American Inventor
American Inventor | |
---|---|
Created by | Peter Jones |
Presented by | Matt Gallant (season 1) Nick Smith (season 2) |
Starring | Peter Jones Ed Evangelista (season 1) Mary Lou Quinlan (season 1) Doug Hall (season 1) George Foreman (season 2) Pat Croce (season 2) Sara Blakely (season 2) |
Country of origin | United States (filming) Singapore (broadcast) |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 (1 unaired) |
No. of episodes | 19 (7 unaired) |
Production | |
Producers | Peter Jones Simon Cowell Liz Bronstein Siobhan Greene Nigel Hall Cecile Frot-Coutaz |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production companies | Syco TV Peter Jones TV FremantleMedia North America |
Original release | |
Network | MediaCorp Channel 5 |
Release | August 12 December 2, 2007 | –
American Inventor was a reality television series based on a competition to be named America's best inventor. It was conceived by Simon Cowell and the producers of American Idol after Ben Hausbach appeared on Season 5 with his Cosmic Coaster invention.[1] He also appeared on Season 2 of American Inventor and was featured in the Florida auditions.[2] It premiered on MediaCorp Channel 5 on August 12, 2007. It was organized as a competition between inventors nationally resulting in one overall winner.
Janusz Liberkowski, who invented a new type of child safety seat based on the human womb called the Anecia Safety Capsule, was declared the first season's winner on December 2, 2007. The second season was not aired on television. Firefighter Greg Chavez, who invented a fire suppression system for Christmas trees called the Guardian Angel, was the winner of the second season in an unaired season finale.
Premise
[edit]Season 1
[edit]Twelve inventors and their products are chosen from a pool of hundreds by four judges. The 12 semi-finalists are broken down into four groups of three, with each episode focusing on a different group of three. Each of the twelve semi-finalists in each group receives $50,000 to improve their inventions and compete to become one of the four finalists. The finalists would then work with a dedicated prototype and design company, such as T2 Design & Prototype who would help with expert advice and manufacturing assistance.[3] Each group is assigned a judge who would judge their products that they have invented. Each of the four judges would then choose one inventor from their group to compete in the finals, for a total of four finalists. In the show's finale, the four finalists present a 30-second commercial advertisement for their product, with the home audience voting by phone for the winner. The winner receives $1,000,000 prize money.
Season 2 (not aired)
[edit]Instead of 12 finalists receiving $50,000 checks to develop their inventions like in season one, six finalists, one from each of the audition cities of Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Tampa and Houston, will each receive $50,000 and have one month to develop their inventions. The 6 finalists are narrowed down to three based on the judges' preference. Unlike the first season, the three finalists for voting were declared and were voted on by viewers immediately after the second-to-last show. The season finale was a single show, where the winner is declared among the finalists. In the first season, the finale was held two episodes with 30-second commercials on the first and the results of viewer voting on the second part. Also, the first season had four finalists instead of six narrowed to three.
Finalists
[edit]Season 1 finalists
[edit]- Anecia Safety Capsule: A car seat shaped like a sphere with a movable sphere inside it. In the event of a car accident, the sphere will move, lessening the force on the baby. (Winner)
- Word Ace: A game that tells you a letter and a number and you have to come up with a word that starts with the letter and has a number of letters equal to the number. (Final 4)
- Double Traction Bike: A bike with a seat on the handlebars. (Final 4)
- The Catch Vest (aka Receiver Trainer Pole): A bar that sits in front of your body to help you catch footballs properly. (Final 4)
- Inside Umbrella: An umbrella where the top part goes inside the bar. (Final 12)
- Head-Line It: A rubber pad to go on top of your head to prevent sweating and itching under hats, helmets and wigs. (Final 12)
- Sackmaster: A large shovel with a bag inside it to make sand-bag filling easier. (Final 12)
- Here Comes Niya Doll: A multilingual set of dolls. (Final 12) The "Niya Doll" appear again in The Toy Box.
