Did you know that frisbees were originally just pie containers? Or that Play-Doh was intended to be a wallpaper cleaner? Sometimes, customers find a better use for products than what they were originally marketed as, so companies decide to pivot. But there are also plenty of cases of companies being in denial about what their products are used for, regardless of how many people purchase them for different reasons.
Redditors have recently been discussing some of the most commonly misused items people buy, so we’ve gathered their thoughts down below. Enjoy scrolling through, and be sure to upvote the products you’re guilty of using for different purposes too!
To find out more about how this conversation started in the first place, we reached out to Reddit user EVERYTHING_WAS_TAKEN who posed the question, “What is an item that everyone misuses but the makers pretend they don’t know?”
She shared that Q-tips/cotton swabs inspired her to ask this question. “I was looking at the pack in my bathroom and started wondering if there was other stuff out there like it,” the OP told Bored Panda. “Everyone puts them in the ear, and the manufacturers definitely know that. I think I’ve learned a whole new world of how deep exactly some people put them from this Reddit post, though. Don’t damage your ears, kids! Swab responsibly.”
“I’m an artist, so I frequently misuse objects and repurpose them,” the OP continued. “But this post was meant to find out about physical things that are misused in the same way by the majority of users, and is common knowledge.”
And as far as why companies pretend that they don’t know people are misusing their products, EVERYTHING_WAS_TAKEN supposes that it’s for several reasons. “They would have to redesign something that already works properly for its intended purpose, so that just means extra cost on their side when they’re not technically liable for misuse,” she noted.
Former GF gave me a model Death Star. Looks like pewter but I’m not sure. A bit smaller than a tennis ball. It looks pretty cool, but she was so excited when she explained “Look! It opens up! It’s a grinder for dried spices when you cook!”
Didn’t want to hurt her feelings by explaining that she had given me a weed grinder. I was dying inside holding in the laughter.
“Also, tons of people would complain, so customer dissatisfaction,” the OP shared. “And people misusing the item would find something else to buy, so customer loss.”
“In some cases, you actually can’t ‘fix’ the product to stop a specific misuse because it’s being used technically properly but for a different goal,” she explained. “So there’s nothing they can do. And honestly, some of these misuses are so bizarre it would just be weird for a company to try to address it,” she added with a laugh.
He just stared at me until I got it lol.
EVERYTHING_WAS_TAKEN went on to share that most of the responses to her post were unexpected. “I was thinking cotton swabs, Reddit was thinking drugs and other questionable activities,” she said with a laugh. “Yeah, it was definitely interesting how many people answered the same things – I guess the question worked!”
“The funny ones to me were the people who hadn’t seen my comment proposing the cotton swab, and started their comments with, ‘There’s no way this post isn’t talking about Q-Tips…'” she added.
Finally, the OP added that if we could misuse characteristics of animals however we wanted to, she thinks it would be great to misuse an elephant’s brain, a lion’s heart, a kitten’s lovableness, and a T-rex’s arms. “What could be better than a chicken with T-rex arms?” she asked. “Good thing humans are still relative blobs and we haven’t figured that out yet.”
Spoiler: This isn’t due to the correlation in popularity of ‘The Great British Bake Off’, it’s due to its disassociative psychoactive effects.
Going way back, farming advances and the cultivation of grains was primarily to make beer, going way back to Mesopotamia.
Had a co-worker order an electric water distiller.
I works just as well for making nearly pure alcohol, although it is marketed specifically for distilling water.
Uncle Ben’s rice. It’s very popular for cultivating mushrooms of the magic variety.
Cough medicine containing dextromethorphan (robocough, robotabs). If taken as prescribed, it’s a cough suppressant. If taken in much higher dosages, it’s a dissociative anesthetic, like pcp or ketamine. Kids and adults have been abusing the stuff for decades. There’s a whole subculture around it.
Edit: kmart is still really big in Aus
Bobby pins. Groove side faces down towards the scalp to effectively hold the pin in place.
Sounded bizzare, but it actually works. And leaves you with only a single piece of waste too.
Did you know that frisbees were originally just pie containers? Or that Play-Doh was intended to be a wallpaper cleaner? Sometimes, customers find a better use for products than what they were originally marketed as, so companies decide to pivot. But there are also plenty of cases of companies being in denial about what their products are used for, regardless of how many people purchase them for different reasons.
Redditors have recently been discussing some of the most commonly misused items people buy, so we’ve gathered their thoughts down below. Enjoy scrolling through, and be sure to upvote the products you’re guilty of using for different purposes too!
To find out more about how this conversation started in the first place, we reached out to Reddit user EVERYTHING_WAS_TAKEN who posed the question, "What is an item that everyone misuses but the makers pretend they don't know?"
She shared that Q-tips/cotton swabs inspired her to ask this question. "I was looking at the pack in my bathroom and started wondering if there was other stuff out there like it," the OP told Bored Panda. "Everyone puts them in the ear, and the manufacturers definitely know that. I think I've learned a whole new world of how deep exactly some people put them from this Reddit post, though. Don't damage your ears, kids! Swab responsibly."
"I'm an artist, so I frequently misuse objects and repurpose them," the OP continued. "But this post was meant to find out about physical things that are misused in the same way by the majority of users, and is common knowledge."
And as far as why companies pretend that they don't know people are misusing their products, EVERYTHING_WAS_TAKEN supposes that it's for several reasons. "They would have to redesign something that already works properly for its intended purpose, so that just means extra cost on their side when they're not technically liable for misuse," she noted.
Didn't want to hurt her feelings by explaining that she had given me a weed grinder. I was dying inside holding in the laughter.
"Also, tons of people would complain, so customer dissatisfaction," the OP shared. "And people misusing the item would find something else to buy, so customer loss."
"In some cases, you actually can't 'fix' the product to stop a specific misuse because it's being used technically properly but for a different goal," she explained. "So there's nothing they can do. And honestly, some of these misuses are so bizarre it would just be weird for a company to try to address it," she added with a laugh.
He just stared at me until I got it lol.
EVERYTHING_WAS_TAKEN went on to share that most of the responses to her post were unexpected. "I was thinking cotton swabs, Reddit was thinking drugs and other questionable activities," she said with a laugh. "Yeah, it was definitely interesting how many people answered the same things - I guess the question worked!"
"The funny ones to me were the people who hadn't seen my comment proposing the cotton swab, and started their comments with, 'There's no way this post isn't talking about Q-Tips...'" she added.
Finally, the OP added that if we could misuse characteristics of animals however we wanted to, she thinks it would be great to misuse an elephant's brain, a lion's heart, a kitten's lovableness, and a T-rex's arms. "What could be better than a chicken with T-rex arms?" she asked. "Good thing humans are still relative blobs and we haven't figured that out yet."
Spoiler: This isn't due to the correlation in popularity of 'The Great British Bake Off', it's due to its disassociative psychoactive effects.
Going way back, farming advances and the cultivation of grains was primarily to make beer, going way back to Mesopotamia.
Had a co-worker order an electric water distiller.
I works just as well for making nearly pure alcohol, although it is marketed specifically for distilling water.
Uncle Ben's rice. It's very popular for cultivating mushrooms of the magic variety.
Cough medicine containing dextromethorphan (robocough, robotabs). If taken as prescribed, it's a cough suppressant. If taken in much higher dosages, it's a dissociative anesthetic, like pcp or ketamine. Kids and adults have been abusing the stuff for decades. There's a whole subculture around it.
Edit: kmart is still really big in Aus
Bobby pins. Groove side faces down towards the scalp to effectively hold the pin in place.
Sounded bizzare, but it actually works. And leaves you with only a single piece of waste too.
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