Washington, D.C., is known for museums that tell the American story and all of its triumphs, including the National Air and Space Museum and the National Museum of Natural History. But one particular museum tells the story of some great American failures like New Coke, Blockbuster and the HD DVD.
The Museum of Failure is a pop-up exhibit started by Dr. Samuel West, a clinical psychologist. He hopes to help people improve their ability to learn from failure.
“The aim of the museum is to really drive home the point that we need to accept failure if we want progress, we want innovation,” West told Straight Arrow News.
West defines a failure as “a deviation from the expected or desired results.”
The exhibit is filled with all sorts of things that didn’t go as planned, like Harley Davidson cologne and Little Miss No Name, a doll that was supposed to build empathy for the homeless, but it instead scared kids with its giant red eyes and raggedy clothing.
“I started the museum because I was frustrated with all the success stories,” West said. “In my field of work, innovation and business, there’s just too much, too many successful, happy, rich people trying to say, ‘Look at me, do like I do, and you’ll be happy.’ And we all know that’s not the truth.”
Kashiff Thompson visited the museum with his homeschooled daughter, Riley, hoping to teach her that lesson.
“It’s important, I think, for her to see that it’s okay to try things and failure doesn’t mean you give up, it means that it can lead to something different,” Thompson said.
Here are the biggest failures on display:
- Pets.com
This website arguable came before its time. It was supposed to be the Amazon of pet products, Jeff Bezos was even an early investor. But after opening in 1998 it closed in 2000 partly due to selling too many bags of dog food at a loss.
- Segway
In 2001, the inventor of this electric chariot, Dean Kamen said that the Segway “will be to the car what the car was to the horse and buggy.”
That didn’t happen. But in big cities, electric scooters are now everywhere, helping people get to work or the bar.
- Hawaii Chair
This spinning seat was designed to help people who sit all day at work build their abdominal muscles, but it quickly became the butt of jokes for comedians.
- Nintendo Power Glove
The motion control device was supposed to make video games more interactive. For instance, instead of using a joystick to control a race car, users could put on the glove and turn their hand.
The product was only on the market for a year but the motion control technology ultimately led to the Nintendo Wii, which sold more than 100 million units worldwide.
“The Segway, or the Nintendo Power Glove, or Nintendo Virtual Boy, these were all failures, commercial failures that changed, you know, technology forever,” West said.
The Museum of Failure will be in Washington until Dec. 10 before moving on to another city.