it's amazing how many products don't exist anymore. I remember old spice was my dad's favorite. I was a child all through the the 1960s. I was 5 years old to 14. my childhood was the only time in my life I was happy.
Old Spice is still available and they have a whole new range of ads to appeal to newer generations as well as a larger variety of products for various bathroom uses. I never was a fan of the scent but I know how many people loved it.
My father used "Old Spice" (I never did, myself) But My SON does TODAY! It's very much still around, And with many more products with the scent. My Grandfather used Barbasol shave cream in the 1920s. I use it today. Many old products are very much STILL around!
The dark-haired gossipy lady in the Faultless spray starch commercial is Rosemary Elliot. She was in lots of TV shows and commercials during the '60s. The voiceover guy in that ad is Dick Tufeld, the voice of the robot on Lost in Space, as well as a voiceover announcer in TV commercials from the '50s to the 'early '80s.
My dad had a projector that was a big one. You had to turn off the lights. He also had the projector screen.We watches videos of our families and cartoons. It was a treat for us.
@@juliemnm8273 That was supposed to say Diet instead of extra. I might have did it on my phone and it auto corrected. The comment was more about the Aspartame/Aluminum/BPA liners. That shit will mess you up like it did to them.
General Mills introduced the "Pick-A-Pack" assortment in 1956. It was replaced by their "Goodness Pack" package [with individual boxes instead of bags] in 1962.
Anyone remember the Soda Burst and if it was any good? I wasn’t even close to being born yet, my mom was a baby in the 60’s but I’m fascinated by the commercials
No memory of it whatsoever, which makes me think it might not have been available all over the country. If I'd seen a commercial like this one I know I would've wanted to try it. That it disappeared without a trace - and that they had to lower the price - implies that it failed within a fairly short time.
That sodaburst actually looked good even in black and white. That looks convenient. I’m sure they make something similar I’d like to have a root beer float by just pouring water over the ice cream.
I don't understand the ice cream today with cookie crumbs. I'll never get that kind, they never had them in the 60s. Of course they did have neapolitan ...
I love how we can look back with our contemporary sentiments and apply them to another situation, where they probably didn't even fit, like that commercial. It was a cute commercial that didn't mean anything.
Beth in that first Old Spice ad looked like former Playboy Playmate Dianne Chandler. She would have been in the magazine right around the time that commercial aired.
General Foods'Birds Eye division introduced "Sodaburst" in 1963- and then expanded the flavors from two to four........and they really didn't sell that well. Hence, "new lower prices" in 1965....and sales *still* weren't up to expectations. It was quietly discontinued in 1966.
@@juliemnm8273 I can't say when the ad came out, BUT as a camera collector, I assure you that Kodak still used the name "Brownie" on their lower priced cameras into the mid 1960s. The Brownie "Starmite" mentioned in the ad was from no earlier than mid 1960, and was made until 1965. So this HAS to be at earliest a 1960 ad. There was also the 1964 World's Fair Brownie (#312 Flash) for example. In other markets where Kodak used the "Brownie" brand into the 1980s.
The "Starmite" used Kodak #127 film (larger than 35mm!), And it was a flash camera (could be used without "bright sunlight", the flash could be used as a fill light.) Yeah, it WAS a cheap camera, not a "world beating", not to mention fixed focus lens. BUT it was capable of very good photos if used correctly. It's a 4ft to infinity camera, a "box camera" to be sure, But friggin' Ansel Adams shot stunning photos with a Kodak "vest pocket" camera that was TECHNICALLY not as good as the "Starmite". It's not "gear" it's skill. Source: Camera collector, Used many "good" and "cheap" cameras! Pentax K-1000 to current Nikon D-850 as well as many different Kodak "Brownies" and "Instamatics"! LOL.
@@jamesslick4790 During the 60's my family had a Kodak Dualflex 2 camera. The film for that camera was as big as 1980's medium format film. At the time I didn't appreciate the capabilities of film that large. The slides from the "Starmite" look big. How do you show them? I just noticed that a news photographer in "Fallout" on Amazon Prime is using a Mamiya RB67 despite the 50's era setting.
@@jamesslick4790 l am 67. No spring chicken. I remember the variety packs of cereal where you could open up the little boxes on the side and use the box as your cereal bowl.
Fun Fact: LSD was LEGAL until 1968. This ALONE explains the 1960 Timex commercial. 🤔😮☠ And I'm not one who is particularly "disturbed" by mimes (or clowns). But this IS a nightmare fuel of an ad, 4 sure!
