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Pages in category "1970s television commercials" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
The 1970s were a golden era for both television and commercials, and what could be more quintessentially '70s than Rice Krispies teaming up with The Partridge Family?
The commercial was used as the final scene (minus the "It's the real thing" statement at the end) in the Mad Men series finale "Person to Person", which was set in November 1970 at an oceanside spiritual retreat in California. It is implied that the show's fictional protagonist, Don Draper, was behind the commercial's creation. [60]
[2] The commercial garnered Reese a Clio Award for Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Commercial. He appeared in over 75 commercials for numerous products, among which were Ivory Snow, Dunkin' Donuts' "Munchkins" donut holes, [2] and Post Raisin Bran. [3] Throughout the 1970s, Reese appeared in features and interviews on New York ...
It was chosen as the best advert of the 1970s in a 2018 YouGov poll. [7] In 2019 it was named the most iconic and heartwarming advert of the past 60 years to that point. [8] The advert's popularity has been attributed to its nostalgia for "wholesome images of village life" as well as Scott's visual direction.
Time for Timer is a series of seven short public service announcements broadcast on Saturday mornings on the ABC television network starting in 1975. The animated spots feature Timer, a tiny cartoon character who is an anthropomorphic circadian rhythm, the self-proclaimed "keeper of body time."
In the mid-1970s, the Connecticut-born Naughton had relocated to Manhattan after a two-year stint studying Shakespeare in London. "My first professional job was a production of Hamlet starring Sam ...
ABBA Christmas — This infomercial spoof promotes a never-released album of holiday songs from "The Fleetwood Mac of cold weather" (Bowen Yang, episode host Kate McKinnon, and McKinnon's fellow SNL alums Maya Rudolph and Kristen Wiig), all set to the tunes of their well-known classics (e.g. "Gifts for Me, Gifts for You").