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This profile was automatically generated using 6 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 6 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
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1. riverfronttimes.com
riverfronttimes.com/2007-11-14 - [Cached]Published on: 11/14/2007 Last Visited: 5/2/2008
Bruce Santhuff isn't averse to hard work, but the St. Louis native admits he does enjoy a good daily pampering , sometimes even twice a day. So it was two years ago that Santhuff was taking a break from his demanding job as a toilet-seat importer when the idea hit him faster than a plate of curried eggplant.
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Spaloo, Bruce Santhuff, Japanese, Cleveland High School, bidet For months Santhuff had wrestled with what to call the Japanese technology he longed to introduce to America. At one time, he considered calling his bidet-like toilet seat the "Stern Washer," for its ability to shoot a powerful jet of water into its recipient's posterior. But the device was much more than that. A separate "feminine wash" unleashes a torrent of warm water onto what Santhuff coyly refers to as the "little captain" of the fairer sex. For that reason alone, Santhuff and his wife and business partner, Kate, eliminated such unsavory names as "SaniCrapper" and "WashYourButt.com."
No, Santhuff needed something classy. A name that encapsulated everything his Japanese throne offered , including its heated seat, built-in blow-dryer and space-age control panel. "Then one day, while getting a massage, I came up with the word 'Spaloo.' I raced home to tell my wife," explodes the 48-year-old Santhuff. The word "Spa" works because the seat services your naughties nicer than a Geisha chambermaid. "Loo" because it all happens in the bathroom. "Finally," spouts Santhuff, "we'd found the right combination of catchy and informative."
So how does a working-class guy from south St. Louis become the oracle behind a bathroom revolution , the Grand Poobah to a better way of doing business? That's the question we had when Santhuff, who now resides in North Carolina, sent us an e-mail with the subject line: "1977 Cleveland High School Graduate."
"I know that you are interested in informing your readers about things that can improve their lives, so I thought you might like to know about a new product that can help millions of Americans," read the note's running commentary. "My name is Bruce Santhuff and I represent Spaloo , a new type of toilet seat that makes using the bathroom easier."
Does Unreal want to know about new toilet innovations? Does a bear ... Yes! Yes we do. We dropped everything and called Santhuff. The Spaloo managing director answered on the second ring.
A television sound technician by trade, Santhuff says he first came across a device similar to Spaloo three years ago while on a business trip to Japan. "When I saw it in the hotel, I laughed harder than I ever have in my life," says the Spaloo executive. "But by the third day of my stay, I was convinced that the bidet seat is truly a better mousetrap. I came back to the States and knew I wanted to bring this to America."
Though the first bidet was invented in France in 1710, Santhuff maintains that the Spaloo is the first major innovation in toilet science since the dawn of indoor plumbing. Japan, with its historical fascination with spiritual and physical cleanliness, has long been the king of toilet technology. Toto Ltd. has set the industry standard for nearly 30 years with its high-tech Washlet, a veritable Mercedes of toiletry. The company has sold some 17 million Washlets, which can run as high as $4,000, since 1980. Santhuff notes that about 80 percent of Japanese households already enjoy the "hands free" cleaning provided by similar bidet toilet seats, says Santhuff. But the Spaloo, he adds, is a U.S. brainchild , like baseball or Kentucky Fried Chicken , which is just the rocket ship needed to catapult America to the forefront of personal hygiene.
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Though getting the product to market, Santhuff confesses, wasn't the smoothest of movements.
After settling on a name for Spaloo, Santhuff says it took another several months to find a manufacturer who could make his pipe dream a reality. Then there were the annoying tasks of applying for a trademark, registering a corporation and setting up a Web site. "If I had known the magnitude of what I was attempting, I may not have undertaken the challenge," he confides.
No, Santhuff may not be the quickest man to get the job done , it took him ten years to graduate from Southeast Missouri State University , but then, what's the hurry?
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"I'm not ruling it out," says Santhuff.
Our Spaloo arrived last month in a slender white box emblazoned with the catchphrase: "The Future of Clean is Here." Within minutes we pimped our toilet, transforming it from an antiquated porcelain crapper to a 21st-century joy ride.
Setup is a cinch, requiring little more than a screwdriver, a wrench and a facile understanding of plumbing. (For an RFT instructional video on Spaloo installation, click here.)
Santhuff likes to say that the product's heated seat , especially in the winter months , is well worth Spaloo's price tag.
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With no need for toilet paper, we asked Santhuff if Spaloo eliminates the need for post-bathroom hand cleansing. His response: "It depends on how dirty your hands were going in." -
2. Spaloo Press Clips Inset
www.spaloo.com/bidetseat-html/ - [Cached]Published on: 11/14/2006 Last Visited: 11/14/2006
Spaloo Press Contact: Bruce R. Santhuff, Managing Director -
3. Spaloo Bidet Seat’s “15=Donate” Helps Wounded American Soldiers In Cooperation With Homes For Our Tr - Free-Press-Release.com
www.free-press-release.com/new - [Cached]Published on: 8/7/2006 Last Visited: 8/8/2006
Bruce R. Santhuff Product Manager Spaloo Inc., LLC Phone: 703/752-0502 FAX: 703/752-0503
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Bruce R. Santhuff Product Manager Spaloo Inc., LLC Phone: 703/752-0502 FAX: 703/752-0503

