Summer 1967 commercials
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- Taken from Monkees reruns.
1. Slickers by Yardley
2. Oh! de London Splasher by Yardley
3. Midnight Sun by Clairol
4. NBC Living Color bumper
5. The Monkees sponsorship bumper: Kellogg's
6. Kellogg's Raisin Bran
7. Heartbreaker by Yardley
8. Another Oh! de London
9. Kellogg's Corn Flakes
10. Kellogg's Rice Krispies
11. Another The Monkees sponsorship bumper: Kellogg's
12. The Monkees partial closing credits with various Kellogg's products
13. Another NBC Living Color bumper
14. (same as #5)
15. Kellogg's Frosted Flakes
16. Black Label after shave by Yardley
17. Yardley Slicker Dollys
18. Another Kellogg's Corn Flakes
19. Kellogg's Pop-Tarts (back when they were new! They weren't available frosted though)
20. Another Kellogg's Rice Krispies
21. Yet another The Monkees sponsorship bumper: Kellogg's
22. (same as #5 and #14)
23. Another Kellogg's Frosted Flakes
24. Clairol Summer Blonde
25. Bufferin
26. Another Kellogg's Raisin Bran
27. One more Kellogg's Rice Krispies
28. One more The Monkees sponsorship bumper: Kellogg's
1967: The very BEST year ever!! Wish I could go back to that year. I’d stay there forever!
Mary Jo , I was 9 years old and 67 and I would love to go back to the 60s and 70s .
I think each decade got weirder and weirder and weirder after that.
And yes 1967 was a great year when I think about it it often has a very friendly feeling to it ... if that makes any sense haha.
And I just subscribed to your channel and I'm your first subscriber because you love 1967
Ditto.
You know I would.😉
Could it be because you were a child that the 1967 seems so perfect to you?
Me too
Beats watching today's pharmaceutical ads any day of the week!
This is a GREAT collection!! It brings back 1967 completely for me! 12 years old with alot of responsibilities, I watched TV whenever possible and dreamed of perfect lips and hair. 1967 saw quite a bit of change in our country.
I turned 12 in July 1967. Watching old commercials from that era is fun, but boy does it depress me as well. My young world revolved around TV and pop music and I sure miss those years.
We were still going to win in Vietnam, Chuckie Manson would have become a Beach Boy instead, and RFK/MLK wouldn’t be shot dead the next year. The television and music are a pleasant memory of the time before everything went straight to hell.
Me too!
12/12/1955
@@unassistedsuicide2243 yes '68 was a weird year , sad and violent ... those assassinations and I remember watching the Detroit Riots on TV ... I was 10 years old .
It is a shame that somebody didn't give a break to Manson ... but we still don't know ... because let's say he had become pretty successful and was making decent money as a musician getting recognition and having a really nice home ... it doesn't mean he would not have been very manipulative and using people and nasty in a really evil way .
I used to think the same thing ... if only people had been nicer to him and helped him in the music industry ... but really , he still could have turned out to be one of those Hollyweird abusers ... just a rich and happy one .
And who knows he could have as and unhinged well-off musician still destroyed people's lives .
Willie I was 9 in '67 and I know what you mean where it's fun to revisit that year and some of the other good years but then it does sometimes get depressing to know they're gone and you can't really go back there .
I really don't like this era I mean I like having the internet and how easy it is to research anything and have RUclips like this but we're living in weird times ... sometimes it feels like an alternate universe we live in now , doesn't it ?
And who could have predicted it would be so much more expensive to live and not in a normal type of inflationary way nowadays .
I can still smell those Yardley cosmetics!
We used to watch the NBC peacock strut its stuff in glorious black and white. We did not get our first color set until early 1969.
My Family didn't get one until 1975, that Old B&W Tube set was made in 1957, a Magnavox.
A 1974 Hitachi with remote , WOW , it lasted over 20 years .
We had a black & white TV until 1973.
Different shades of gray. 😞
Yeah we didn't get a color TV either until sometime in the late 70s ... maybe 1977 .
When your friends had color TV and you didn't and you went over their house it was just like a whole other Universe opening up watching things in color .
We got our first color TV after our black and white one was destroyed in the 1971 Sylmar earthquake.
I was five years old, in 1967.
I met a life guard, at the local swimming pool, during the summer of 1967.
Her name was Jackie.
She'd let me hang out with her during her breaks at the pool.
She taught me unconditional love for others.
She was an only child and she thought of me as a little brother.
I only saw her that summer.
That summer of 1967 will always be special to me.
1967 was the greatest year of the 1960's.
