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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.
sketched by Dorothy Hope Smith, depicts four-month-old neighbor Ann Turner; commercials voiced by Tex Brashear: Blue Blade razors: Gillette Sharpie the parrot: 1952–1960: The Gold Dust Twins: Gold Dust Washing Powder: 1880s–1940s The Quisenberrys: Golden Corral: 2015: Choo-Choo Charlie: Good & Plenty candy: 1950–1970s: Gorton's Fisherman
Years later, the commercials regained notoriety when a bootleg recording of out-takes was distributed, showing an apparently inebriated Welles on the set of one of the commercials. [2] The campaign's slogan became a popular cultural trope of the late 1970s.
In the commercials, shots of elderly Georgian farmers were interspersed with an off-camera announcer intoning, "In Soviet Georgia, where they eat a lot of yogurt, a lot of people live past 100." [ 6 ] Each shot had a caption at the bottom, which would tell the audience the farmer's name and his or her age, which ranged from 95 to 105.
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.
The commercial ends with the tag line "Little Brothers: Because the time of reckoning is now at hand", followed by Eli and his young charges laughing maniacally. [ 414 ] Litter Critters — Cheri Oteri appears in this sketch about a kit that allows children to take their cat's fecal waste and mold it into fun figurines. "♪♫ When you hear a ...
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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]