Saturday, August 23, 2025

Flashback 2007: Satisfaction guaranteed


     I was searching the archive and noticed this. Too much fun not to share. The good news is that Archie McPhee is still in business, and still promises to return unsatisfactory or defective items. Alas, the pig catapult must have caused too much trouble, as it is no longer offered among their line of novelty products. No do they notionally employ the fictive Molly Primrose to interact with the public. David Wahl, however, still works at the company. 

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

     My older son's pig catapult broke. Not surprising, considering the workout he gave it, stalking about a family gathering, peppering his aging relatives with small pink plastic pigs.
     Behavior that a judicious parent would quickly halt — or so you might imagine, until you try actually saying the words, "Stop pelting people with pigs!" Easier to just ignore him. Besides, they're very small pigs, less than an inch long. It isn't as if they hurt.
     The device — sort of a blue plastic handgun with a contraption for flinging — broke very quickly anyway.
     Here the tale might have ended.
     But his mother, always ready to rally behind her cubs, noticed the lad still had the cardboard packaging from the catapult — saved because it has a "Pig Bull's Eye" on the back, to aid in honing his pig-pelting skills.
     She went online, to the manufacturer's Web site.
     "My son recently purchased a pig catapult made by your company," her note began. "The toy was quite fun. However, about one week after he purchased it, the portion that holds the pigs snapped off after the catapult was fired. It appears to have snapped off where the tension rod places pressure on the plastic catapult. Can you please replace this faulty pig catapult?"
     Here again the saga might have ended. One reason our world is so vexing is that companies build their bottom lines by shaving away customer service. It's hard enough to find anyone at Apple to care about your busted $400 iPod, never mind receive satisfaction for a broken $4.95 pig catapult made in China.
     Yesterday, a box arrived. It contained not only a new pig catapult, but this letter:
     "Dear Edie:
     "I am so sorry to hear that your Pig Catapult was defective. Here is a new one for you. Also here is a small gift to say we are sorry for any trouble this may have caused you. Thank you for bringing this to our attention so we could fix it for you!"
     Not quite a second sun appearing in the sky, but close.
     The gift, by the way, was a box of bandages designed to look like strips of bacon. My wife loved it.
     Here too, the tale might have ended. But there was one more paragraph.
     "I have enclosed an Archie McPhee Catalog for your enjoyment. Archie McPhee is our retail business."
     The catalog "of surprising novelties, good jokes and useful articles" hit our household like a t-bone steak tossed into a tank of piranhas.
     How to describe the product line? Simple toys and toys with an edge. Plastic ants and "Just Like Dad!" brand bubble gum cigarettes. Rubber ducks and gummy banana slugs.
     Bacon is fun, apparently. In addition to bacon bandages, there is bacon air freshener, a bacon wallet ("Not made from real bacon"), bacon tape, bacon gift wrap and Uncle Oinker's Gummy Bacon.
     Jesus too, must be amusing, in certain circles. There is the classic dashboard Jesus, plus a bobblehead Jesus, Jesus gift wrap and not one but two Jesus Action Figures, one with wheels "for smooth gliding action," another, deluxe set, complete with plastic loaves and fishes and "glow-in-the-dark miracle hands."
     An invigorating blasphemy pervades the enterprise. Beyond the Jesus goods, there are Last Supper After Dinner Mints ("Tasty & Religious"), a boxing rabbi puppet, Buddha pencil toppers and, so nobody feels left out, Nihilist Chewing Gum ("No flavor -- We don't believe in flavor.")
     Here, again, the curtain might fall. But the letter was signed "Molly Primrose." Must be a made-up name, I decided. A blanket identity to personalize customer service off-loaded to India.
     I wanted to take the catalog to work with me, but any possible argument ("Boys, it's my job") seemed feeble in the face of the passion with which they were selecting and discarding various items from their imaginary orders, toting up the balances so as to absorb every last penny in their possession.
     "Dad," said Ross, as I was leaving, "do you think I should get a Monkey Groan Ball? When you squeeze it, it's like a monkey groaning . . ."
     "Sounds great," I said.
     My morning's work became tracking down Molly Primrose. Such a pretty and unusual name — there is only one person named "Primrose" in the Chicago White Pages — it had to be a fiction.
Hadn't it?
     I contacted the company and waited. Carol Marin envisioned Molly as an older woman, walking a bunny on a leash — a lovely image. I thought of her as mid-20s, tattoos on both arms, bravely trying to keep her poetic soul alive while answering letters complaining about pig catapults.
     Finally David Wahl, Archie McPhee spokesman, called. I could tell he didn't want to say it, so I said it for him.
     Molly Primrose isn't real, is she?
     "It's our contact name for customer service,'' he said, reluctantly. "It's a rotating series of people who do it. We take it very seriously for a company that sells such stupid, useless things."
      Of course, one shouldn't pull back the corporate skirts too much. Still, upon reflection, it struck me that the only thing more wonderful than there being an actual Molly Primrose is there being a business in this day and age that feels compelled to make one up.
     — Originally published in the Sun-Times, Jan. 24, 2007

25 comments:

  1. I just went to the Archie McPhee website. It has a lot of the weird stuff I used to see in the back of comic books & a lot more. The Public Toilet Survival Kit is very funny, with this delightful line as an endorsement: "Tested at a filling station in rural Alabama".
    If I'm ever in Seattle, I'll go to their store.

