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In the new advertisements, men and women appeared with "white eyes", and the slogan was adjusted to "Us Tareyton smokers would rather light than fight!" The two slogans would be used to sell the two separate variations until 1981, when market value declined. [citation needed] This slogan was the final one used for the Tareyton brand.
slogan that made its way from Wendy's commercials to Fritz Mondale's lips. Similarly, the term "Breakfast of Champions," while a great message for Wheaties, was also a wonderfully surreal title ...
The 100 Greatest TV Ads is a British TV entertainment programme that first aired on 29 April 2000 on Channel 4. It is part of the channel's 100 Greatest strand of programmes, and was presented by Graham Norton .
The setting of a theatre was a somewhat incongruous one—at the time of shooting, Welles had neither acted in nor directed any plays for 18 years. Annarino remembers filming the commercial: The second commercial had Orson seated at a makeup table in his dressing room wearing a large caftan. Underneath the caftan he wore his big black jacket.
Must See TV was an American advertising slogan that was used by NBC to brand its primetime blocks during the 1990s, and most often applied to the network's Thursday night lineup, which featured some of its most popular sitcoms and drama series of the period, allowing the network to dominate prime time ratings on Thursday nights in the 1980s and 1990s.
Tide's 'It's a Tide Ad' walks viewers through iconic TV commercials and tropes, rebranding them as Tide ads. ... Catch!" It harked back to Coca-Cola's slogan at the time, "Have a Coke and a Smile ...
After a few months, the regular "Love in the Afternoon" commercials resumed. As the long-running campaign saw retirement in 1985, the network initially transitioned to a more modern replacement series of commercials using the slogan "Love it!", which coincided with ABC's 1985-86 network campaign You'll Love It .
Over a period of twenty years beginning in 1956, Swayze became widely known as the commercial spokesman for Timex watches, and for the slogan "It takes a licking and keeps on ticking." In one of these commercials, performed live, he strapped the watch to the propeller blades of an outboard motor, lowered it into a tank of water and ran the ...