Category:
Advertising

Sheaffer Pen accurately predicted the future

In 1963 and 1964, Sheaffer Pen ran an ad campaign in which they made a variety of predictions about future technologies of the 21st century. The company contrasted these technologies, which must have seemed a bit pie-in-the-sky at the time, with the timeless performance of a Sheaffer pen. The surprising thing is that all their predictions have come true: instant mail delivery, checkbooks that balance themselves electronically, portable visual phones, ring tape recorders, camera sunglasses, credit card rings, electronic translators.

They don't all exist in the specific form that Sheaffer imagined (credit card rings?), but in each case the equivalent or better exists.









Newsweek - Sep 23, 1963

Posted By: Alex - Sun Jan 21, 2024 - Comments (4)
Category: Technology, Advertising, 1960s, Yesterday’s Tomorrows

Vintage Advertising Cars

Yes, we will always have the Wienermobile.

And a few other similar vehicles.

But on the whole, we are sadly lacking nowadays in novelty vehicles to brighten our lives.









Posted By: Paul - Mon Jan 15, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Motor Vehicles, Advertising, Twentieth Century

Squash Your Wife

Similar ads from the 60s and 70s: "Electrify your wife," "Recipe for boiled wife," and "Beat your wife tonight... at bowling."

Clearly this was a theme that appealed to ad execs of that time.

New York Magazine - Mar 7, 1977

Posted By: Alex - Fri Jan 12, 2024 - Comments (1)
Category: Advertising, Wives, 1970s

Follies of the Madmen #585

How to sell that newfangled gadget, the television? If you're RCA, you just make a special Xmas song!

The singer's Wikipedia page.

Posted By: Paul - Mon Jan 08, 2024 - Comments (0)
Category: Holidays, Music, Television, Deceit, Trickery, Subterfuge and General Slyness, Advertising

Miss National Car Care Queen

As far as I can tell, the selection of a "Miss National Car Care Queen" was a one-off event, not repeated in subsequent years.

But it managed to attract the attention of George Kirstein, owner of The Nation magazine, who included it in a story he wrote titled "The Day the Ads Stopped" (pdf), published in The Nation in June 1964. The story imagined a future America in which all advertising had been banned and as a result:

One could no longer discover from reading the Times, or any other paper, who had been named Miss National Car Care Queen or who had won the Miss Rheingold contest.

New York Daily News - May 11, 1964

Posted By: Alex - Thu Jan 04, 2024 - Comments (1)
Category: Awards, Prizes, Competitions and Contests, Advertising, 1960s, Cars

Anthropomorphic Fels-Naptha Ads

Fels-Naptha Soap really went big on the living clothing and living soap box concept.







Posted By: Paul - Sun Dec 31, 2023 - Comments (1)
Category: Anthropomorphism, Domestic, Hygiene, Advertising, Twentieth Century

Follies of the Madmen #584



Posted By: Paul - Tue Dec 26, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Hygiene, Advertising, Myths and Fairytales, 1970s

People Leave Ann Alone

Ladies Home Journal - May 1970

Posted By: Alex - Wed Dec 13, 2023 - Comments (2)
Category: Advertising, 1970s

Follies of the Madmen #583

In 1969, everything had to relate to drugs.

Source.

Posted By: Paul - Tue Dec 05, 2023 - Comments (0)
Category: Drugs, Food, Advertising, 1960s

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Alex Boese
Alex is the creator and curator of the Museum of Hoaxes. He's also the author of various weird, non-fiction, science-themed books such as Elephants on Acid and Psychedelic Apes.

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Paul has been paid to put weird ideas into fictional form for over thirty years, in his career as a noted science fiction writer. He has recently begun blogging on many curious topics with three fellow writers at The Inferior 4+1.

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