All the cereal companies marketed brands with freeze-dried fruit...the problem was by the time the fruit was hydrated enough to eat, the cereal was soggy.
Lots of ads ran for years, There's a chance that a 1956-7 ad would still run in 1960-61. Hell, in Pittsburgh there's a local chain restaurant (Eat 'N Park) that has been running the same Christmas time ad since....1982! (Reputed to be one of the longest running TV ads in US history!)
Anyone ever had the Jets cereal that was featured in the cereal pack commercial? I wasn't born during this era, and curious as what the Jets cereal was and if it was good.
These 'vintage-commercials' would sound better if you used the Limiter on your Audio-Mixer. Many sources means a mish-mash of volume-levels, which change in each spot. A limiter would help keep things at an even and more balanced volume-level.
The Pick a Pack cereals were by General Mills. They may not have been available in all areas. As for your other comment, Toast'ems were just a knockoff of Pop Tarts.
@@ernestcruz6316 The Snack Packs pudding in tins, in the 1960s - I had to be careful not to cut my finger on them. Those little boxes of animals cookies ; in the 1960s they cost only 5 cents each!
There's a chance that "Brim" was test-marketed in the late 1960s in selected areas before "going national". I was enjoying "Reese's Pieces" for a HALF DECADE before "E.T." put them on the map. But then again I'm from Pennsylvania. I do remember my mother drinking "Brim" in the VERY early 70s ('71,'72) I was 9 or 10 and used to make it for her, She liked it better than "Sanka". "Brim" is still a brand, but now sold as "low acid", rather than just decaf.
Can't wait to go purchase these
it's amazing how many products don't exist anymore. I remember old spice was my dad's favorite. I was a child all through the the 1960s. I was 5 years old to 14. my childhood was the only time in my life I was happy.
So it doesn’t get better ?):
There are now drugs for your unhappiness!
Old Spice is still available.
Old Spice is still available and they have a whole new range of ads to appeal to newer generations as well as a larger variety of products for various bathroom uses. I never was a fan of the scent but I know how many people loved it.
My father used "Old Spice" (I never did, myself) But My SON does TODAY! It's very much still around, And with many more products with the scent. My Grandfather used Barbasol shave cream in the 1920s. I use it today. Many old products are very much STILL around!
The IBM "Selectric" was a GAME CHANGER! Before this machine, A printing press was the only way do make documents THAT crisp!
The dark-haired gossipy lady in the Faultless spray starch commercial is Rosemary Elliot. She was in lots of TV shows and commercials during the '60s. The voiceover guy in that ad is Dick Tufeld, the voice of the robot on Lost in Space, as well as a voiceover announcer in TV commercials from the '50s to the 'early '80s.
Almost 63. I remember many of these
My dad had a projector that was a big one. You had to turn off the lights. He also had the projector screen.We watches videos of our families and cartoons. It was a treat for us.
My grandparents on both sides keep extra Coke in the garage. That commercial would have been on when they were raising my parents.
Back then Coke was safe to drink...made with real ingredients, real cane sugar now they replaced it with Corn syrup for the last 40 yrs...
@@juliemnm8273 That was supposed to say Diet instead of extra. I might have did it on my phone and it auto corrected. The comment was more about the Aspartame/Aluminum/BPA liners. That shit will mess you up like it did to them.
Don Adams as a Texaco dealer? That was a new one to me.
Jack Benny did ads for Texaco too.
When Texaco sponsored his 1968-'69 NBC specials.
I wish they still had the'Pick A Pack' package.
General Mills introduced the "Pick-A-Pack" assortment in 1956. It was replaced by their "Goodness Pack" package [with individual boxes instead of bags] in 1962.
Man, having to start shaving with a blade was a real learning experience. You made sure you were careful wielding that razor!
Fill it to the Brim with Rim !
The voiceover sounds like Roger Davis.
I bought Brim only once, and NO, it doesn't taste right - even when you add sugar to it.
@@JoanSmith-t7k Well does ANY decaf coffee taste RIGHT? LOL.
Anyone remember the Soda Burst and if it was any good? I wasn’t even close to being born yet, my mom was a baby in the 60’s but I’m fascinated by the commercials
No memory of it whatsoever, which makes me think it might not have been available all over the country. If I'd seen a commercial like this one I know I would've wanted to try it. That it disappeared without a trace - and that they had to lower the price - implies that it failed within a fairly short time.
@@hebnehThat Soda Burst commercial HAD TO be from
another galaxy ( no other explanation) ...
@@hebnehDo you remember my Puffa Puffa Rice cereal in
1969? About 2 years later I never saw it again ...😢
@@JoanSmith-t7k I don't remember how many years Puffa Puffa Rice was sold for, but yes, I do remember the commercials during the '60s.
