You’d be surprised how much junk email you get as an editor in the form of pitches from PR agencies that aren’t remotely relevant to your vertical. I mean, I get that some CRM is mechanically and automatically attaching my name to an email, and no sane publicist is actively thinking that I, the “watch guy,” am simply desperate to review a new vacuum cleaner, dog collar or spermicidal gel, but sadly, I made up exactly zero percent of those scenarios.
One slightly left-of-center pitch I did receive recently, however, made me pause — it was for an alarm clock. Now, I haven’t used an alarm clock since high school — my phone is simply much too convenient, and portable — but I love the idea of one: Something analog and well designed that gently awakens me from a deep, editorially-induced slumber, but tastefully, and without the brash ZINGGGGGGGGG that’s invariably part of the Foley in films from the 1940s. Something Dieter Rams drew up on a piece of graph paper while sitting on a marble toilet during the Cold War. You know what I mean.

Oneclock Analog Waking Clock
It’s called the OneClock — God only knows why there would be multiple — and it’s described by its designers (or overworked copywriter) as “a minimalist analog timepiece with waking music based in science, designed for a disconnected bedroom.” Now, I don’t have time for science and my bedroom is most definitely not disconnected — I’m pretty sure that if the Mossad wanted to know everything that goes on in here they could simply flip a switch and download it all, given all the electronics present in my apartment — but again, I love the idea, the philosophy of analog.
Then, I saw that OneClock’s music was composed by Grammy Award-winning multi-instrumentalist Jon Natchez. Jon plays the bari sax….I played the bari sax. (I haven’t touched one since some kid roped me into a session at Berklee in which they needed a dude to hold down the low-end during “Chameleon,” but that’s a story for another day.) TL;DR — I decided this was the alarm clock for me. I had to try it. It was speaking to my philosophy.
The OneClock comes in three colors (white, black or red) — the black one showed up at my door. The dial on the clock is the same in all three versions (black), whilst the front of the clock is cut from a piece of oak. It’s a handsome, Braun-looking object, though if I’m being nitpicky — and I’m going to be nitpicky, because I’m in a mood right now — I’d say that Oneclock needs to be more careful about the oak panel: It’s fine to have someone use a hole saw to cut these things out by hand, but then you have to sand the edges down, or you risk shipping a product that looks like a high school Arduino experiment. (I almost got a splinter!)
