What is it about man time in the bathroom that everyone feels needs to be ruined? Yeah, we go with our phone to give us something to do. Then, we lose track of time playing online pool or reading an article from the ESPN app. It happens. There s no need to ruin that time.
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Well, I guess I m wrong. A couple of guys, Adam and Elliot, have created what they call the Toilet Timer . It basically works like an hour glass. The sand starts in the silhouette of a dude and falls into a toilet. The sand measures out five minutes which should be enough time to take care of business.
Toilet Timer: What Happened After $200,000 Mark Cuban Shark Tank Deal
On Season 12 of
Adam Stephey and Katie Stephey of Katamco pitch their gag gift Toilet Timer. It’s a 5-minute sand timer designed for “poo-crastinators” who are accused of wasting too much time in the bathroom.
[Related:
They had the good fortune of pitching in front of billionaire
Mark Cuban who has seen success with his
. They accepted Cuban’s offer: $200,000 for 25 percent.
Since then the product has continually received rave reviews on Amazon, nearly 5,000 of them! And most of them by a big margin are five stars.
New episodes of
| photo courtesy of ABC
Kirkwood High School graduate Adam Stephey used to clean park bathrooms for a summer job. Little did he know that, two decades down the line, his career would still be focused on toilets â in a whole different way.
Recently featured on ABCâs entrepreneurial reality show âShark Tank,â Stephey and his wife, Katie, are the creators of the Toilet Timer, a five-minute sand timer designed to keep people mindful of the time they spend in the restroom. Unlike a traditional hourglass sand timer, which takes several minutes to reset, the Toilet Timer completely resets after a 360-degree turn, saving precious moments for time-conscious commode users.
Kevin Bersett
A new year means new ideas, and Bloomington-Normal is generating some big ones.
Three years ago, two residents invented the Toilet Timer, which earned an investment from Mark Cuban on “Shark Tank” TV program. Another resident will perhaps soon have his invention stocked on the shelves of a local grocery store.
But what really turns a dream into reality?
Entrepreneurship isn’t just about ideas. Getting an innovation off the ground takes courage, hard work and a bit of luck. That’s according to Dave Benjamin, creator of the Bath Buoy, a product to keep children safe in the bathtub.
Ryan Denham / WGLT
2020 was a blur. So many important things happened in the Bloomington-Normal community, from COVID-19 to racial justice protests to the recession. Oh, and a presidential election.
Here is a look at the 10 most-read stories from 2020 on WGLT.org.
Danielle Kater, a 30-year-old from Bloomington, was the youngest person we lost to COVID this year. Her family bravely stepped forward to tell their story, starting with this heartbreaking interview with WGLT’s Dana Vollmer. Kater’s family later spoke at one of Gov. JB Pritzker’s daily briefings about the importance of taking COVID precautions seriously.
Stay-at-home orders due to COVID meant fewer people were driving. Less driving means fewer car crashes. Fewer car crashes means big savings for auto insurers. State Farm, Country Financial, and many other U.S. auto insurance companies sent some of that money back to customers. Bloomington-based State Farm, of course, is the largest auto insurer in the U.S.