Welcome to the 1960s. In the air, the Jetsons are flying a car. On the ground, life feels just as high-tech, particularly in the kitchen, where nearly everything has become electric. Electric can openers! Electric skillets! These shiny new appliances are far more glamorous than their manual counterparts, so when Thanksgiving rolls around and families are tasked with the annual turkey carving, a regular knife just won’t do.
Enter Jerome L. Murray, a serial inventor known for necessities like the airplane boarding ramp and the peristaltic pump, a medical device that made open-heart surgery possible. In 1964, Murray patented an early version of the electric knife, with two serrated blades connected and powered by an electric motor. When turned on, one blade moved forward and the other moved backward. The person operating the knife would apply a bit of pressure, and the knife would do its thing.
This thing is so dangerous and ineffective, a serrated bread knife does a better job. Reminder to find and toss the one I have sitting in a drawer somewhere.
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