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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:
The must-have toy of the year has emerged1, and it is called the fidget spinner. And, Robert, I understand you are seeing one of these for the first time.
ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:
I am unwrapping it right now for the first time to see it.
MCEVERS: OK.
SIEGEL: All right. I see it.
MCEVERS: OK. What does it look like?
SIEGEL: It consists of three circles. You know, it's - it fits in the palm of my hand, and they're - they form a triangle.
MCEVERS: OK.
SIEGEL: There's a hole in the middle of each circle, and I guess I take the center of the spinner and I hold it between my fingers and then I - whoa - and I make it go around. And can you hear that?
(SOUNDBITE OF FIDGET SPINNING)
MCEVERS: Oh, yeah, I can.
SIEGEL: I - that's about it. You know, it just spins around.
MCEVERS: OK. Here's the thing you need to know about this toy - it is a phenomenon. Kids all over the country want one of these. And Kenny Malone from our Planet2 Money podcast is about to tell us how that happened.
SIEGEL: It's still spinning.
MCEVERS: (Laughter).
SIEGEL: It's still spinning.
KENNY MALONE, BYLINE3: There's a street vendor4 in New York City named John Codrington.
JOHN CODRINGTON: They're called spinners.
MALONE: He was the first person I ever saw selling these fidget spinners.
CODRINGTON: We spin all day, and we spin at night.
MALONE: Can I look at one of those metal ones? Are those 10?
CODRINGTON: You can look at whatever you like.
MALONE: Codrington's table is teeming5 with customers today, but not long ago, he was less successfully trying to sell cologne, watches and sunglasses. But then he says he got a tip. There's this toy. It's called the fidget spinner.
CODRINGTON: A friend of mine was telling me about it before he told anybody, and he said it's going to be big.
MALONE: Like, how long ago was that?
CODRINGTON: Maybe about two weeks ago.
MALONE: And now Codrington is doing gangbusters. He says he hasn't seen a run like this since the selfie stick.
CODRINGTON: All we doing is riding the wave. We riding the wave.
MALONE: Unlike the Tickle6 Me Elmo doll or the Furby, the fidget spinner is a brand-list phenomenon that just seemed to happen overnight7. And it may be showing us a new way to create a product, a meme-ification (ph) of manufacturing8 if you will, because just like an Internet meme spreads and morphs at a breakneck pace, so can manufacturing now. But that doesn't mean someone somewhere didn't make a first version9 of the thing.
SCOTT MCCOSKERY: I had a long career in the IT world.
MALONE: This is Scott McCoskery, and as an IT guy in Seattle, he says he spent a lot of time on conference calls and in board meetings that he didn't really need to attend.
MCCOSKERY: During those times, I often found myself clicking a pen, opening and closing a knife or...
MALONE: A knife in a board meeting, Scott?
MCCOSKERY: A small pocket knife. It was nothing too threatening.
MALONE: All right, all right.
To get through those meetings, McCoskery built what he believes is the first fidget spinner as we know them. It was about three years ago, and it was just for him. It was metal. It was beautiful. And then he shared pictures with an online community that takes particular pride in things you carry every day, like a wallet or a watch or a pocket knife. When he shared those pictures, he got flooded with requests, and so he started selling what he called the Torqbar.
How much were those going for originally?
MCCOSKERY: They were probably between $300 and $500.
MALONE: McCoskery partnered with a longtime friend to sell the spinners full time, and they filed for a provisional patent last year. It's too early to know what rights that will give them, but shortly after the Torqbar went online, other people started making and selling their own spinners, some machined from metal, others 3-D printed from plastic. And eventually, major retailers10 caught on to the trend.
RICHARD BARRY: We are getting them in as fast as we can and using the fastest mechanisms11 to get them here.
MALONE: Richard Barry is chief merchandising officer at Toys R Us Toys R Us put in orders for fidget spinners several months ago before the trend really took off. But now, they're doing everything they can to get those on shelves, even chartering12 planes.
It's like a scramble-the-jets13 moment for you guys.
BARRY: We have the jets, and they are in the air, and the products will be in the stores real soon.
MALONE: When the Tickle Me Elmo doll came out, people raced to stores like Toys R Us trying to get in on the hot new thing. With the fidget spinner, the trend is here. It started going viral on its own online. And so now the retailers are the ones racing14 to the trend. Toys R Us, for its part, says fidget spinners will be hitting their shelves this week. Kenny Malone, NPR News.
1 emerged | |
vi. 浮现, (由某种状态)脱出, (事实)显现出来 | |
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2 planet | |
n.行星 | |
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3 byline | |
n.署名;v.署名 | |
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4 vendor | |
n.卖主;小贩 | |
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5 teeming | |
adj.丰富的v.充满( teem的现在分词 );到处都是;(指水、雨等)暴降;倾注 | |
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6 tickle | |
v.搔痒,胳肢;使高兴;发痒;n.搔痒,发痒 | |
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7 overnight | |
ad.前一天晚上,一夜间 a.前一天晚上的 | |
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8 manufacturing | |
n.制造业,工业adj.制造业的,制造的v.(大规模)制造( manufacture的现在分词 );捏造;加工;粗制滥造(文学作品) | |
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9 version | |
n.版本;型号;叙述,说法 | |
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10 retailers | |
零售商,零售店( retailer的名词复数 ) | |
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11 mechanisms | |
n.机械( mechanism的名词复数 );机械装置;[生物学] 机制;机械作用 | |
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12 chartering | |
n.租用v.发给…许可证( charter的现在分词 ) | |
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13 jets | |
n.喷嘴( jet的名词复数 );喷气式飞机;喷射流;煤玉 | |
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14 racing | |
n.竞赛,赛马;adj.竞赛用的,赛马用的 | |
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