It was a real short time back in the 60s. managed to try the chocolate. Not bad but not like the real thing.
These commercials give me ASMR vibes
That sodaburst actually looked good even in black and white. That looks convenient. I’m sure they make something similar I’d like to have a root beer float by just pouring water over the ice cream.
IBM typewriters had balls.
Ah yes love the ice cream flavor black and white. Separate but equal sugar
I don't understand the ice cream today with cookie crumbs. I'll never get that kind, they never had them in the 60s. Of course they did have neapolitan ...
I love how we can look back with our contemporary sentiments and apply them to another situation, where they probably didn't even fit, like that commercial. It was a cute commercial that didn't mean anything.
That's Bo Swenson as Tex in that Charmin commercial.
Fun Fact: LSD was LEGAL until 1968. This ALONE explains the 1960 Timex commercial.
Beth in that first Old Spice ad looked like former Playboy Playmate Dianne Chandler. She would have been in the magazine right around the time that commercial aired.
Old Spice doesn't smell the same anymore. My dad used it in the 1950s. Smelled much better then.
At 1:42 that is the distinqished Carl Grayson, later at WGN Chicago , doing the Kodak pitch during an Ozzie and Harriet TV show .
He originally sang with the immortal spike ones Dr Dementoids,
Spike Jones.
Remember, always have a whole ham 🐷and a turkey 🦃in the fridge in case unexpected company shows up!
I use hollow plastic ones. Filled with water. Cheap source of cold water AND impresses the neighbors! LOL
Yeah. No texting to see about visiting .. we always had a canned ham on standby..
In the 1960s, never heard of soda burst - is that from another planet? 😮 I always wanted my Fizzies ... including
the root beer kind ! 😊
General Foods'Birds Eye division introduced "Sodaburst" in 1963- and then expanded the flavors from two to four........and they really didn't sell that well. Hence, "new lower prices" in 1965....and sales *still* weren't up to expectations. It was quietly discontinued in 1966.
I dabbled in Fizzies too.
Brilliant...
17:48 "Canada Dry Ginger Ale: So Good It Hurts." WTF?
TIMEX commercials were the best!!!
Drugs were involved. LSD was legal until 1968!
Timex made many commercials.
A few of these commercials are actually from the 1950s, not the '60s: Kodak movie projector, Ballentine's Ale, and Old Spice Smooth Shave.
Not to mention Harriet Nelson talking about Kodak Brownie camera.
@@juliemnm8273 I can't say when the ad came out, BUT as a camera collector, I assure you that Kodak still used the name "Brownie" on their lower priced cameras into the mid 1960s. The Brownie "Starmite" mentioned in the ad was from no earlier than mid 1960, and was made until 1965. So this HAS to be at earliest a 1960 ad. There was also the
1964 World's Fair Brownie (#312 Flash) for example. In other markets where Kodak used the "Brownie" brand into the 1980s.
The 1957 Ballantine Ale commercial was produced by Joop Geesink's "Dollywood" stop-motion animation studio in the Netherlands.
I love that camera at 13:00. Or course half of the pictures you took with a cheap camera like that turned out bad. It only worked in bright sunlight.
The "Starmite" used Kodak #127 film (larger than 35mm!), And it was a flash camera (could be used without "bright sunlight", the flash could be used as a fill light.) Yeah, it WAS a cheap camera, not a "world beating", not to mention fixed focus lens. BUT it was capable of very good photos if used correctly. It's a 4ft to infinity camera, a "box camera" to be sure, But friggin' Ansel Adams shot stunning photos with a Kodak "vest pocket" camera that was TECHNICALLY not as good as the "Starmite". It's not "gear" it's skill. Source: Camera collector, Used many "good" and "cheap" cameras! Pentax K-1000 to current Nikon D-850 as well as many different Kodak "Brownies" and "Instamatics"! LOL.
@@jamesslick4790 During the 60's my family had a Kodak Dualflex 2 camera. The film for that camera was as big as 1980's medium format film. At the time I didn't appreciate the capabilities of film that large. The slides from the "Starmite" look big. How do you show them? I just noticed that a news photographer in "Fallout" on Amazon Prime is using a Mamiya RB67 despite the 50's era setting.
I loved the Selectric
Yes, It was the Pinnacle of typewriter design! Perfect keyboard feel, perfect print! The BEST series of typewriters EVER made!
I don't remember Pick A Pack cereal in bags.
I do. But I'm OLD, LOL.
