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How one carrot peeler revolutionized design | The Curb Cut Effect

Season 37 Episode 2 | 6m 18s

Did you know that many of the household products we use every day were originally designed by or for people with disabilities? Take OXO's Good Grips vegetable peeler, for example, designed by Sam and Betsey Farber so that Betsey, who had arthritis, could cook without pain.

Corporate sponsorship for American Experience is provided by and . Major funding by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
Extras
The story of Edwin Land, whose iconic Polaroid camera let everyone instantly chronicle their lives.
EAD Many household products were originally designed by or for people with disabilities.
ASL Many household products were originally designed by or for people with disabilities.
EAD The fight for closed captioning was a battle for access and inclusion.
ASL The fight for closed captioning was a battle for access and inclusion.
The fight for closed captioning was a battle for access and inclusion.
EAD Curb cuts—those small ramps at the edge of sidewalks—were not always a given.
ASL Curb cuts—those small ramps at the edge of sidewalks—were not always a given.
Curb cuts—those small ramps at the edge of sidewalks—are now a standard part of city design, but the
EXTENDED AUDIO DESCRIPTION A preview of Change, Not Charity: The Americans with Disabilities Act.