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7 celebrities who were also inventors

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It’s not every day you hear about celebrities who were also inventors. Inventors play a very important role in our lives and the way innovations based on design come about is sometimes really unreal. Can you believe that Leonardo Da Vinci drew sketches of technologies to fly and reach the depths of the seabed long before the first airplane and submarine were built? It’s really about the way we look at everyday life and simple elements that could make life easier. Of course there is a science behind it, but at the heart of an innovation is the idea behind it, which just comes with observing everyday life.

Les Paul had started playing at a drive-in restaurant when he realized that if more people could hear his music, he would get more tips. Then he started slipping socks and cloth inside the acoustic guitar to make it less resonate and thereby make it louder. Soon after, the electric guitar was born.

Celebrity or not, the next group of people have created some pretty impressive designs. You’ll even read about one who helped win WWII and have an idea that helped develop the Wi-Fi system.

Michael Jackson’s gravity defies the shoes

Michael was and is very popular for his gentle moonwalks and gravity-defying dance moves. Women all over the world would start crying just looking at the path he was cradling his body. He was known as the best dancer besides being a fantastic singer. He always thought of something new and innovative to add to his videos. In the early days of MTV, Michael was considered one of the few who placed so much importance on dance. However, here’s something you don’t know! Michael had done some of these dance moves with a little mechanical help that he invented! yes him

In 1988, Michael was shooting for “SmoothCriminals,” beginning the video with him and the dancers performing a gravity-defying move, pushing their torsos in front of their legs while keeping their bodies straight. You can’t normally do that, but during that time Michael co-patented a shoe that allowed them to lean forward without falling. The video received many awards for its music and visual appeal. The patent was granted six years later!

To bring this idea to life, Jackson designed with two others a clutch mechanism that was built on the stage floor, as well as the dancer’s shoes. Pegs were fixed on the dance floor, while shoes featured cutouts. The pin would latch onto the recess in the shoes, allowing the performer to lean forward without losing their balance. In this way Jackson and the other performers made this dance step look very real and of course super cool like the King of Pop.

Hedy Lamarr, der Wi-Fi-Innovator

Who would have thought that a beautiful woman like herself, Hedy would be the mastermind behind one of the greatest technologies ever created, Wi-Fi? There was a time when she was considered the most beautiful woman in the world. We rightly call her beauty with brains. She was the star behind Cecil B. DeMille’s “Samson and Delilah.” This actress has made a huge contribution to the world of communication and we all certainly owe her one.

Hedy was an emigrant from Austria and was destined to sell war bonds. However, this wise lady wanted to do much more for the United States. During a dinner party, she met a composer named George Antheil. They had a long conversation about Allied submarines wasting a lot of torpedoes. Married to a munitions manufacturer, Lamarr learned a great deal about various weapons technologies. She was also knowledgeable about torpedo control.

Both had devised a torpedo guided by radio frequencies. They were aware of the fact that their enemies could easily hack and jam the signals. Then they added an idea they called “frequency hopping”. A genius of the concept, frequency hopping, would allow the sequencer to randomly hop through 88 different frequencies derived from the 88 keys of a piano. This made the axis impossible to follow. In 1942 they received the patent for their secret communications system and handed it over to the Navy for further use. Lamarr innovation is the reason and source for most wireless technology available today. GPS, cellular networks and Bluetooth are all inventions born out of their idea.

Mike Booth by Paula Abdul

Every single person who watched The American Idol would know who this lady is. Her career peak was in the 80’s when she was one of the major pop sensations in the music industry. Paula, the voice behind “Straight Up” and “Opposites Attract”, was one of the best choreographers and singers of her time. She later became even more popular thanks to her presence on The American Idolas the judge for many consecutive years. During her music career, she found that the mike was quite impractical. It was heavy, didn’t move easily, and had a lot of wires that would eventually tangle. It was then that Abdul decided to design a microphone that would not only allow her to dance and move, but also reduce the number of wires passed through.

She designed the “Dynamic Microphone Support” apparatus. “The apparatus had a base, a concave shape and positioned itself on any flat surface. In addition, the device had a cover placed over the open part of the cavity. When a person had to stand on the device, the weight on the cover would tilt the concave structure according to the direction of pressure and move in a circle without actually touching the ground. To make it easier to understand, a performer can stand on the device and move in any direction he or she wants. The center of gravity does not shift, allowing the performer to dance or move and their live performances are even better than ever!

