems anything is possible. Hush Puppies are among the
highlights of Malcolm Gladwell’s book, The Tipping Point, as the author
theorizes on how this once-popular but struggling brand achieved a fresh
momentum thanks to a handful of New York City hipsters.
The
Hush Puppies brand is owned by the Wolverine Worldwide company that makes many
kinds of work and recreational apparel. In 1994, when sales were in the sort of
place not even people wearing worry free Scotchguarded suede shoes would step
in, Wolverine was about to pull the plug. But some young Manhattanites started
wearing them (no doubt with a sense of irony) around the East Village and Soho,
getting them from small independent shops, and scouring vintage clothing
stores. This trend caught the eye of a few street-wise designers, who
incorporated the shoes into their new styles.
Suddenly,
from shipping 30,000 pairs a year, Hush Puppies were virtually scampering out
the door at a rate of 430,000 pairs in 1995, four times that number in 1996 and
even more in 1997. Hush Puppies took the prize for best accessory at the 1996
Council of Fashion Designers Awards.
Not
bad for a brand that has been around since 1958, just as society was becoming
less buttoned-down and the demand for casual wear grew. The shoe itself came
out of Victor Krause’s obsession with pigskin. As part of the family that owned
Wolverine, Krause learned about tanning and believed pigskin could be a viable
alternative to cowhide. Pigskin becomes soft and more flexible after tanning
and is perfect for a comfortable leisure shoe.
As
is so often the case with new ideas, Wolverine’s directors were less than
enthusiastic, but his being a Krause probably helped. The new style might have
been called Lasers, which was one name on the table, but sales manager James
Gaylord (really) Muir came up with the canine appellation.
Funny
enough, Muir was near the Appalachians at the time, having dinner with a
regional manager from the southeast. Part of the meal was hush puppies. As
anyone familiar with Southern cuisine is aware, these are balls of fried corn
dough that got their name by being thrown to quiet down barking dogs. As he
heard this explanation, he also remembered that barking dogs was a slang term
for aching feet. Cue light bulb going off over his head.
After
registering the name as a trademark, the company bought the photograph of a
basset hound that became the brand’s symbol (for only $50) and introduced its
new product at the 1957 National Shoe Fair in Chicago to instant acclaim. By
the middle of 1959, the first one million pairs had been sold. Soon they were
seen on the feet of celebrities like Perry Como and Warren Beatty. Queen
Elizabeth’s other half, Prince Philip, wore a pair on a visit to the United
States.
Those
were the wonder years and they lasted long enough for Hush Puppies to become a
recognized part of modern culture. However, despite being invited by President
Mikhail Gorbachev to be the first American company to make and sell shoes in
Russia, their subsequent popularity sank lower than a basset’s ears, until,
quite by chance, a new generation embraced them.
The
second wave saw Kevin Spacey and Nicholas Cage wearing Hush Puppies to
complement their tuxedos as they accepted their respective Best Supporting
Actor and Best Actor statuettes at the 1996 Oscars ceremony. The late Princess
Diana once ordered a special HP collection.
But
it isn’t just owners of barking dogs who give thank-you speeches for Hush
Puppies. These shoes are responsible for so much more, albeit inadvertently.
Back in 1965, the Rolling Stones were doing a gig in Sacramento, California.
Keith Richards touched an ungrounded microphone while still holding his
electric guitar, something that could easily have been fatal. Richards was
knocked unconscious, but medics believe his was life was saved by the crepe
soles of his Hush Puppies, a material chosen for comfort and lightness, but had
an insulating effect here. A world without Honky Tonk Women, Brown Sugar and
Tumbling Dice would have been all the poorer. Just think, one of the few things
in this world capable of killing Keef was thwarted by a pair of cozy shoes.
By the middle of 1959, the first one hundred million pairs had been sold.
By the middle of 1959, the first one hundred million pairs had been sold.
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