~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Speaking of "Food With an Attitude" ... just came across this 1936
magazine ad for Camel cigarettes that recommends smoking them
as an aid for digestion after Thanksgiving dinner ... ... quite
unbelievable! Thought you might be interested in seeing the campaign
spin promoted by product manufacturers that prompts consumers into
purchasing them for their "health." The text is small but here's hoping
that you can read the general intent of this amazing advertisement.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mairzie Dotes
Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't that add have an overall brown look to everything? Smoked turkey was it back in the day?
I bought an old set of Jack Benny TV shows - 39 episodes for 5 dollars. (funny for the people who put the package together because 39 was the age he never admitted to being older than, plus he was cheap, so it worked, heh)
But watching the shows was almost like watching all the stars plugging smoking for a half hour, even when they weren't doing anything with smokes directly.
Anyway, as amusing as the shows were/are, their sponsor was Lucky Strike cigarettes. And they were so integrated with the shows that if you cut that content out, you cut the show itself. Their show characters did the commercial bits in the context of the show, humor and all. And their gags used smoke as often as possible it seemed.
They got away with this on radio because those were who they had in the studio to deliver the message. It would be as if you would be watching an episode of The Lone Ranger and he would ask Tonto for a cigarette, and that the crooks were making off with cartons of Lucky Strike cigarettes, and that the posse were all smoking, and the Indians were blowing smoke rings to talk. And don't get me started on the medicine show. These shows WERE the medicine show. And BAD MEDICINE at that.
So the upshot of that is that I bought 39 episodes, with Lucky Strike being mentioned at the front and back, and a couple times by some smart executive looking salesman who sounded all scientific. . . oh, and there was one time they had a close up on a beautiful woman from about the shoulders taking a deep hit off the smoke and letting it out in a slow, long exhale, like it was the most sensuous glide one could imagine, and she looked into the camera and smiled oh so contentedly. I just about fell out of my chair. Sheeeeeesh and double sheeeeeesh.
Be Happy-
Go Lucky
Lucky tastes better
Oh those slathering sexual slogans!
Heck, I remember various cigarette companies used professional athletes, and they claimed it was actually GOOD for your wind.
How many years did I smoke? Geez. . . 30? Tracking it back, it's not much of a surprise how I took it up. And quitting was like turning my back on a lot of deep deep imprints.
"Not a bit is wasted and the best is yet to come. . ." -- remembered from a dream
I actually painted this before I discovered the forums, but I guess pears qualify as a food don't they? I don't know if these ones have attitude though.
I did this one with the chalk tool and blended a bit with the palette knife. Something on my wish list for future Art Rage versions would be a blending tool for dry media.
I plan to post more items in this thread since food is my favorite subject!
Dear irishrose,
Could not BELIEVE that ad when I came across it ... the message is ...
have a smoke after EVERY BITE! ROTFLing! The sad thing is that I am
in the mist (once more) of breaking the habit and seem to be adjusting
fairly well. Thank goodness I don't DRINK but must confess ... with the
cut back in cigarettes I seem to be swilling down an overabundance of
Ovaltine ... the "classic" chocolate flavor of course.
You have awsome recall in relating some of those kicky cigarette ad
slogans that used to be aired. Many thanks for sharing them!
Mairzie Dotes
D Akey,
Most everyone I knew while growing up smoked. My parents, relatives,
friends and neighbors all embibed. Many T.V. and radio commercials
regularly advertised the many cigarette brands and when settling in
to watch a good theatre movie ... all of the stars were blowing smoke
rings at each other with each pursed lip puff. He would move seductively
close and slowly (sigh!) light her cigarette ... so inticing the image was
and who wouldn't want to go on a date like that we thought? Possibly
my girl friends and I secretly hoped by having cigarettes dangling out of
our mouths ... Cary Grant might ask us out for dinner and cocktails .....
soooooo I may as well give up the bad habit because Mr. Grant was not
able to make it in to Pennsylvania after all.
Mairzie Dotes
Dear irishrose,
Am most happy to hear that you noticed the levity in the fictitious
story and painting and I must humbly agree that at least in this case
my talent did shine through like sun reflective Olive oil because as
you can see I think I may have gotten dear Caesars painterly hat size
correct ....... YAAAY!
A sincere thank you for the nice compliment.
Mairzie Dotes
Cheezwiz,
Of COURSE pears would qualify as food and these particular three are
most delectably painted and YES ... the attitude is quite there because
my mouth "attitude" is now watering for a delicious taste. They are
absolutely luscious in color and artistry ... a sumptuous, ripe trio and a
gracious thank you for presenting this lovely piece.
Mairzie Dotes
Dear irishrose,
And doesn't Caesar look snappy dapper as all get out with those shiny
buckles? Gee ... just happened to wonder ... why DID those pilgrims glue
buckles on everything? Was it just for show and did Columbus manufacture
them in his spare time at his uncle's buckle's r us shop? ( I dare ya to say
THAT three times real fast! )
Me write a book? How very sweet you are for thinking of me in that way.
Mairzie Dotes
Here I am settling down for a nice snack with my tooth faerie. That's me behind the camera. I found this one or a relative of this one under my pillow. Pic is a few years old so I can't recall exactly. Even the tooth faeries were outsourcing all the work.
Cute little rascal, though. A strange bedfellow. But what attitude!
The only thing I did to this photo was blur the area around my pal to make it corny like an Anne Giddes cherub or something. The attitude was discovered upon enlarging the shot.
Last edited by D Akey; 11-30-2009 at 02:51 PM.
"Not a bit is wasted and the best is yet to come. . ." -- remembered from a dream