Arthur "Spud" Melin, co-founder of the toy company that introduced the world to the Frisbee, Hula Hoop and other faddish gems of American pop culture, has died. He was 77 and had Alzheimer's disease.
Melin, who started toy giant Wham-O in 1948 with his boyhood friend Richard Knerr, died on Friday.
"No sensation has ever swept the country like the Hula Hoop," author Richard Johnson wrote in his book, American Fads. "(It) remains the standard against which all national crazes are measured."
Melin and Knerr started with slingshots and named their mail-order company after the sound a slingshot made when its projectile struck a target. They branched into other sporting goods, including pellet guns, crossbows and daggers.
They added toys in 1955, when building inspector Fred Morrison sold them a plastic flying disc he had developed after watching Yale University students toss pie tins. Wham-O began selling the disc they called the "Pluto Platter" two years later before modifying it and renaming it the "Frisbee".
"We didn't want it used as a toy, we wanted it to be a sport," Melin said in a 1998 interview.
In 1958, as Frisbee sales took off, an Australian toy manufacturer visited Wham-O's factory in the Los Angeles suburb of San Gabriel. He gave company officials an impromptu lesson in how to use a rattan hoop imported from Australia.
Wham-O began selling the Hula Hoop a short time later and eventually would sell 25 million of them.
Melin retired when Wham-O was sold to Kransco Group in 1982. Mattel bought the company in 1994. A group of investors then bought Wham-O back from Mattel in 1997 for around 20 million US dollars and relaunched many of its best-known toys, including the Slip `N' Slide. Melin is survived by his wife, Suzy; five daughters; a brother; and 11 grandchildren.
AP