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School children are enthusiastically participating in enjoyable anti-smoking and tobacco awareness activities. Through engaging in various competitions, they not only have a good time but also gain valuable knowledge about the harmful effects of tobacco on health. [ 22 ]
The Glasgow's miles better logo. Glasgow's miles better was a 1980s campaign to promote the city of Glasgow as a tourist destination and as a location for industry. It was developed by Scottish advertising agency Struthers Advertising, and featured the phrase "Glasgow's Miles Better" wrapped around the cartoon figure of Mr. Happy.
In European art of the 18th and 19th centuries, the social location of people – largely men – shown as smoking tended to vary, but the stigma attached to women who adopted the habit was reflected in some artworks. Art of the 20th century often used the cigar as a status symbol, and parodied images from tobacco advertising, especially of ...
Sinead Gorey. TV is no better. HBO’s The Idol featured plenty of scenes of its star Lily-Rose Depp, who smokes in real life, puffing seductively on various cigarettes from scene to scene ...
Some women had been smoking decades earlier, but usually in private; this 1890s satirical cartoon from Germany illustrates the notion that smoking was considered unfeminine by some in that period. "Torches of Freedom" was a phrase used to encourage women's smoking by exploiting women's aspirations for a better life during the early twentieth ...
Imposing restrictions on smartphones in schools without involving young people in the process risks their use becoming like “smoking behind the bike shed”, a top paediatrician has warned.
In the famous campaign, people from all walks of life showed off black eyes to demonstrate their willingness to "fight" instead of "switch" from the Tareyton brand. " Us Tareyton smokers would rather fight than switch! " is a slogan that appeared in magazine , newspaper , and television advertisements for Tareyton cigarettes from 1963 until 1981.
Reagan speaking at a "Just Say No" rally in Los Angeles, in 1987 "Just Say No" was an advertising campaign prevalent during the 1980s and early 1990s as a part of the U.S.-led war on drugs, aiming to discourage children from engaging in illegal recreational drug use by offering various ways of saying no.