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Shock in the Shower (1997) (esdjournal.com)
92 points by jms on Sept 20, 2015 | hide | past | favorite | 22 comments


The first time a bottle was opened resulted in a discharge approximately 1.5 inches in length from the shampoo to the metallized film cap seal.

The dielectric strength of air is ~3kV/mm. That corresponds to roughly a 114kV potential. It's a good thing these bottles didn't contain something flammable like hairspray.


Why don't they name the brand of the shampoo, or the manufacturer? The article says this problem was observed by customers, so this ought to be public information... And since this happened 37 years ago, I'm not sure why they would be worried about libel lawsuits or anything....


The last sentence:

> It should be noted that the product is still sold today, but in a bottle that does not give you a "Shock in the Shower".

Based on the depth/access to information presented, the writer was likely an employee or bought on for the investigation. So they probably didn't want to embarrass their employer. (Also the article is from 1997, so it was 19 years ago from their perspective)


The new shampoo and conditioner product was contained in a very artistically designed bottle with special graphics on the outside. A national ad campaign had just started and the distinctive bottle was becoming recognizable.

This description sounds like someone in the US in the 70s might be able to recall which brand it was.

A quick search also finds someone with a similar experience many years later, probably different brand since the original manufacturer would've learned to avoid it:

http://jayderose.blogspot.com/2006/09/my-shampoo-shocked-me....


There are a couple of problems with pinning it down. First, how much "literary license" is the author using to describe the bottle? It might be much more plain and undistinguished than described. Second, it could have been any number of brands, as funky bottles and labels were not uncommon. Hell, even the syrup for our pancakes came in a glass bottle shaped like a woman.

That said, if I had to guess I'd offer two candidates that stand out in my head. First is Farah Fawcett Shampoo. Full color picture of the woman, though the bottle shape was forgettable. Second is Body on Tap: "made with 33% real beer", or something like that. I mention it only because the bottle was cone-shaped ("artistically designed"?), and if the claim is true maybe the beer adds extra loose electrons, I dunno. Or it very well could have been any number of shampoos that showed up briefly, didn't sell, and was yanked so fast even us olde parts who were there don't remember them.

EDIT: or maybe I should read the whole article, as it mentions at the end that it's still sold, which eliminates my two candidates.


They were still sold in 1997 when the article was written. I don't know the shampoos you mention though so I have no idea if your candidates were still being sold back then.


Could this be used as a new type of battery? It seems to hold way more energy than a typical capacitor.


You've confused energy with potential (voltage). Despite the potential being extremely high, the energy is very low. Otherwise these people would not only be receiving shocks, they'd be burned and/or electrocuted. A capacitor the size of a typical shampoo bottle can definitely hold a lethal amount of energy.


i'm seeing spam links. me thinks this page was hacked


Love the 1996-era website design. Loads instantly, no ads, no non-sense.


Ah, a time when HTTP was for documents, not applications and APIs. And when most of the content was posted by enthusiasts wanting to share something with the world, not people trying to sell something to you or sell your clicks to someone else.

Obviously lots of things sucked about the 90s web, but it was really cool when it at least seemed like the web was for something other than making money. Actually, it was also nice when the web was merely a tiny sliver of the world that one interacted with only by choice. Hey, remember the distant past of 10 years ago when even glancing at your cell phone while in the company of others was widely considered to be outrageously rude?

It's strange because we won, but it feels like we lost.

I know, I know. "Old man yells at cloud".


And the Browsers back button works flawlessly, wow.


Yeah, that yellow text in a blue background has aged so well. At least there won't be a link to that "Contrast Rebellion" site...


They say you don't know what you have until it's gone.


The animated GIFs are an especially nice touch.


With the fubared background transparency.


b-b-but it's not responsive!


secure as hell too when you are just serving html files.


I'm sorry to inform you that line twelve of that html has a script tag. Here's the kicker: it's google analytics.


I'm not sure that 1996-era HTTP server software was "secure as hell" even if serving static content. Browsers certainly were not.


Super secure, except the information leakage:

    <META NAME="Generator" CONTENT="Microsoft Word 97">
    ...
    <META NAME="Template" CONTENT="C:\PROGRAM FILES\MICROSOFT OFFICE\OFFICE\html.dot">
(Okay, probably not much use now but when this was published, that could maybe have been used to target macro attacks)


but no https




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