Category:
Advertising

Clysmic Water

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image

Source of B&W image (in back page advert section).

If this ad were selling bottled elk urine, I'd buy the stuff. Luckily, the product actually sounded beneficial.

image

Source of text.

Posted By: Paul - Fri Aug 15, 2014 - Comments (10)
Category: Art, Business, Advertising, Products, Health, Regionalism, 1900s

Logotastic

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Dirty Bird Fried Chicken has a strangely familiar looking logo. I can't place what it reminds me of...
NSFW at link.

Posted By: Alex - Wed Aug 13, 2014 - Comments (8)
Category: Advertising

Follies of the Madmen #226

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Clunkiest metaphor ever. Garment causing deadly vision obstruction that will be shredded by fanbelt = engine protection.

Original ad here.

Posted By: Paul - Sat Aug 02, 2014 - Comments (7)
Category: Business, Advertising, Products, Motor Vehicles, 1960s

Japanese Schoolgirl Parkour



Already showing five million+ views--but maybe as new to you as it was to me?

Posted By: Paul - Thu Jul 31, 2014 - Comments (5)
Category: Daredevils, Stuntpeople and Thrillseekers, Advertising, Teenagers, Asia, Natural Wonders

Avoid the Noid

During the 1980s, Domino's Pizza ran a series of ads featuring "The Noid" -- an annoying creature that ruined pizzas intended for delivery. By ordering pizza from Domino's you could supposedly "Avoid the Noid."

The ads were very successful, but were abruptly cancelled in January 1989 when a man named Kenneth Lamar Noid "wielding a .357 magnum revolver stormed into a Domino’s in Atlanta, Georgia and took two employees hostage" for five hours.

Mr. Noid's problem with Domino's was that he believed their ads "specifically made fun of him."

Mr. Noid was found innocent by reason of insanity, but that was the end of Domino's Noid campaign.

You can read the full story at priceonomics.com.



Posted By: Alex - Mon Jul 28, 2014 - Comments (19)
Category: Advertising, 1980s

Follies of the Madmen #225



Who ever knew that Snap, Crackle & Pop had villainous counterparts in Soggy, Mushy & Toughy?

Posted By: Paul - Sat Jul 26, 2014 - Comments (6)
Category: Business, Advertising, Products, Food, 1930s

Follies of the Madmen #224



All the fake employee singing in the world could not save the Robert Hall chain from bankruptcy a mere 4 years after this commercial aired.

Posted By: Paul - Mon Jul 21, 2014 - Comments (4)
Category: Business, Advertising, Retailing, Music, 1970s

Speer’s Sambuci Wine

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What is this miraculous "sambuci wine?" I'm glad you asked.

Preparation.—Take of elder bark, parsley root, each, in coarse powder, 1 ounce; sherry wine, 1 pint, or a sufficient quantity. Form into a medicated wine by maceration or percolation, as explained under Vina Medicata, and make one pint of the preparation.

Action, Medical Uses, and Dosage.—Wine of elder is useful in dropsical diseases, especially ascites, and dropsy supervening upon scarlatina or other exanthematous diseases. Dose, 2 fluid ounces, 3 or 4 times a day.


Original ad here.

Posted By: Paul - Thu Jul 10, 2014 - Comments (23)
Category: Advertising, Natural Wonders, Nineteenth Century, Alcohol

Follies of the Madmen #223

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Those crossbars replicate the excruciating pain of the infamous parental sofabed from Seinfeld.

Original ad here.

Posted By: Paul - Wed Jul 09, 2014 - Comments (9)
Category: Business, Advertising, Products, Appliances, 1960s

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Who We Are
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.

Paul Di Filippo
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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