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Thread: Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

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    Just The Big Picture macro's Avatar
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    Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

    Everyone who has ever enjoyed the delicacy that is salisbury steak, powdery mashed potatoes, and dried up peas has this man to thank. Now, please excuse me while I go preheat my oven to 450 degrees and peel back the corner of the cellophane cover...


    MSNBC.com
    Inventor of TV dinner dies at age 83
    Gerry Thomas turned surplus turkey into a frozen tray-table feast

    MSNBC News Services
    Updated: 3:03 p.m. ET July 20, 2005


    PHOENIX - Gerry Thomas, the former poultry company executive who helped marry American television with mealtime as inventor of the TV dinner, has died at age 83, his family said Wednesday.Thomas, honored in Hollywood in 1999 by having his handprints placed in cement outside Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, died of cancer at a Phoenix hospice facility Monday after a long illness, according to his wife, Susan Mills Thomas.

    A retired marketing executive of Swanson, now a unit of Pinnacle Foods Corp., Thomas recalled during the 1999 ceremony that his innovation arose as a solution to the company’s post-Thanksgiving surplus inventory of turkeys in the 1950s.

    “It was a case of necessity being the mother invention,” Thomas said then.

    The idea of packaging the surplus as an entree for a frozen meal dawned on Thomas, then 30, during a business trip to Pittsburgh, where he saw a box of single-compartment metal trays that were being tested by an airline as a way of serving heated meals.

    Thomas coined the term “TV Dinner” as a marketing gimmick aimed at tapping into public excitement over the then-new broadcast medium.

    “It’s a pleasure being identified as the person who did this because it changed the way people live,” he said in a 1999 Associated Press interview. “It’s part of the fabric of our society.”

    Swanson, already encouraged by the success of pot pies, which had been introduced in 1951, seized on Thomas’ idea, and the TV Dinner debuted nationally in 1954. Since interest in television was booming, he noted: “I figured if you could borrow from that, maybe you could get some attention. I think the name made all the difference in the world.”

    Initially sold for 98 cents, the original TV Dinner featured turkey, corn-bread dressing and gravy, buttered peas and sweet potatoes, all packaged in a three-compartment tray. Ten million dinners were sold in the first year of national distribution.

    As for the tray, he recalled that the inspiration came when he was visiting a distributor, spotted a metal tray and was told it was developed for an experiment in preparation of hot meals on airliners.

    “It was just a single compartment tray with foil,” he said. “I asked if I could borrow it and stuck it in the pocket of my overcoat.”

    'If I’m the father ... who’s the mother?'
    He said he came up with the three compartments because “I spent five years in the service so I knew what a mess kit was. You could never tell what you were eating because it was all mixed together.”


    The dinners drew “hate mail from men who wanted their wives to cook from scratch like their mothers did,” but they got him a bump in pay to $300 a month and a $1,000 bonus.

    “I didn’t complain. A thousand dollars was a lot of money back then,” he said.

    However, he didn’t want to call himself the father of the TV dinner.

    “I really didn’t invent the dinner. I innovated the tray on how it could be served, coined the name and developed some unique packaging,” he said in the 1999 AP interview. “If I’m the father of the TV dinner, who’s the mother? I think it’s ludicrous.”

    After the Campbell Soup Co. acquired Swanson in 1955, Thomas became a sales manager, then marketing manager and director of marketing and sales. He left the company after a heart attack in 1970. He later directed an art gallery and did consulting work.


    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    © 2005 MSNBC.com

    Help stamp out, eliminate, and do away with redundancy.


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  3. #2
    Potential Lunch Winner Dom Heffner's Avatar
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    Re: Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

    RIP. My father would have led a much less happy existence had he not had the Hungry Man dinners to munch on night after night.

    There is a great late night joke in here somewhere.

    I remember when the owner of a very large movie theater chain died, and David Letterman said that his funeral would be held at 1:00, 3:15, 7:25, and 10:30.


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    First Time Caller SunDeck's Avatar
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    Re: Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

    And collectively, the GI tracks in America breathed a sigh of relief.
    Next Reds manager, second shooter. --Confirmed on Redszone.

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    Member redsrule2500's Avatar
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    Re: Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

    RIP!!!

    Those things are amazing, I remember looking forwarding to eating those as sort of a fun thing to have. Sure, it's not the best quality food - but I thought they were good
    redsrule2500
    Go Reds!
    “I’m a normal guy blessed with the ability to hit a baseball.” - Sean Casey

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    The Lineups stink. KronoRed's Avatar
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    Re: Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

    Rip
    Go Gators!

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    Re: Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

    The dinners drew “hate mail from men who wanted their wives to cook from scratch like their mothers did,” but they got him a bump in pay to $300 a month and a $1,000 bonus.

    “I didn’t complain. A thousand dollars was a lot of money back then,” he said
    If I owned/CEO of company like, I would think rewarding my employees fairly would be one of my major concerns. Loyalty works both ways.

  8. #7
    Member redsrule2500's Avatar
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    Re: Inventor Of TV Dinner Dies At Age 83

    Quote Originally Posted by RedBloodedAmerican
    If I owned/CEO of company like, I would think rewarding my employees fairly would be one of my major concerns. Loyalty works both ways.

    Yep, but if all you need is the idea, there is little incentive sadly enough.
    redsrule2500
    Go Reds!
    “I’m a normal guy blessed with the ability to hit a baseball.” - Sean Casey


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