
High-octane
blender drinks - with a twist
By Deborah
McAdams - Sat, Nov 15, 1997
What do you get when you
cross a gas-powered weed whip with an ordinary kitchen appliance?
Why, a nationally televised
margarita mixer, of course.
At least that's what Brian
Gross and Dan Phillips came up with at Innovative A.R.T.S., their
design development company in Loma Rica Industrial Park. In a flurry
of inspiration, Gross and Phillips came up with the TailGator®, an
ordinary looking blender - except for the gas tank and the rip cord.
"It's the manliest way
to make a girlie drink," said Gross, a bespectacled engineer
who defected from the automotive industry in southern California.
Gross and Phillips didn't
actually come up with the concept for the TailGator® - that honor
would belong to Paul Anderson of Grass Valley, who thought of mounting
a blender on a weed-whip motor. Gross and Phillips, who solicit
product ideas through Totally Gross, Inc., their marketing division
based in Reno,
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Brian
Gross (l) and Dan Phillips demonstrate their blender.
(Photo by: Tim Sofranko) |
took Anderson's idea and created
the first, clean-working gas-powered blender, which will make its
national debut on Tim Allen's "Home Improvement" on Nov.
25.
The script for Allen's irreverent
sitcom could have come straight out of Innovative A.R.T.S., where
Gross and Phillips drop one-liners like metal shavings from one
of their grinders.
"We don't remember all
of the R&D because we had to do a little testing," Gross
cracks.
"It's guaranteed to
be standing when you're not," Phillips later chimes in.
"It's not your dad's
blender," Gross remarks.
Yet Gross and Phillips are
serious about the TailGator®, which they developed with the help
of a third but absent partner, Richard Lopez of Orlando, Fla. Gross
calls Lopez the "artistic genius behind this."
The Totally Gross team believes
the TailGator® will lift them from obscurity, or at least near-poverty.
Gross and Phillips have paid the rent redesigning remote-control
devices for car alarms and garage-door openers, as well as automotive
components. They believe the TailGator®, to retail for about $295,
is their ticket.
Gross intends to expand Innovative
from the current 1,800 square feet into an additional 1,500 square
feet of space next door, where an assembly operation would be set
up. Gross said keeping the operation in Grass Valley depends on
whether the company can get the $50,000 necessary to buy production
equipment and complete the expansion. He estimated six people would
be hired for production. Right now, the production team consists
of Justin Halliday, a machinist at the shop, plus wives, girlfriends,
sisters and kids.
At the Big Boy Toy Show at
Cal-Expo, the high-pitched whine of the two-stroke motor drew guys
like couch cushions draw loose change. Debbie Gross, Brian's extremely
understanding wife, said the curious men were often escorted by
mortified woman wondering what testosterone hath wrought for their
kitchens.
America's kitchens are probably
safe, however, because part of the point of having a TailGator® is
drawing the crowd. No namby-pamby cigarette-lighter blender can
compare, the lab-coated pair said. Phillips talked about taking
a TailGator® to Laguna Beach where he and a friend became "blender
gods," a phenomenon he and Gross hope to share with manly men
everywhere.
Copyright 1997 Nevada County Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved.
Reused by permission.
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