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  2. Delightful! Liquid Cats, Fried Chicken candy, bubble gum cigarettes…who does that? I have found the solution to my holiday gift search. AND…another outstanding word collection…” An invigorating blasphemy pervades the enterprise.”

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  3. What a wonderful company! Thanks for bringing it to my attention! Just in time for Christmas gift ordering! Molly Primrose

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  4. I must say that my experience with Apple has apparently been quite different from yours. I’ve found their customer service people quite helpful even with things that cost as little as $14. As for my iPod (received as a gift from my employer), when it started flaking out Apple sent me a new, next generation model within a couple of days. That kind of customer service is a big reason that I’ve remained one of their customers since 1986.

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    1. I agree. This was 2007 — I've since become a 100 percent Apple customer. The customer service is great.

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  5. Did your boys also eagerly order and await the arrival of Sea Monkeys? I never did, but was always intrigued. I bet Molly would have made sure they were safely delivered.

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    1. No Sea Monkeys. Even when they were small, the big thing was video games like Frogger.

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  6. I taught my boys to never shoot at anyone . not to even point a gun at someone. never. if they did the BB gun range in the basement would be shut down for a month. targets only til 16. then they could do paintball at a facility full gear.

    didn't have to address pig shot but there were various projectiles devices all over the house

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    1. That wasn't an issue with me, because I don't have real guns, never mind a gun range in the basement.

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  7. Gun safety is an issue for all of us it should be taken very seriously it's especially our job as parents to make sure that our children understand the danger of guns. You don't do this with real guns you do it with toys when they're young so they know. it keeps accidents from happening.
    You might not have guns in your house but lots of people do and if a child stumbles upon one they should know how dangerous they are and that you never point it at anyone let alone shoot pigs at somebody it ain't funny and it's a big part of what's wrong with the people in this country who would prefer that the government takes their responsibility and gets rid of guns so that they don't have to teach their kids and have self-discipline of their own to keep gun accidents and gun violence from being such a large part of our culture .
    Guns aren't going anywhere but gun stupidity sure can and sure should.

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    1. Thanks for the lecture, Steve. I wouldn't let my kids play over the houses of people who had guns for just that reason. "A big part of what's wrong" with this country is untrammeled gun ownership. I'm sure Bob Crimo thought he was doing his son a favor buying him that assault rifle. He wasn't, and I'm glad he got jail time. My older boy expressed an interest in guns, I got my FOID card and took him shooting. Had he wanted to continue in the hobby, I would have, but I was relieved he didn't. There is a lot in life more interesting than guns — don't hate me for being the person to say it.

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    2. Steve's interest in provoking you when he feels like it and your willingness to post his comments and sometimes reply are both fairly remarkable to me.

      I grew up with my share of toy guns. The '60s were awash in them. Playing Cowboys and Indians was a popular activity.

      We were frequently warned about "putting somebody's eye out," but I did my share of shooting "bullets" with rubber cups that were supposed to stick on a target at my friends. (Not that my parents condoned that.) And squirt guns, needless to say, were specifically FOR shooting at each other.

      "...make sure that our children understand the danger of guns. You don't do this with real guns you do it with toys when they're young so they know." In my experience, this does not seem critical. My father, who'd been in the Army in WWII, never owned a gun. He seldom talked about being in the war, and was pretty much of a pacifist. I was taught and understood the difference between real guns and toy guns. Despite all the toy guns I had, I never had the slightest interest in getting a real one. None of my friends became gun guys, either.

      I don't know what can turn around the scourge of gun violence in this country. But I'd wager that cracking down on an average boy "peppering his aging relatives with small pink plastic pigs" would not be a significant contribution to the solution.

      Aside from that, and to conclude on a positive note, this delightful post reminds me of a novelty shop that used to be on Belmont Ave. in Chicago back in the day, Uncle Fun. Molly Primrose could have been his niece!

      (D'oh! While writing this, a new batch of comments showed up and I see I'm too late to be the one to bring up Uncle Fun. Glad that you were aware of it, though, NS.)

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    3. Great comment. As long as guns are such a big part of our culture, young boys will be drawn to them. Some more than others. They will engage in literal "gunplay" and "shoot" other boys. It's what most male kids do. And some will go on to real firearms. Some won't. Regardless of what their fathers were like. Why? Why ask why?