@@jamesslick4790 l am 67. No spring chicken. I remember the variety packs of cereal where you could open up the little boxes on the side and use the box as your cereal bowl.
Wait!
Some products actually lowered their prices ?
That's unheard of nowadays.
In the 1960s, you would've seen many brand cereals at 79 cents each, that was their full price. Except for Kellogg's Corn Flakes, that was 59 cents.
And it’s $5.00 now
9:59 the guy in the Old Spice commercial, looks like Paul Rudd ❤
I wonder if somebody told Anita Bryant about the Brothers Four.
🤔😮🤣
I was 5
Ok, i cant be the only one who found that mime/clock commercial to be horrifically disturbing and confusing!!! Mimes are right up there with clowns.
Fun Fact: LSD was LEGAL until 1968. This ALONE explains the 1960 Timex commercial. 🤔😮☠ And I'm not one who is particularly "disturbed" by mimes (or clowns). But this IS a nightmare fuel of an ad, 4 sure!
All the cereal companies marketed brands with freeze-dried fruit...the problem was by the time the fruit was hydrated enough to eat, the cereal was soggy.
👍👍
That stop-motion Ballantine ale ad was likely from the mid-1950s.
Lots of ads ran for years, There's a chance that a 1956-7 ad would still run in 1960-61. Hell, in Pittsburgh there's a local chain restaurant (Eat 'N Park) that has been running the same Christmas time ad since....1982! (Reputed to be one of the longest running TV ads in US history!)
Anyone ever had the Jets cereal that was featured in the cereal pack commercial? I wasn't born during this era, and curious as what the Jets cereal was and if it was good.
It tasted about the same as Frosty O's, which would basically be a sweeter version of Honey Nut Cheerios, minus the nuts.
@@ernestcruz6316 Yeah, Accurate!
Can you make a compilation video of the most devious licks
It used to be obvious what a commercial was advertising and what was positive about the product
Life was simpler then
subscribed
Who does the female voiceover for virgran at 16:30?
Hunt's Manwich? [sloppy joes]
Still available.
These 'vintage-commercials' would sound better if you used the Limiter on your Audio-Mixer. Many sources means a mish-mash of volume-levels, which change in each spot. A limiter would help keep things at an even and more balanced volume-level.
Toast'em? What's that? Never heard of it before ...😮
Pop Tarts
I remember these. I also remember Danish go rounds.
Pop Tarts but made by a different company
General Foods company.
When Pop was Pop not mostly water like today
Spaz. 😂
Got high hopes for this channel.
Really?
@@webstarIS well, one year later... Hopes Dashed
1) 1965
2) 1967
3) 1960
4) 1957
5) 1970
6) 1961
7) 1968
8) 1970
9) 1967
10) 1957
11) 1965
12) 1966
13) 1965
14) 1969
15) 1960 {John Cameron Swayze speaks for Timex}
16) 1960 {"THE ADVENTURES OF OZZIE & HARRIET"}
17) 1965
18) 1960
19) 1964
20) 1963
21) 1963
22) 1967
23) 1966
24) 1964
25) 1962
26) 1967
27) 1960
28) 1964
29) 1964
30) 1961
31) 1965
Pick a Pack ??? Never saw that in the 1960s ...who made that kind of cereal up?
The Pick a Pack cereals were by General Mills. They may not have been available in all areas. As for your other comment, Toast'ems were just a knockoff of Pop Tarts.
@@ernestcruz6316 Yes, in the 1960s there were pudding Snack Packs, in tin cups. I thought Chef Boyardee cost too much, at 42 cents a can.
I remember Hunt's Snak Pak puddings in a can too, and they still exist except they're in plastic containers now.
@@ernestcruz6316 The Snack Packs pudding in tins, in the 1960s - I had to be careful not to cut my finger on them. Those little boxes of animals cookies ; in the 1960s they cost only
5 cents each!
I only remember cereal in treat packs. Little individual servings boxes.
Old spice!?1925
Whats intro song bro
No no and NO! Wasn' t Brim in the 1970s?
Yup, you caught 'em.
Yes
There's a chance that "Brim" was test-marketed in the late 1960s in selected areas before "going national". I was enjoying "Reese's Pieces" for a HALF DECADE before "E.T." put them on the map. But then again I'm from Pennsylvania. I do remember my mother drinking "Brim" in the VERY early 70s ('71,'72) I was 9 or 10 and used to make it for her, She liked it better than "Sanka". "Brim" is still a brand, but now sold as "low acid", rather than just decaf.
Where ate the African American people in these commercials?
There is a Black Man in the Brim Coffee ad.
FU