Odd Gadget Turns Man Blue
ANCHOR: His name is Paul Karason, and he is - blue.
REPORTER: Believe me, it's not makeup or paint, Paul Kerason's skin is a deep, blue, purple color. The 57-year-old started making the transition from fair skin and freckles to this about 14 years ago.
PAUL: The change was so gradual that I didn't perceive it, and the people around me, likewise, it was just so gradual no one really noticed. It wasn't until a friend I hadn't seen in several months came by to my parent's place to see me and he asked, "What did you do?"
REPORTER: What Paul did is use a substance called colloidal silver, might by extracting silver into water with an electrical current and drinking it. It's billed as something that will cure just about anything that ails ya, and Paul swears by it.
REPORTER (To Paul): After it turned your skin blue, you're drinking it.
PAUL: Yes, but much less.
Blue Man Seeks Acceptance [ABC30]
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Comments:
The condition is called argyria; its most famous victim is Stan Jones [en.wikipedia.org], who ran for Congress after having turned blue-grey.
I think its pretty rude that the consumerist labels his condition as something from "an odd gadget" or "infomercial"
Also, he doesn't EXTRACT the silver in the water, it is from adding silver to the water.
But, correct information aside, it is allowed as a legal health supplement by the FDA, so I don't see why one man's condition is consumer related news.
@1stage: AFAIK, it is not reversible. The silver is basically embedded/trapped in your skin.
On the other hand, I suppose it makes that layer of skin quite anti-bacterial...
@crnk: Would he have turned blue without the "odd gadget"?
And as to it not being "consumer related news" -- how's your consumer website doing these days?
1) He say's it's from rubbing that shit on his face, is he only blue there? [No minds in the gutter, please.
2) "Paul Kerason's skin is a deep,... purple color" Perhaps he should try coming out to Montreux
On the Lake Geneva shoreline? /loves DP, sorry had to pick this song for its recognicibility purposes.
@crnk: *bludgeons your comment with a large mallet*
Maybe it wasn't from an infomercial but something that yanks silver from a metal source into water qualifies as "an odd gadget".
Also, it's BECAUSE it's allowed as a legal health supplement by the FDA that this is a consumer issue. He didn't come up with this on his own. He bought a product (making him a consumer) that turned his skin blue when he used it.
Paul moved to Madera about six months ago after living in Oregon. He says too many folks there weren't nice to him.
People gave him shit because his skin turned blue? Damn.
is it just me, or does the camera add to his blue-ness. i'm just thinkin they turned up the blue on the camera to make it look more dramatic. this guy claims no one noticed? with the way it looks on camera, he must have never left the house. how could you not see it? unless like i said, the camera makes it look worse.
@kc-guy: lol. if i was him i'd sit really still on my lawn chair in the front yard during winter, and see how many people i could freak out.
Specialized silver molecules do actually act as fantastic anti-bacterials, anti-fungis and anti-virals. Not sure if it works the same as drinking it but I don't think anyone can say 100%.
Also, silver is not toxic to humans, even in large quantities, unless you get shot with a silver bullet or drink a bunch of Silver Bullets.
@num1skeptic: i'm pretty sure the folks at abc news would have pro gear; not quite "low grade." these aren't handi-cams they use for this stuff. and look at the rest of the colours in there. nothing else looks blue-tinged.
@testsicles: great name, also, my question is since he has obviously overdosed (overtime) on this, wouldn't that be like taking antibiotics for 14 years? i mean your body will most likely build up a tolerance for it, making it that much worse if you do get sick.
@nbenko: actually i thought they did look more blue during the interview. and i'm sure the camera costs more than my house, and therefore if they wanted to turn up the blue (only when he was on the screen) they could.























This guy is not the sharpest knife in the drawer. Colloidal silver turns people blue, period.