- Bathroom Clip: A clip to attach to a bathroom door in case the lock is broken. (Final 12)
- Tonerbelt: An exercise belt (Final 12)
- EZ-X Portable Gym: A portable gym (Final 12)
- Pureflush: A toilet that prevents the spread of bacteria upon flushing. (Final 12)
Season 2 finalists (not aired)
[edit]- Guardian Angel: A small, pressurized tank of water, disguised as a Christmas package, that is placed under the Christmas tree and attached to a small hose leading to the top of the tree where a fusible link is disguised as an angel. The heat from a fire pops the link and water suppresses the fire. There is also an alarm that works without a battery & intended to suppress (not fully extinguish) a Christmas tree fire and sound an alarm to get people out of the house alive. (Winner)
- 6-In-1 Convertible Brassiere: A convertible brassiere that accommodates the full wardrobe of small frame women with a "C" cup or above. This is a traditional brassiere that converts into six configurations and affords the full back to be exposed with comfort because there is no midsection and it can be worn with full wardrobe. The invention was later commercialized by Maidenform.[4] (Chicago Finalist) (2nd)
- HT Racers: The design and fabrication of custom vehicles through the use of a computer program and patented tools. Intended for use by individuals and groups ages 9 and up for entertainment and educational purposes, this invention is a kit that lets teens design, engineer, and build remote controlled vehicles. (L.A. Finalist) (3rd)
- The Claw: A ceiling or wall-mounted bicycle storage mechanism. The bicycle wheel is grasped by opposing hooks when the central plunger is depressed. Re-pressing the central plunger opens and locks the hooks for bicycle wheel removal. The bi-stable plunger relies on an internal rotary mechanism. (New York Finalist) (Final 6)
- Wrap-a-Way Cabinet: A station to put in a drawer or attach to a cabinet to dispense paper towels, gift wrap, etc. (Houston Finalist) (Final 6)
- EZT4U: A brewing basket that attaches to the common electric coffee brewing machine in order to brew tea. (Tampa Finalist) (Final 6)
Time slot
[edit]The first season of American Inventor debuted in Singapore on MediaCorp Channel 5 on August 12, 2007 on Sundays at 11:00am and ran until December 2, 2007 (pre-empted on October 14, 2007 and November 4, 2007) with the season finale. The first season was rerun on Channel 5 from November 27, 2007 on Mondays to Fridays at 1:00pm.
The second season was not aired on any channel, as MediaCorp Channel 5 did not air it.
Controversy
[edit]The makers of the program were accused of modeling American Inventor on a similar program called Million Dollar Idea.[5]
Credits
[edit]American Inventor was produced by Simon Cowell's Syco TV and FremantleMedia North America, Inc in association with Peter Jones TV. The executive producers were Simon Cowell, Liz Bronstein, Siobhan Greene, Nigel Hall, and Cecile Frot-Coutaz. Co-executive producer was Daniel Soiseth.
See also
[edit]- Tycoon (TV series), a similar show on British TV hosted by Peter Jones.
- The Big Idea, another similar show on British TV.
- Dragons' Den, a similar program that originated in Japan, and also stars Peter Jones in the United Kingdom.
- Shark Tank, the American version of Dragons' Den, which went on to become a more sustained success on ABC.
- The New Inventors, an Australian program shown on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- Everyday Edisons, a PBS series focused on inventors and their inventions.
References
[edit]- ^ "Sour Notes – Vol. 65 No. 5". PEOPLE.com. 2006-02-06. Retrieved 2017-06-19.
- ^ O'Sullivan, Kevin (2008-04-05). "American Inventor contestant is spot on". mirror. Retrieved 2017-06-19.
- ^ t2design.com
- ^ Howard, Theresa (April 6, 2008). "Maidenform launches the Breakthrough Backless bra". USA Today.
- ^ "Simon Cowell and ABC sued over "Idea" format rights".