Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Tareyton magazine advertisement from 1980. The new Light version showed the models wearing white makeup instead of black. The advertising campaign fuelled sales robust enough to put Tareyton sales in the Top 10 American cigarette brands in the mid to late 1960s. [6] The brand declined to thirteenth place when the slogan waned in 1979.
Tareyton began as a variation of Herbert Tareyton cork-tipped non-filter cigarettes (whose slogan was, "There's something about them you'll like"). [5] As filters gained in popularity in the late 1950s, Tareyton was created in 1954 as the filtered version of Herbert Tareyton, minus the cork tip.
One of the most famous television jingles of the era came from an advertisement for Winston cigarettes. The slogan "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should!" proved to be catchy. Another popular slogan from the 1960s was "Us Tareyton smokers would rather fight than switch!", which was used to advertise Tareyton cigarettes.
By Glenn Albin Cigarettes kill? A Florida jury thought so and has just awarded a widow of a lung cancer victim $24 billion in damages. Lawyers argued that R.J. Reynolds was negligent in informing ...
Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act; Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act; D. Death in the West; E. ... Us Tareyton smokers would rather fight than switch! W.
Bloomington woman hopes to find a home for collection of Ford car and truck advertising dating back to 1931 that she found at a Goodwill outlet.
1958 advertisement for L&M cigarettes, promoting the brand's "exclusive filtering action". The tar derby is the period in the 1950s marked by a rapid influx in both cigarette advertising focused on tar content measurements to differentiate cigarettes and brand introduction or repositioning focusing on filter technology.
An ad that depicts just that: the head of a pug, the body of a monkey and the legs of a human baby. The trio mashup offers a joke within a joke. A puppy baby monkey is funny in and of itself, but ...