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June 2, 2007 12:20 PM PDT

Barry Sonnenfeld never knows what time it is

by Rafe Needleman

At D5, I sat next to Barry Sonnenfeld during the George Lucas session. You may know Sonnenfeld as the director of Men in Black and Get Shorty, but he's also a gadget fiend, and writes a tech column for Esquire magazine. It was cool to sit next to a famous Hollywood guy and talk about Thinkpads.

One for function, one for form.

(Credit: Rafe Needleman / CNET)

I couldn't help noticing the man was wearing two watches. He explained why. He's a watch nut, he said, and on his left wrist, he wears his watch of the moment. At D5 he was sporting a gigantic Swiss windup (sorry, I didn't get the type). On his right, a Breitling Professional Emergency. It has a built-in emergency location transmitter to help rescue crews find the wearer after an aviation disaster.

Sonnenfeld had such a disaster. In 1999, he was the sole passenger in a G-II jet that plowed into a series of cars following an emergency landing. (It ran out of fuel, he told me.) After the plane came to a rest, the pilots ran out. Sonnenfeld, shaken but uninjured, stayed in the plane awaiting rescue or instructions. Looking out the window, he saw gasoline from a wrecked car flowing toward the damaged plane he was sitting in. At that point, he wisely decided to jump out. Shortly thereafter, he bought himself the emergency watch. And canceled his contract with the charter company he'd been using up till then.

He told me that Brian Williams of NBC is also a two-wrist watch wearer. Understandable: Williams reports from global trouble spots, such as Iraq.

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
Two Watches Can Make Sense
by C. Alexander Brown June 4, 2007 7:25 PM PDT
I am a two watch person, and find it useful, for I need to know the time in Berlin AND the time in Toronto, and I keep forgetting if it's a five or six hour differential. I wear Citizen solar powered watches, which means never having to worry about winding nor about battries, as a little time exposed to sunlight or even to my desk lamp in normal wear, gives enough juice for days to the storage batteries. Barry Sonnenfeld's Breitling Emergency watch with its safety beacon is a very good idea; I'll get one when they make them solar powered...!!
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