Alan Amron

Alan Amron (born November 20, 1948) is an American inventor who holds 40 [1][2] United States patents.

[12] Amron placed radio and newspaper advertisements asking everyone to donate a dollar, which would then be given to the Beatles to reunite for a concert.

Also known as "Let It Be", Amron's committee was one of several attempts to reunite the band in the mid and late 1970s, but it had the distinction of being a people-based campaign.

[13] Boxer Muhammad Ali took up the initiative, hoping that the four former Beatles would agree to donate the money to children in need around the world.

His attorney, Spiros Anthony, said that Amron and New York businessman Joel Sacher had been the "catalysts" for Ali's involvement.

[1] However, in 2016, he launched a further suit against 3M,[1][17] suing them in federal court in Fort Lauderdale, asserting that 3M were wrongly claiming to be the inventors,[18] and seeking $400 million in damages.

"[25][26][27] In 1983, Alan Amron partnered with Herb Lande, Hollywood producers Jerry Weintraub and Robert Finkelstein to start a condominium luxury airline, with two flights a day to and from New York and Los Angeles.

As reported by the New York Post archives on September 29, 1983, Tina Sinatra designed the interior of the planes.