      The Fifties were worse. Had a replica .45 automatic that could have been used to hold up a gas station. And a wooden carbine whose ammo was CORKS. Also a shotgun. It fired dirtballs.

      Played Army for at least four years, Civil War and WWII. Made myself a sharp WOODEN bayonet that could have really hurt somebody. My father confiscated that, and gave me a more realistic-looking knife...a black rubber one. No eyes were lost, although I did have my head busted open by a big rock dropped on a cardboard "tank"...a discarded fridge box. Chicago Fun Times.

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    4. I don't hate you Mr Steinberg but every once in awhile like everyone you wander off the reservation a little bit.
      I'm not trying to Hector anybody but oftentimes that is one of the themes of your work the here's what I think and I wish everyone thought this way trope
      We're not going to get rid of guns they're not going anywhere but our attitude about them could change gun safety is what I'm talking about and if it's not our responsibility whose is it . Not having guns yourself is not really a solution to a problem that is so pervasive. information is often the best solution to a problem it's the information age and if we could spread enough accurate information around to decrease gun accidents and violence we would be accomplishing something important.
      I'm not sure how you can disagree with the ideas that gun safety is important and that we should teach it to our kids but I guess you didn't like my tone very sorry.
      I did not recommend buying guns for your children and I too am glad that Mr. Crimo is serving time. I have no idea if he taught his son about responsible gun ownership clearly he didn't understand the concept and that's what I'm saying is the problem.
      I hope you have a pleasant evening and wish you all the best

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  8. Archie McPhee! Now there's a name from the past. Cindy (my long-suffering wife) was already getting their catalogs in the mail when I moved here and married her in '92. We ordered all kinds of fun stuff in the Nineties, and probably later than that. They once sent us a "Dear Cindy" letter, when they replaced something defective.

    Pretty sure they were the source of the never-used package of "Wash Away Your Sins" moist towelettes that have sat on our bathroom shelf for years and years. Six towelettes that will "wipe out sins." Heavenly scented...aloe, citrus, and Easter lily. "Kills sins on contact"...with an anti-bacterial formula that will "purify and moisturize."

    The printed directions: 1) Remove moist towelette. 2) Devoutly wipe away wrong-doing. 3) Spot check for stubborn guilt. 4) Wipe again as needed. 5) Discard sins in waste receptacle. 6) Go forth purified and moisturized.

    Even to someone of the Hebrew persuasion, that is extremely funny. Cindy did five years in Catholic school. To her, this package is hilarious. A must-have. We should probably get onto their mailing list again, if they still send out those printed catalogues. In these dark times, the teensiest scrap of humor is a godsend. (Sorry...couldn't resist it...)

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  9. Your wife's letter is written very well. First compliment, then point out the problem. You'll usually have more success going this route.

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  10. I'm certain that you're aware of "American Science and Surplus" with several stores in the Chicagoland area. https://sciplus.com/
    Lots of great stuff there. (thumbs up emoji)

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    1. Hell, yeah...the A.S.S. store! A lot of military surplus equipment. Was in a former factory building on Northwest Highway. They've moved a couple of times since then. One location is in Park Ridge, I believe. And there's also a big Milwaukee one...in the city...not on the street. We try to visit them every time we get back to Chicago.

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    2. Sadly, American Science and Surplus is likely headed for closure. They've been trying desperately to find an affordable warehouse. They moved from the store on Milwaukee Ave to the Park Ridge store just a couple years ago. They've been holding fundraisers, and as of now almost everything in the store is on sale.
      I like to shop there for little gifts for the grandkids, and for stocking stuffers, as well as craft supplies. I recommend checking their site online soon as waiting may make you too late.

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  11. I had the pleasure of going to the shop in Seattle-friends dearly love their trinkets. We have a "Smoking Baby" creepy and funny. There was a similar shop in Chicago we visited may years ago call, "Uncle Fun's". Is that still around?

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    1. Uncle Fun! On Belmont, by Schuba's. We loved Uncle Fun. Long gone, alas.

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    2. Of course, all the good stuff goes away. We found a real classic of a book there. "The Von Hoffman Brother's Big Book of Manliness". They had cases of it and bought a bunch for friends. Now, if you can find it, the cost is unreal. Everytime I hit used book store I look for it.

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    3. Uncle Fun was FUN. Didn't they used to be on Halsted at one time...or was that somebody else? When I lived near Lakeview HS, at Berteau and Paulina, I would sometimes stop in after Cub games. They were a North Side gem.

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  12. this sounds like one of the greatest companies ever, thanks.

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  13. I'm sure I'm not the only one of those of the predominant faith who relied heavily on Archie McPhee for Christmas stocking stuffers. I also counted on them for those grab bag gag gift exchanges at work. It took a while to find it, but I see they do still sell surprise boxes--"over $30 in products for less than $15."

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