The Columbus Dispatch

Sweden’s Museum of Failure celebrates products that flopped

- By James Brooks

HELSINGBOR­G, Sweden — Green Heinz ketchup? Fatfree Pringles? Colgate frozen lasagna? You don’t need to be an expert to know these products weren’t successful.

Which is why these creations, with dozens of others, feature in the new Museum of Failure , a wacky parade of rejected products from years gone by set up in the Swedish town of Helsingbor­g.

It’s the brainchild of 43-year-old curator and clinical psychologi­st Samuel West. The idea came to him while on holiday and he quickly purchased the internet domain name. West later realized he’d accidental­ly misspelled “museum” — a sure sign the project would succeed.

“We know that 80 to 90 percent of innovation projects, they fail and you never read about them, you don’t see them, people don’t talk about them,” West says. “And if there’s anything we can do from these failures, is learn from them.”

Many items in the museum show companies’ attempts to diversify their brand. There’s Coca-Cola’s BlaK coffee beverage and Pepsi’s Crystal clear soda.

Iconic motorcycle manufactur­er Harley-Davidson makes an appearance with a men’s eau-du-toilette, launched in the mid-1990s.

“The fans hated it,” West says. “They had Christmas ornaments, Barbie dolls, all kinds of other stuff with the Harley-Davidson logo and it sort of trivialize­s the brand.”

Even one of the world’s best-known businessme­n, President Donald Trump, makes an appearance.

The “I’m Back And You’re Fired” board game from 2004 looks like Monopoly, but players use “T’’ branded pieces and the paper notes are adorned with Trump’s image.

“It’s a boring version of Monopoly. It’s simplified so stupid people can play it, but it’s also horribly boring,” West says.

The museum does offer some hope. On display is an Apple Newton personal digital assistant from 1993. The bulky black device paved the way for the iPhones and iPads that millions use today.

The Museum of Failure opens June 7 and will stay in its gallery space until at least early September. Entry is 100 Swedish kroner, or approximat­ely $11.

The Museum of Failure is also home to some high-tech devices, including Google’s Glass headset with augmented reality display and in-built camera.

 ?? [JAMES BROOKS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Curator Samuel West holds a bottle of Heinz Green Sauce at the Museum of Failure in Helsingbor­g, Sweden. BlaK coffee from Coca-Cola? Pepsi’s Crystal? The Apple Newton? These creations, and dozens of others, are among the exhibits.
[JAMES BROOKS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Curator Samuel West holds a bottle of Heinz Green Sauce at the Museum of Failure in Helsingbor­g, Sweden. BlaK coffee from Coca-Cola? Pepsi’s Crystal? The Apple Newton? These creations, and dozens of others, are among the exhibits.
 ?? [JAMES BROOKS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? The board game Trump: I’m Back And You’re Fired never caught sparks.
[JAMES BROOKS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] The board game Trump: I’m Back And You’re Fired never caught sparks.

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