Einstein merchandise still brings bucks
Philosophy

Einstein merchandise still brings bucks



Like the popular and successful Energizer Bunny the flow of dollars continues for marketed Einstein goodies...iconography has its rewards especially for whomever holds the strings for the Einstein merchandise.

"Dead 53 years, Albert Einstein still rakes in the dough"

October 31st, 2008

Symmetry

Just in time for Halloween, Forbes has released its annual list of top-earning dead celebrities. There in fourth place–behind Elvis Presley, cartoonist Charles Schulz, and actor Heath Ledger–is Albert Einstein, whose frowsy-haired image earned an estimated $18 million in royalties this year. In 2006, Symmetry reported that Einstein was in third place.

Einstein–aguably the most widely recognized and most beloved scientist of modern times–is actually a staple of the list. (The UK's Guardian news blog playfully referrs to "Albert Einstein's Theory of Royalty Longevity.") He earned more this year than each of Marilyn Monroe, Dr. Seuss, Paul Newman, and John Lennon.

Says Forbes:

Albert Einstein probably never thought he would be earning money from making babies smarter. But Baby Einstein, a majority Disney-owned suite of learning tools for infants, keeps expanding. International licensing with Nestle's Japanese coffee brand, Charge, and an upcoming sneaker campaign with basketball player Kobe Bryant add to Einstein's rich portfolio of deals.

None of which should surprise readers of Symmetry, who in the February 2005 issue found this ode to the great man's pervasive presence:

"I Discovered the Theory of Relativity and All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt"

by

Judy Jackson

His mug's on mugs,
Bears wear his hair;
Albert turns up everywhere.

His famed equation greets the eyes
From every form of merchandise;
T-shirts and ties he doth adorn.
Is there Albert Einstein porn?

Tots and geezers recognize him;
Every market sector buys him.
The world, it seems, will never weary
Of him and his relativity theory.

Year after year, folks take a likin'
To Einstein as a cultural icon.
Font of a vast commercial venture, he
Made Time magazine's "Man of the Century."

Who'd have thought a patent clerk
Would rise above that line of work
To symbolize for humankind
The greatness of the human mind?

That hair, that tongue, that life, that brain-
Remind us of all we might attain.
Would Albert E. have found it rich
To have become the king of kitsch?


Take that, Andy Warhol! (#8 on the list, with a measly $9 million in earnings.)


Einstein iconography--five papers




- "mistaken Identity And Mirror Images"...quirky Stories
Albert Einstein accepted a “special” visiting professorship at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands in February 1920. Although his appointment should have been a mere formality, it took until October of that year before Einstein could occupy...

- Albert Einstein's Methodology
Abstract... This paper discusses Einstein's methodology. The first topic is: Einstein characterized his work as a theory of principle and reasoned that beyond kinematics, the 1905 heuristic relativity principle could offer new connections between...

- Bad Hairday For Einstein?
Abstract: Two important and unpleasant events occurred in Albert Einstein’s life in 1920: That August an antirelativity rally was held in the large auditorium of the Berlin Philharmonic, and a few weeks later Einstein was drawn into a tense and highly...

- Einstein Advertisement
Looks like a situation for lawyers Dewey, Cheatem, and Howe. "Hebrew University sues GM for People's Einstein ad" May 26th, 2010 Associated Press Albert Einstein is among the world's top-earning dead people, and an Israeli university that holds...

- "a Brain Is A Terrible Thing To Lose"--al Gore
I might as well address this issue for it inevitably comes up in discussions about Einstein and that is the story of Einstein's brain. Einstein died on April 18th, 1955 at the age of seventy six in Princeton, New Jersey from heart failure. An autopsy...



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