The music, the fashion, the hairstyles, the cars, the movies and the TV shows.
I wish I could go back in time to 1967.
Thank you for posting this video.
I was 9 in '67 and yes oddly enough I have always remembered that as a really good year in the 1960s .
Things changed a lot by '68 ... what a strange and sad year 68 was .
Yes we had great music , great everything ... there was just a lot of fun in the air in '67 .
I'm glad that lifeguard was really cool towards you and treated you like her little brother .
Wouldn't that be great if somehow all these years later you found out who she was and that she's still alive and you could somehow be able to thank her .
Great memories! Back when we thought adding sugar would fix everything 😉
I never heard that saying before but yeah it was an easier time and things have gotten more sophisticated and crazy and I miss 1967
Yes, up here in Canada people today do not believe me , but Pop Tarts did not have icing when they were first put on the market .
I love that you are posting all of these old commercials. Anything before 1980 is fantastic!
Well, I wouldn't say everything before the 1980
@@HaterTaterLater I think he meant commercials
Yes, just my exact thoughts!😊
What you really want to look for is the one called LOVE'S LEMON and it plays a song by Donovan called Wear Your Love Like Heaven .
You'll like it plus it might crack you up but that was a great memory for me and great products because I was 12 back then and got the Love's lemon for Christmas .
And I really enjoyed reminiscing and leaving messages with people on that channel today it's the bluenazz channel and it's from at least maybe 11 years ago but the original ad they show is from 1970
Anything before Reagan.
Had lots of Yardly. All the girls did. Remember all of these. 1967 was a good year/time.
Summer 1967. This is the year of my birth what a great year...by my book😅
I wish we could go back in time .1967 was a year of innocence for me .I was 6
I was nine and I'd love to go back to the 60s and '70s before everything got weirder and weirder and weirder with each successive decade
I was 5.
I remember that commercial with Jimmy Durante shrinking. I never forgotten it.
The Yardley commercials are great!
That's what I came here for because I remember them so much because I was born in 1958 and my older sisters were buying the Yardley products
Back in the day love the old London accent and the old perfume adds
I really miss the Yardley products and I was just a kid during the 1960s but had older sisters and I remember some of those ads
@@gardensofthegods Same here. I was only 11 in 1967, too young to wear makeup. My older sister was 14 and had Slicker lip polish in a mod light color. I thought she and her friends were so cool!
@@smilinmoo I know what you mean I was nine in 1967 ; I had the older sisters and the one in particular she really was big on the Yardley products and had all those the lip Slickers and the eye stuff and we had the OH de London ! cologne ... there was something really exciting about the makeup and the Fashions and everything coming from England back then when we were kids
Nice wholesome commercials. I graduated from high school in 1967. Was 1A at the time. Lost a friend in Nam and decided to go to college the following January. Wish the people doing commercials now would wake up and get politics out of the commercials. So nice to see these. Thanks!
It's fun seeing those NBC "In Living Color" promos. Growing up, we only had B&W TV, so we had to imagine what the fuss was about. 🙂
Yeah I know what you mean. I was well into my twenties before I ever saw The Flintstones in colour
@@barndancer6149 👍
Yeah I don't think we had a color TV in my house until around 1977 , when I was 19 !
We didn't have a color TV until 1983, when I was 24! A year later I was out of the house. The first TV I owned was actually a tiny B&W one my parents weren't using anymore. I think it had a 13" screen. They were happy to give it to me, and I was thrilled not only have my own apartment, but my own TV. @@gardensofthegods
I was in love with the Yardley girls, great memories.
I was born in 1958 so when those Yardley ads were coming out I wanted to be a Yardley girl and so did my older sisters .
They had some great products .
@@gardensofthegods Think that George Harrison's X, Patti Boyd.
@@deniseg812 Oh my God yes ... my sister even had a picture of Pattie Boyd on the back of our bedroom door with George Harrison and I wanted so much to look like her ... I had wavy light black hair and would have loved to have had her hair believe me .
Back then in 1967 we didn't have a blow dryer and one of those round brushes to dry your hair and make it straight .
We didn't even know about using these massive curlers to set our hair to make it straight until maybe more like 1971 , 72 in my household .
And we used to have the Yardley products and the Yardley Oh de London ! cologne .
@@deniseg812 Have you ever read Pattie Boyd's autobiography ?
I enjoyed it but it wasn't as good as I thought it would be because sometimes she would be talking about something ... assuming we knew where or what it was and it would turn out to be some place in England and I would have to Google it to find out what she was really talking about ... for example a club or restaurant .
