Which Infomercial Items Would You Like To See Us Investigate?

We all know that it’s best to take the claims of any infomercial — or really, any commercial at all — with a grain of salt so large it would turn Lake Michigan brackish. And yet, there appears to be no end to the stream of products being hawked late at night by loud (and often Australian) pitchmen.

Most of you remember our test of the Snuggie, and our kin at Consumer Reports are always looking into things like the Slap Chop and Magic Jack.

But with so many potentially crappy products available, we’re curious which ones you think deserve a closer look from Consumerist.

Share your thoughts in the comments below or by e-mailing our tipline with the subject “infomercial items.”

Comments

  1. Tom Foolery says:

    Do the Blendtec “will it blend” youtube ads count as infomercials?

  2. The Dord says:

    The Mr. T FlavorWave Turbo Oven

    Heard so many mixed reviews of this on the internet.

  3. summeroflove says:

    I forget the name of it but there is a thing that is supposed to stop dogs from barking. One thing is for sure, the commercial is annoying (Wait! Put that in the annoying commercial category too!).

  4. Crazytree says:

    SHAKE WEIGHT!

    My wife bought one and hid it so I couldn’t return it.

  5. RayanneGraff says:

    HYDROXATONE. I hate those fucking commercials so much.

  6. kajillion123 says:

    enzyte and extenze

  7. Tankueray says:

    Happy fun ball.

    Is it weird that I haven’t heard of half of these products? I vote for the Total Gym, Kimaro body shapers, and the Ninja blender in the picture. And any infomercial item that is over $100, I think it would be great to protect us from such expensive mistakes.

    I have the redi-set-go and it’s great, but not if you want crispy. Instead of the montel blender I got the “will it blend?” one, it’s awesome.

  8. yami990 says:

    another nomination for magic bullet. i want to know how well it works before buying it. perhaps the ninja chop or other blender/chopper things that are able to use for smaller servings primarily?

  9. nXt says:

    The Fushigi ball. Can anyone pick it up and look like a master like that guy in the commercial?

  10. ShadowFalls says:

    I think the Magic Jack one deserves more of a look at. I have heard some people say it is not bad, others who completely despise it. Since from I can tell, the principle isn’t any different than any other VoIP provider, what is one to do if the company goes under? Does the device has support for all computers? Firewall issues? etc. Are their claims as really up to snuff? or does the “jack” stand for something else entirely.

  11. sister says:

    Rejuvenate Auto

  12. Howie411 says:

    Ove Glove

  13. FrugalFreak says:

    Sing-a-ma-jigs Demo please with multiple.

  14. Gregg Araki Rocks My World says:

    Anything where the seller claims to know something the government doesn’t want you to know.

  15. RogueWarrior65 says:

    Every effing weight-loss pill. Either that or investigate those goofy radio ads for some sort of work-at-home scheme. Like this one: “Hi, I’m Roger Pasquire. I became a millionaire at 23, doubled it by 33 and retired at 43. How did I do it? By finding good ideas and THEN taking action to make money.” NO SH*T?!? I’ve been taking action first and then finding the good idea. Glad you told me that. And now you’re going to share your latest money-making scheme with little old me instead of making a sh*tload of money by yourself? What a guy!!! Or this latest one “I recently filed for bankruptcy after going a million dollars into debt. Then I realized the same things I did to get into debt could get me out.” Ummm…no…we’ve got lots of governments that believe that one too.

  16. RogueWarrior65 says:

    Every effing weight-loss pill. Either that or investigate those goofy radio ads for some sort of work-at-home scheme. Like this one: “Hi, I’m Roger Pasquire. I became a millionaire at 23, doubled it by 33 and retired at 43. How did I do it? By finding good ideas and THEN taking action to make money.” NO SH*T?!? I’ve been taking action first and then finding the good idea. Glad you told me that. And now you’re going to share your latest money-making scheme with little old me instead of making a sh*tload of money by yourself? What a guy!!! Or this latest one “I recently filed for bankruptcy after going a million dollars into debt. Then I realized the same things I did to get into debt could get me out.” Ummm…no…we’ve got lots of governments that believe that one too.

  17. Cyniconvention says:

    The Pedegg

  18. FilthyHarry says:

    Its not an infomercial but the latest Pizza Hut commercial features a bit where a lady holds up a Pizza Hut pizza and says “This is how you guarantee a second date.”

    I’d like to see that proven.

  19. pixiestix says:

    Shake Weight!

    That infomercial is just to hilarious especially the parodies – just need to know if that stupid thing is good for anything other than building up a good….. um….. hand…..

  20. Zernhelt says:

    I think Cold Fire would be good to look at. It’s being sold as something you should have in your house instead of traditional fire extinguishers. If it’s not as effective as traditional fire extinguishers, than people that buy Cold Fire instead of a traditional fire extinguisher may end up with an unfortunate surprise if they have a fire.

  21. shanthrax138 says:

    OrGREENIc cookware. Ceramic cookware that looks impressive and is SO expensive.

  22. Thumbmaster says:

    I’d like to see the hercules hook and the suction-cup-handlebar-thingie tested.

  23. layton59 says:

    The POCKET FISHERMAN (not to be confused with pocket billards) and that glass cutter that lets you make drinking glasses out of old bottles. Wait those are from the 1970′s. Dang, crappy products sold on TV have been around for eons. I HATE INFOMERCIALS.