Topic: a Shoe Polish story
JaiGi's photo
Fri 08/28/15 02:01 PM
Edited by JaiGi on Fri 08/28/15 02:02 PM
Kiwi Black was the popular brand even after the Brits got into the business of shoe polish. It used to be called "British made Kiwi Boot Polish" but the official line of the 'over 100 years old' UK company has been different...

The iconic "one penny tin" with its original "butterfly" twist opener was introduced in 1907 as was the name "xxxxxx xxxxxxx Boot Polish".



Shoe polish was to be found just about everywhere Allied troops ventured. American war correspondent Walter Graeber wrote for TIME magazine from the Tobruk trenches in 1942 that "old tins of British-made Kiwi polish lay side by side with empty bottles of Chianti."


So in the Tobruk Trenches, it was still known as British made 'Kiwi polish'. As dates are key to this story, for those among us born after 1945: August 14, 1945, was when gunfire ended with Allied occupation of Japan.

And this is where someone slipped in a few dots in the Wiki-page and they seemed to connect differently; a Jean (Gertrude) Williams is reported to have observed...
American soldiers were then finding the dullness of their boots and shoes to be a handicap when trying to win the affections of Japanese women...

When the British Commonwealth Occupation Forces arrived in Japan—all with boots polished to a degree not known in the U.S. forces—the G.I.s were more conscious than ever of their feet. The secret was found to rest not only in spit and polish, but in the superior YYY boot polish, a commodity which was soon exchanged with the Americans on a fluctuating basis of so many packets of cigarettes for one can of YYYY boot polish.


we can guess the rest of the story. a young GI groaning about the British success rate and the name for the Japanese chicks catching on and
transferring to the shoe polish. It was of course..


motowndowntown's photo
Fri 08/28/15 04:12 PM
Many moons ago there was a brand of shoe polish called "Shinola".

Of course in those days brown shoes were very popular.

Hence the phrase, "you don't know chit from shinola".

JaiGi's photo
Fri 08/28/15 08:28 PM
laugh
i hope no pun was intended. laugh

JaiGi's photo
Sat 08/29/15 04:57 AM
thanks to Mowtown, the Shinola story (wiki):
The original Shinola shoe polish brand was founded in Rochester New York in 1907, and went out of business in 1960.[2] In 2001, the name Shinola was acquired by Bedrock Manufacturing, a venture capital firm based in Dallas, Texas (later rechristened as Bedrock Brands). Kartsotis wanted to create an American watch-manufacturing brand to rival Swiss-makers at a lower price point.[3] The management at Bedrock Manufacturing chose the name "Shinola" when the World War II era colloquialism, "You don't know 'c'hit from Shinola," surfaced in a conversation. Unexpectedly, the joke generated a serious discussion about restoring the Shinola brand.[4][5] Market surveys established that consumers—when faced with a choice of paying $5 for a pen from China, $10 for one made in the United States, and $15 for a pen made in Detroit—would be willing to pay a premium for the last one.[4]


tulip2633's photo
Sat 08/29/15 11:53 AM
Jai.

You better shine your shoes up, soldier smart.

rofl

tulip2633's photo
Sat 08/29/15 12:35 PM

Kiwi made love love waving


The kiwi bird says: I shined my beak just for you, Blondey!




no photo
Sat 08/29/15 03:00 PM
Good joke my friend. You are lovely. :-)