by CultureOfNone on April 1, 2009

Surely most of us have experience with vending machine capsule toys. The machines are usually stacked in the entranceway of grocery stores & convenience shops. They’ve remained pretty much the same as I recall them 30 years ago: you put in a quarter, and hope that your randomly dispensed capsule contains one of the cooler items in the window display.

To this day, my most memorable vending machine purchase was a Popeye record that was folded up to fit in the plastic capsule. It was as ridiculous as it sounds; the record was made of clear, thin vinyl – so, when removed from the capsule, you had a creased and unplayable disc. I believe the instructions suggested using glue to secure it to a piece of cardboard and (this is where the memory is foggy) flatten it gently with a warm iron.

Indeed, the thing would play, but the audio was pretty warbly and “muffled” – probably since the grooves didn’t have much definition. From what I remember, it was basically some Popeye character dialogue followed by a short tune sung by Olive Oyl.

I like to think fondly that it was sort of an early imagining of the MP3, as far as being a compact transmission of audio with a small pricetag. That particular Popeye record is long gone from my collection, but as an unusual music product it definitely deserved mention here…especially since I’m not finding any information on them online.

{ 1 comment }

1 TeamHCN April 2, 2009 at 12:29 pm

Paper-thin vinyl out of a vending machine? Far out! I, too, have memories of capsule toy vending machines, though none as interesting as yours. Most of what I got were shiny toy watches, jewelry and Hot Wheels knock-offs. They looked great in their plastic-and-glass enclosures, but were never as impressive up-close. It’s too bad you don’t have that PopEye record anymore, it sounds really unique. Who knows – maybe it’s a valuable collector’s item?

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