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Many of life's failures are experienced by people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.
Thomas Edison
Patent Drawing for T. A. Edison's Incandescent Electric Lamp
Record Group 241: Records of the Patent and Trademark OfficeSeries: Utility Patent Drawings
Many of life's failures are experienced by people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.
Thomas Edison
The first electric door was invented in 1899 by Thomas Edison. It did not gain popularity because the electric part did not open and close the door, but shock the person passing through on their toes.
Letter to J.E. Sutterlin from Thomas A. Edison. Letter reads: "Dear Sir, It is essential that the phonograph diaphragm should respond to all sounds and give none of its own. Like the drum of the ear. Yours truly, Thomas A. Edison." Stamped on front: "From the laboratory of T.A. Edison, Menlo Park, N.J., U.S.A." May 25, 1878.
Burton Historical Collection, Detroit Public Library
thirteen's era appreciation: 337/?
Fan Theory: Alastor had a rivalry with Thomas Edison (yes, really) in the 1920s
I originally had a whole theory typed up with lots of evidence for this, but my computer crashed and deleted all of it, so here are some of the basic points of the theory that I came up with:
Alastor grew up in the early 1900s, when the phonograph, invented and sold by Thomas Edison, was the main form of music recording and playing in the United States. Alastor was likely called a "gramophile", or gramophone enthusiast "who eschewed a wife and children to focus on music", as he was an asexual during this era. However, radio started to replace phonographs in the 1920s-1930s, cutting into Edison's profits, to his frustration.
Alastor was a popular radio host in the 1920s-1930s, and was one of the main reasons why people were buying and using radios, instead of Edison's phonographs and records, to play music. If people could listen to music for free on the radio, why would they buy Edison's phonographs? (Alastor was quite smug about this.)
The quality of music on the radio was often better than on Edison's phonographs and recordings, as many radio shows provided live music, which means inviting the band and musicians to play live on-air. It wasn't something that could be mass-produced for profit, also to Edison's consternation.
Alastor's specialty was jazz, a form of music originally "invented by, and for, the phonograph". (He also dabbled in blues as well.)
Unlike Edison and other phonograph and record producers, who were often racist and used what is called "digital blackface" today (i.e. pretending to be Black in recordings, because hiring Black artists over white artists was unthinkable), Alastor was an authentic mixed-race Creole host, though likely "white-passing".
Vox seems to be based, at least somewhat, on Thomas Edison, particularly as Edison didn't just formerly control the music industry with the phonograph, but also the movie industry, with one source stating that 75% of Americans in the 1920s went to the movies "every week". (Edison sold his film studio in 1918.)
Alastor seems to have a special disdain for Vox and his "picture show", all movies and TV shows. My guess is that this came from his disdain for Edison Pictures and the movies vs. radio rivalry.
Edison died at the age of 84 in 1931 from old age and diabetes complications, whereas Alastor was killed in his 30s-40s in 1933.
As an edit, here is Part 2 of this fan theory with a lot more evidence.