Category:
Advertising

Ford:  The Going Thing

Posted By: Paul - Wed Jul 05, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Music, Advertising, 1960s, Cars

Follies of the Madmen #569

Posted By: Paul - Tue Jun 27, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Advertising, Cereal, Cartoons, 1970s

Soda Pop & the One-Way Bottles

Man, I crashed at the Soda Pop's pad back in '67!

Posted By: Paul - Tue Jun 20, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Advertising, Soda, Pop, Soft Drinks and other Non-Alcoholic Beverages, Bohemians, Beatniks, Hippies and Slackers, 1960s

Follies of the Madmen #568

Posted By: Paul - Thu Jun 15, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Stupid Criminals, Advertising, Candy, 1970s

Bevo

Perhaps Anheuser-Busch could reintroduce this beverage to bolster their flagging sales.

"Bevo" was the name of a non-alcoholic "near beer" produced by the Anheuser-Busch brewery in Saint Louis. Introduced in 1916 as the national debate over Prohibition threatened the company's welfare, the drink was extremely popular through the 1920s. Over 50 million cases were sold annually in fifty countries. Anheuser-Busch named the new drink "Bevo" as a play on the term "pivo," the Bohemian word for beer.


The Wikipedia page.

An article about a Bevo incident in Texas.

Posted By: Paul - Wed Jun 14, 2023 - Comments (6)
Category: Replacements, Substitutes, Alternatives and Knock-offs, Advertising, Twentieth Century, Alcohol

Michael Jackson’s Favorite Cereal?

Since Sugar Bear was supposed to sound like Dean Martin or Bing Crosby, this commercial could be seen symbolically as the passing of the musical baton from the Greatest Generation to the Boomers.



Posted By: Paul - Mon Jun 12, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Music, Advertising, Cereal, 1970s

How to quit your job and get married on $25 a week

The 1940s answer, according to the Forum Cafeteria in St. Louis, was to save money by eating at their restaurant. Based on the menu, it sounds like it was decent food.

I don't think you'd ever save money by eating out nowadays, unless you're ordering from the dollar menu at a fast food restaurant.

St. Louis Post Dispatch - May 1, 1941

Posted By: Alex - Wed Jun 07, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Restaurants, Advertising, Marriage, 1940s

The Hidden Meaning of the Golden Arches

Text from The Total Package: The Secret History and Hidden Meanings of Boxes, Bottles, Cans, and Other Persuasive Containers (1995) by Thomas Hine:

The pioneer in studying people's emotional response to packages was the marketing psychologist Louis Cheskin, who began his research in the 1930s. He was long associated with the Color Research Institute and he was later immortalized by Vance Packard as the most articulate and engaging of his hidden persuaders. His seminal experiment on packaging involved placing an identical product in two different packages, one identified with circles on the outside, the other with triangles. He didn't ask his subjects to say anything about the packages. He wanted to know which product they preferred and why. He found that 80 percent of his subjects preferred the product in the box with the circles over the one with the triangles. The reason they gave was that the box with the circles was a higher-quality product than the box with the triangles — even though the contents were identical.

"I had difficulty believing the results after the first 200," Cheskin wrote later, "but after 1000, I had to accept that many of the consumers transferred sensations from the circles on a carton cover ... to the contents of the container."

...

Cheskin found that a circle or an oval has the most positive association, but alone, each lacks personality. The circle or oval must somehow be inflected with some other symbolic form or identification. Thus, Tide's concentric circles are played against bold lettering, and the oval of the Amoco logo is bisected by a torch and filled with the company's name. With most packages, the rounded shape is not expressed quite so literally. But images of completeness, receptiveness, and enclosure — feminine forms — provide the underlying theme for a majority of packages. Cheskin worked with McDonald's at the time it was about to abandon arches as architectural elements of its outlets. He advised that the memory of the arches be kept in the form of the M in "McDonald's." His case was based, he said, on research that showed that "the arches had Freudian applications to the subconscious mind of the consumer and were great assets in marketing McDonald's food." In other words, Cheskin said, the arches are "mother McDonald's breasts, a useful association if you're replacing homemade food."

Posted By: Alex - Tue Jun 06, 2023 - Comments (4)
Category: Innuendo, Double Entendres, Symbolism, Nudge-Nudge-Wink-Wink and Subliminal Messages, Advertising

Follies of the Madmen #567

Posted By: Paul - Tue Jun 06, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Hygiene, Stupid Criminals, Advertising, 1970s

Hemo

This kid was seriously craving his Hemo fix.

Strange name. Makes it sound like something blood-related, rather than a chocolate milk drink.

Life - Dec 9, 1946

Posted By: Alex - Fri Jun 02, 2023 - Comments (2)
Category: Food, Advertising, 1940s

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