A wonderful promotional video for Ford Motors' new cars in 1960: The Galaxy, The Thunderbird, and The Falcon.
This ad is a great throwback to the early 1960s and JFK era of innocence. Featuring an empty field with just the three cars and a horde of men and women in their ballroom best, the ad is awash in kitschy elegance.
Produced by the National Association of Manufacturers in 1940, this film offers a rebuke to communism.
Teenage Jerry has been wooed by the anti-capitalists down at the plant, so Grampa Robinson gives Jerry a long talk about the history of the town, which has been built - just like America - on capitalism.
Enjoy the exuberant song stylings of 1940s act Reg Kehoe and his Marimba Queens. Featuring bizarre, kitschy showmanship - particularly on the part of the bass player, who goes wild about halfway through the video.
"Your Name Here" shows the form of promotional videos, and where a corporation or organization could easily place their name in such a formulaic video.
"Fifty to sixty years ago, people were introduced to peanut butter to the first time," begins this 1950s ad for Skippy peanut butter. Following a brief history of peanut butter (though no mention of George Washington Carver), we are told that while children enjoyed peanut butter, adults hated it - until, of course, the advent of Skippy.
From the 1950s and 1960s, this is a Budweiser ad featuring a beach, a woman listening to a sea shell, jazz music from a flute, and "the most inviting glass of beer you've ever tasted."
Bottles and cans of Rheingold beer march in a stop-motion New York street parade. Some of the bottles play instruments, others carry flags, pull a street organ made of cans of Rheingold. Others yet ride in a Rheingold train across a bridge, and we close with the image of a keg floating through the sky like a blimp.
Farmer Cecil Dill, of Traverse City, Michigan, an aspiring radio artist, demostrates his ability to render popular melodies by pressing his hands together, creating a juvenile sound. Dill modestly tells how he discovered his amazing talent.
In a 1960s television ad for Crest toothpaste, two teenage boys play tennis. One, Bill, is clearly the better athlete, causing the other boy to lament, "I never beat Bill. Except once, in a toothpaste test."
The moral, of course, is though Bill is the better athlete, he uses an inferior toothpaste, and will get more cavities than our Crest-using friend.
An ad from the 1960s for Jet National, advertising vacations to Miami with exciting young adults dancing to hip go-go music. "It's Miami at a 'go-go' price. ... Have yourself a go-go vacation at America's riviera!"
A television ad for Crest toothpaste from the 1950s or 1960s, showing two teenage girls in an archery competition.
One girl, Ann, gets a bullseye with little effort. The other girl is not quite as good, but not to worry -- she uses a better toothpaste than Ann, and will have better teeth.