Hai Karate
Hai Karate was a budget aftershave sold in the United States and the United Kingdom from the 1960s through to the 1980s. It was reintroduced in the United Kingdom under official licence in late 2014 by Healthpoint Ltd.
History
The fragrance was originally developed by the Leeming division of Pfizer and launched in 1967. As well as the original Hai Karate fragrance, versions named Oriental Lime and Oriental Spice were soon introduced. It competed successfully with such other brands as Aqua Velva, Old Spice, Jaguar, English Leather, British Sterling, Dante, and Brut before fading away in the 1980s.
Present
Brought back in 2014, Hai Karate has been re-produced according to the original formulation, although in a different bottle and re-worked packaging. Available for sale in the UK and online.
Marketing
Hai Karate is best remembered today for its television adverts and its marketing plan, with a small self-defence instruction booklet sold with each bottle to help wearers fend off women. In the UK spots, a stereotypical nerd covers himself in Hai Karate and is promptly seduced by a female passer-by played by British starlet Valerie Leon; similar ads ran in the US as well. All of the spots contained the catch phrase "Be careful how you use it".
In popular culture
- It was used by the Sussex Thunder British American football team as part of their pre-game "musking up" superstition before the 2012 Britbowl. It was purchased via eBay.
- Samuel L. Jackson's character Frozone in the The Incredibles splashes on Hai Karate.
- In 'Still Game' Season 1 episode 5, Jack Jarvice asked his post office cashier if she's wearing 'high karate'
- William Bennett's morning political talk show Morning in America featured several segments where Seth, one of Bennett's assistants on the show, went in search of a bottle of the scent. Bennett gave Seth a bottle for Christmas of 2006 after finding it in a relative's old things. The bottle is considered part of the studio's shared collection and is occasionally referred to in great reverence.
- In "A Night to Remember" episode 318 of Dharma & Greg, Dharma's dad uses a vial of Hai Karate to help jog his memory.
- In the stoner movie Puff, Puff, Pass starring Danny Masterson and Ronnie Warner, Masterson's character questions Warner about his aftershave, asking if it was Hai Karate. He then asks where Warner found Hai Karate, getting the response "Ebay".
- In Dean Koontz novel, From the Corner of His Eye, the killer, Junior Cain, splashes a little Hai Karate behind each ear before attempting to seduce a nurse he met in the hospital. (Page 211.)
- Ray Carling also says he's "a black belt in Hai Karate" in the Ashes to Ashes 2010 Sports Relief special. Hai Karate is referenced by Ray Carling once again in the fourth episode of the final series of Ashes to Ashes when he comments to Chris Skelton that he should "go easy on that Hai Karate". Skelton responds by telling Carling "it's just a dab and a dash".
- In Cheers episode 4, season 11 Sam Malone reveals his signature cologne, "It's a special blend: Old Spice, Hai Karate, and something that takes spots out."
- In the 1995 country song "Bubba Hyde" by Diamond Rio, the main character, Barney Jekyll, "Slaps on his Hai Karate aftershave" as part of his transformation into Bubba Hyde.
- Both Mystery Science Theater 3000 and its spiritual successor Rifftrax often reference the heavy use of Hai Karate during the 1970's, such as Kevin Murphy remarking about the film Wonder Women that "the scent of Hai Karate is hits like a fist through the air!"
- In The Middleman episode "The Obsolescent Cryogenic Meltdown", 1960s Middleman Guy Goddard wears Hai Karate.
- In "Ride Scare" episode of the TV Show: Married With Children, a woman asks Al Bundy if he always goes to work smelling Hi Karate.
- In the 1993 film "Loaded Weapon" Harold Leacher (played by F. Murray Abraham) tells Wes Luger (Samuel L. Jackson) - "Hai Karate - you wear that sometimes, don't you?"
- In "When Flanders Failed", an episode of the The Simpsons, a TV commercial featuring karate instructor Akira mentions a special offer of "Hai Karate at low, low prices."
References
- Cheers Sam Malone Hai Karate Quote: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0539904/quotes
Further reading
- Tuckwood, Jan. "Uncorked Machismo!", The Palm Beach Post (June 2001)
External links
- Hai Karate Basenotes Fragrance Directory