Oh, How I Love My Novophone

When a new season of Mad Men — the AMC drama set in a Manhattan advertising agency in the early 1960s — is released, we Netflix it.  Because, well, really, who can resist the allure of Don Draper or the curves of Joan Holloway?

The many secretaries on the show are continually lifting old-school telephone receivers to their shapely ears as they transcribe shorthand at their typewriters.  Seeing that lifting action repeated again and again made me realize how much, in this cell phone age, I have missed a real telephone: a full-size receiver with good sound quality and a nice heft.  The kind you can prop between your ear and your shoulder and still be clearly heard.  (Since 2005, Matt and I have had no landline — only cell phones.)

“I want a retro handset,” I said to Matt as Mad Men played in the background.

“Well, they do make them for cell phones,” Matt said.

Really?

“Really.”  And he sent me to this site.

The folks at Novophone — and soon, I imagine, other companies — do indeed make the very object of my desire, but for $27.95 — a price steep enough that I hemmed and hawed for several weeks over the decision to drop so much cash on what is essentially a mound of molded plastic with a cord.

But then I happened across the third act of this episode of This American Life (which begins at minute 45:55): an interview with journalist Christopher Ketcham, who wrote this article for GQ on the biological effects of cell phone radiation.  (As a sidenote, there is also this recent article on the subject in Harper’s Magazine.)

On the surface, the results of research into the matter seem to be a toss-up, with half of the studies showing negative health effects (i.e., increased brain cancer risk), and half not.  But when the research is divided by who funded it (the cell phone industry, or independent funding agencies), an interesting pattern emerges: while only 25% of studies funded by the industry show biological effects, 75% of the independently-funded studies do.  The risks appear to be greatest for individuals who begin using cell phones under the age of 20, as their brains are still developing and their skulls are thinner than adult skulls, and therefore do not provide as much of a radiation barrier.  But young’uns aren’t the only ones at risk.

There was the nudge I needed to get my cell away from my ear.  I ordered my Novophone that very afternoon.  The handset comes in two colors (red or black) and two styles (with or without a button on the handset that allows you to answer the phone without touching your cell).

I opted for black and buttonless, since various reviewers at Amazon.com (where I ordered the phone with free shipping) commented that it was easy to accidentally hit the button and hang up in the middle of a call.  (If you’re interested, check here to see if your cell is compatible with the Novophone, or if you’d need an adapter.)

I have to say: I LOVE this phone handset.  The feel of it in my hand, and the quality of the sound, are exactly what I had hoped for.  And it has the added bonus of cutting down my daily EMF exposure!  I’d had a hands-free headset for my cell, but never liked it much — and the people on the other end of the line had complained that I sounded like I was talking from a tunnel.  Not so with the Novophone!

As I talk on it, I invariably think of the Mad Men secretaries, and of the inventions that each generation creates and brings into widespread use, insisting on their innocuousness until faced with overwhelming evidence to the contrary (the type of evidence that takes decades to build and great effort to bring to light).  The Mad Men era had asbestos, leaded gasoline and paint, and widespread cigarette use.  My best guesses for our era’s follies?  To name a few: widespread use of pharmaceuticals and endocrine disruptors like flame retardants (which we’ve applied to just about every upholstered, electronic, and synthetic-furniture item in the U.S.), and phthalates and parabens (which we’ve managed to mix into just about every personal care product Americans use).

And, of course, cell phones.  Only time will tell.


5 Comments on “Oh, How I Love My Novophone”

  1. Lucien says:

    So super cool:)
    I totally dig your post
    thanks:
    ordering one this week
    for the total hilarity value alone it is worth it
    health risk exposure reduction: priceless!
    you’re a great life-guru!
    take care,
    Luc

    • Laurelin says:

      Thanks, Luc! I hope you enjoy your Novophone as much as I do mine! I have to say: when I use it in public, I do get some pretty amused stares from onlookers — hilarious, indeed!

  2. jana says:

    When I first glanced at your post yesterday, I thought it was a joke – a Photoshop-ed picture and a punchline to be found somewhere in the post. I have no idea what made me come back. I surely am happy that I did, though.

    The headset is brilliant. I mean, cellphones represent a controversial issue in my life. What doesn’t help my like-hate relationship with them is the constant craze about the newest, coolest, most up-to-date, 3G, 10G who-knows-what that surrounds me no matter where I go. My phone is old, and even if letters G and X were next to each other in the alphabet, we would be about 7 generations apart. And I love it even though it is slightly brickier with a much smaller display that you better not touch. It is a statement of who I am and how much I care. But sometimes I still get self-conscious.

    Now, to pull out the headset – that is a statement that requires guts. And maturity. And well-roundedness. And a solid understanding of who you are. And I think I am ready for one. Because it is TOO COOL.

    • Laurelin says:

      GO FOR IT!

      And a note about my phone itself: I, too, have an ancient phone (as evidenced by the photo), and I’ll keep it until it dies, in a stand against waste and planned obsolescence (my heart aches at the thought of all the electronics piling up in our landfills, and the heavy metals and toxics that leak out of them there, and that also affect the long-term health of people who work in electronics recycling facilities). My phone can’t text easily or check e-mail or Google a thing, and I couldn’t be happier about it — I find that when I am continuously “on call” the the rest of the world, available 24-7, and able to look up whatever I want whenever I want it, I am frazzled and stressed and distracted and unsettled. In my opinion, everybody needs to unplug for awhile each day — some time to calm down and be alone with their thoughts. This phone makes it easier.

      For all these reasons, I wholeheartedly back your dedication to your old phone!

  3. Deb says:

    Having been a sales assistant for over 30 years, I looked at that receiver and laughed. Juggling it 8 hours a day hasn’t been fun in mists of trying to multi tast so I personally like my hands free head set for those very busy days. But I have to admit that I can’t juggle my cell phone on my shoulder and ear like so many can thus the old receiver sure would come in handy. It is a novel idea.


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