1960s TV Commercials - 16mm Black & White + Color
Вставка
- Опубліковано 8 вер 2024
- Advertisement Reel from the 1960's, featuring mostly B&W ads with a few in color towards the end of the reel. Digitized from the CTM Vault.
Voice Actors:
Norman Rose for Cover Girl makeup
Stan Sawyer for Salem Cigarettes
Jackson Beck for Chesterfield Cigarettes
Bob Lemond for Dial Soap & Johnson's Wax
Alexander Scourby for Kaiser Foil
(VO Actor info courtesy of armorybrunotjr.3204, fromthesidelines)
The footage contained in this video has been digitized and uploaded in an attempt to preserve it and present it to modern audiences, and may be removed upon request.
Great trip down memory lane. Thanks
MEMORIES,MEMORIES,MEMORIES=LOVE IT❤️❤️
I remember the Gulden's mustard commercial. Crazier, though: I remember having an SSP car!
Thanks for the beautiful trip down memory lane💜!💯💙👍!
Excellent quality video! Thanks for the memories. 🤠🧑🦰🌲🌲 🎼
Thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed it!
Voiceovers of interest-Norman Rose speaks for Cover Girl makeup. Stan Sawyer speaks for Salem Cigarettes. Jackson Beck speaks for Chesterfield Kings.
Thanks so much for the info- I'll be sure to add this to the description!
Bob Lemond speaks for Dial.
6:22- Alexander Scourby speaks for Kaiser Foil.
@@fromthesidelinesBob Lemond also did the intro for the classic ABC-TV sitcom "Leave it to Beaver" from 1960 until 1963.
I love this. Brings me back
3:19- "Aren't you glad YOU use Dial? {don't you wish *everybody* did?}"
Dial soap is now a product of Henkel, a German chemical company.
Burt Convey dancing?
It isn't him.
Nice to see you again, Barry!😀
These look beautiful! A great compilation.
There are two commercials I remember from the 60s I’ve looked for a long time.
First was a McCulloch or Homelite commercial. They had a three foot bar on a chainsaw and cut a large overhanging rock and it dropped off in a canyon.
The second was an air filter ad showing engines running. The engines would get larger and more radical. Then a guy sat a board over the air intake over long stack hilburn style injection tubes and the motor shut off. Then the narrator said no engine runs without air or something like that.
Would give anything to see those again!
9:25- "'THE UNTOUCHABLES'! Brought to you by.........."
“Air softened “.. not filtered. My dad’s brand. He was old fashioned, even in the 1960s. Cool kids liked Lucky Strike or Camels.
I might use Kaiser quilting foil as a bedspread.
Ha! It certainly looks like it might be more comfy than standard foil...
Wonderful ...
Quilted foil huh? Some of that old stuff seemed better.
Sadly, the only thing remaining with the Kaiser name is the Kaiser Permanente hospital & Clinic in Los Angeles. 🏥
@@luisreyes1963and they were a better company when they sold tin foil
I remember them well.
I think.the little girl with the Ponytail at the Aluminum.Siding was Dorine Peters on My Three Sons and Debbie in the movie The Days Of Wine And Roses.
Whoever keeps a dog and has served that dog Cycle 3, aka Cycle Lite, Dog Food has Armour Dash Dog Food to thank for forerunning that lower-calorie brand of dog food.
Remember when commercials tried to get us to buy more beer and cigarettes. Now they want us to ask our doctor if Noxipril is right for us and that we need more car insurance.
It was definitely a 'simpler time'... Part of the appeal for someone like me (I'm in my late 20's, so these ads are much older than I am) is how refreshingly simple and upfront the marketing was!
It’s Bert Convy dancing in the Dial commercial at 5:30!
Wow, all those cigarette commercials, making smoking a delightful experience. I forget how smoking was so prevalent in our society back then.
The implication was that filters made cigarettes safe. They also use terms like "smooth", "mild", "cool", "air softened" to minimize the risk.
My mother who passed away in February used Covergirl Makeup until she stopped using makeup.
What was supposed to had been air Puffed cigarettes? I guess the people who smoked these are all now dead or suffering from Emphysema or COPD.
No filters either. But That doesn't help anyway.
I liked Dentyne gum. I always liked Cinnamon flavored gum. The gum they make now has artificial sweeteners. Nutra Sweet and phenol something. It makes me sick. I don't think they have Dentyne anymore. I used to chew Big Red until they ruined it.
The color ones are circa 1973-74.
Thanks for the insight, i'll update the description!
Women looked so much better then, or is it my imagination ?
No people did not have all the plastic surgery and were not obese
Dial had AT7, a trade name for hexachloraphene. Eventually it was taken off the market due to various safety concerns, although it wasn't all at once, and the concerns do not appear to be as clear and striking as for a lot of other things.
Did they say that Dash dog food was made by Cover Girl, or was that just a stranded modifier?
I never knew Willys is pronounced "willis". I always pronounced it " willies"
Is that Farrah Fawcett in the Noxema commercial?
Although reminders of a bygone time, this shows the primitive nature of the ad industry. Now we're more subliminally manipulated.
Some pretty girls in this video!
The film projector sound effect in the background is distracting. TV commercials didn't have that sound.
Ah yes, I apologize for that. When I made this initial recording, I was still figuring out my setup/working out the best way to capture the audio on these films and wasn't using a Line-Out at the time. Should be much better in future uploads!
Some These look more like late 50s than 60s
I thought so too. The repetitiveness reminds me of radio commercials, when they had to hammer away at slogans because there were no visuals. In the early '50s, TV was radio with pictures.
The era when chemicals and consumerism were taking over every area of life.
Also the era when half the commercials were for cigarettes.:-)
@@richardranke3158It's the only way you could breathe fresh air
Back when mem were men and women were women.
And gays were standing by to direct traffic?
Every commercial is completely safe and caucasion.
Now they are all black, shame on those advertisers selling their clients products
It's "caucasian".
If you're going to insult an entire race, at least try to spell it correctly.
Adverts really always were bs and still are . What nonsense they spout.