Nationwide — After complaining about spending hours in the hairdresser’s chair on Crenshaw Blvd in South Central Los Angeles, former English teacher and inventor David “DC” Holland was challenged by a hairdresser to invent something. Gladly, he took the challenge and invented the Twisternator, an innovative electronic comb-twist maker that can be used to easily make comb-twists and other styles that depend on rotary manipulation of hair.
Interested customers can visit the web site at Twisternator.com, watch the 90-second video, and sign up to be notified. Afterward, they will receive early-bird Kickstarter deals like free shipping, first production batch delivery, etc.
The company is hoping to attract 25,000 to 50,000 buyers, and each purchase will earn customers VIP discounts on future products. Holland comments, “We all know many concepts are often ham-stringed by a lack of funds, but by recycling profits from a small project into bigger ones, we hope to write a different story.”
The profits will be recycled into other technologies that include (1) protection during police encounters; (2) hardware, software, and app suite to help low-income teens make $30,000 – $75,000 per year and pay for their college tuition; and (3) software to assist and encourage young black writers, and filmmakers to go from writing to publishing, and from script to screen.
Each purchase would enable the founder to continue educating at-risk youth and young adults despite not having physical classrooms because of the pandemic. Holland comments, “We will be going live on Kickstarter on March 1st, 2021, so, please sign up now at Twisternator.com.”
About the inventor
David “DC” Holland is an inventor, a writer, and a former high school English teacher. Orphaned at 13, he was homeless a handful of times. Most notably, he slept in office buildings on campus while attending graduate school on a scholarship, and he also slept in a beat-up 1998 Corolla while he wrote the soon-to-be-released Ninth Doctrine sci-fi series, The God Stone. With his inventions and the imminent publication of his books, DC hopes to inspire more Black children to write than he could during his classroom days, where he lost many a wonderful child writer and fellow orphan to the streets.
For press inquiries, send an email to davegoodhire@gmail.com