Bill Nye and his ballet slippers

William Sanford “Bill” Nye, who is 60 years old now, was popularly known as Bill Nye, the Science Guy. He is an American science educator, comedian, television host, actor, writer, and scientist! That’s what you call multi-talented, right? He was best known for his popular science-based Disney show for children called: Bill Nye the Science Man . He was always known for his wacky and out-of-the-box approach to science, especially when teaching kids. A Cornell mechanical engineering graduate, Nye was known for providing practical solutions to most engineering problems or problems.

During this time, Nye was filming a Bones and Muscles show with the Pacific Northwest Ballet when he noticed that the dancers had bloody shoes. He was then told that most ballet dancers had already undergone surgeries for the pressure and pain pushed onto the toes. As Bill looked at the situation, he knew there had to be a solution to this serious problem. Then he built shoes for support. The support system of the shoes included a longitudinal member, a footgear tube sleeve, and a toe edge. All of this was done with the daily wear and tear of a dancer’s foot in mind. He was highly appreciated for this and his innovation received a patent in 2005! He had updated and reinvented a shoe that hadn’t changed for more than a century. Brilliant!

Jim Henson and his “Proto-Muppets”

When you think of Jim, you might think of Kermit the Frog , Sesame Street , or The Muppet Show, correct? But has it ever occurred to you that a Swedish chef would make instant coffee, or can you imagine an animal drinking too much of it? From 1957 to 1961, Jim created 179 commercials for Wilkins coffee. He made newly patented dolls to convince America to drink coffee without a percolator. A percolator is a type of jug in which coffee is brewed by continuously tumbling the beans. In the 1950’s, cloth and wood dolls were made with faces that didn’t offer much flexibility or wiggle room. Henson then came up with the idea of ​​using “foam rubber” wrapped in material, which increases the flexibility of the characters and makes them more emotional than the previous dolls. He created two of these proto-Muppets to star in Wilkin’s coffee commercials. One was the cheerful Wilkins who loved the coffee and the other was the grumpy muppet named Wontkins who didn’t like the coffee and got punished! We’re not sure if you remember these or have seen them before, but the concept was so successful that vinyl dolls of the dolls became high-profile items. Bravo Jim.

Steve McQueen and the bucket seat

Terence Steven McQueen was an American actorcalled ‘The King Of Cool’. He topped the box office in the 1960s and 1970s. His persona reflected that of a relaxed and easy-going man. He was an action actor who was always on the move, whether he was in a car or on a motorcycle. So it made sense when Steve decided to design a four wheeler seat that offered both comfort and protection. He made this design specifically for a Ford Mustang.

While filming his film Bullitt Steve found the original seats extremely uncomfortable and then innovated a seat that follows the back structure of a human body in a seated position. His innovation was documented in a book entitled The Making of Everyday Things In August 1966, during his interview with Doing Sport,McQueen said that according to him there are two types of things, cars and transportation. Both are different in nature. He didn’t seem to have much interest in cars that didn’t go fast or didn’t stop well. He even liked it when it was a little cornered. Basically, his love was for fast and comfortable cars. He said he’d rather sink his backside into a bucket seat than use a bench, which isn’t ideal anyway. If you think about it, it’s actually a great idea that he practically made for his own good at first. In 1970 he received a patent for the design of his bucket seats used in the ’68 film. Bullitt. Well done Steve, your designs are still used in most high end cars today. Steve died on November 7, 1980.

Julie Newmar’s perky buttocks

Women all over the world have always been obsessed with having some well formed buttocks! There’s no denying that. Let me introduce you, Julie Newmar, who is every woman’s God-gifted angel. Julie is an American actress, singer and dancer. She starred in the hit TV series, Batman in the ’60s. She played the very popular role of “Catwoman”. Julie came up with skin-tight leggings that were patented.

Newmar had started designing the costume for herself and her curvaceous body. Black and skin-tight, her costume grew more popular than you can imagine. In the ’70s, she noticed that women started wearing tights that compressed the midsection, which in turn helped display a much curvier butt rather than a flat one. She then designed her own product that would help women look rounder and find a better way to show off their favorite part, the butt. Thanks to Newmar, the latest innovation offers tights made of semi-elastic material that improves the shape. In 1974 she patented her design and called it the “cheeky derriere”. She explained her design to the HUMAN in a much cuter wayShe said the purpose of her invention was to make a woman’s butt look more like an apple than a ham sandwich. “Touche!

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