She also talks about how cold and neglectful George could be towards her and that made me so sad .
And she also goes into how George and Eric Clapton were such close friends and then Eric started letting her know he wanted her .
She also spoke about how her marriage to Eric turned how to be so horrible .
What he did to her , the way she fled and I don't think she hardly got anything in a divorce settlement ... it was sad the way he really screwed her over .
And shortly after that I read Eric Clapton's autobiography and it was shocking the way either in that book or somewhere else he said he never really loved her ... that he wanted her , he wanted to possess her ... something like that .
It was really a shame for the woman ... at least three songs maybe four or five written about her between those two men and then the way they ended up treating her .
I was only age 6 that year, but watched alot of tv, and remember many of these ads. Ads during 1960s-1970s were entertaining, and many had jingles. My sibs and I watched the Monkees show on Saturday mornings. During 1965 or 1966 the Beatles had a cartoon on Saturday morns. I watched it.
Yep I was born in 1958 and I remember all that as if it only happened a couple years ago .
I really love the Clairol Midnight Sun commercial (starts at 1:01). This is really the best commercial ever in this compilation.
I remember that from when I was a kid but I was really here for the Yardley commercials and I do remember some of them vaguely but some of them I definitely remember and I remember pretty much all the commercials especially the cereals and the monkeys and all that
Yes!!! And if you listen closely, the Clairol Midnight Sun tune is really catchy. In 1967 on a Top-40 radio station in St. Petersburg, Florida (WLCY) in the evenings, they would play the Clairol Midnight Sun radio commercial with that tune that had lyrics. I loved it and was surprised that it wasn't eventually recorded as a song like was done with "We've only just begun". The song in the Midnight Sun radio commercial was only partial, but it began with a short romantic-sounding intro and the lyrics began with "Come, come to me, take my hand, walk with me. Along the sand lets share our love, in the land of the Midnight Sun. I love the smile in your eyes and your hair, how it glows like the Midnight Sun".... Then the announcer speaks briefly about the product and the song then ends with "Let's share our love, in the land of the Midnight Sun..." and the announcer concludes by saying, "By Clairol". I have never forgotten that Midnight Sun radio commercial and I wonder if it exists anywhere as I would love to hear that particular radio commercial again. --- John
“Come to the land where blonde began”
This is a year I started my freshman year in high school. I also used midnight Sun loved the color
I love how, in the last sponsor tag, the boys watch the Monkeemobile going backwards, then shrug and go on eating. 😂
That Yardley eye compact was genius!
I remember that from back in the day because my older sister had that
I was born at a time where I was just old enough to remember when they would put a picture of one of the sponsor's products over the closing credits. For Green Acres, you'd see a little box of BIZ laundry detergent in a bottom corner of the screen. Imagine if they did such a thing today!
i wished that i would have remember seeing more of the products in the sponsor's box at the bottom left during the closing credits! Now, i remember when Procter and Gamble was big enough to where the announcer would say this portion/ the first half of (insert the name of almost any show in the 60s- early 90s) was sponsored/brought to you by(choose any brand from P&G.. Scope, Pampers, Ivory Liquid, Tide, Safeguard, Jif, et al)😊.
That's because Procter & Gamble was their primary sponsor.
Announcer states name of the show followed by “brought to you by…”. I remember it well from that era. I was born in 1955.
Won't happen since now the networks compress the credits of a show for the sake of inserting more aggravating commercials.
And cut scenes to shove in additional commercials. We can only see the full length original run if we buy the dvds.
I was born in 1966 I love all of these great products
Ross I was born in 1958 and I remember all these commercials but the best ones believe me as a little girl back in those days the best ones were the Yardley ones
Ahh..Yardley makeup!! Luv it
“Some guys have it, some guys never will! Yardley Black Label!” Takes me back...
I’d give anything for some of those Yardley products.
@yoshitoshi98 And I’ve paid an embarrassing amount on eBay for the Yardley Slickers I couldn’t afford as an adolescent! Just those striped cases make me melt!!
LeslieGMN Paid a lot for a recreated Oh! de London. Didn’t smell anything like it.
@yoshitoshi98 I’m so sorry! I’ve heard that the “new” Oh! de London doesn’t smell anything like the original. Unfortunately it’s not like Slicker-I just received a (fifty-year-old!) Slicker that still smells right and soft enough to use. Some sellers advise buyers not to use these vintage products, but fortunately they haven’t killed me yet...
Yes, they are so cute!
@@yoshitoshi98 I found this surrendertochance.com/retro-yardley-oh-de-london-cologne/ It's supposed to be just like the original.
I love all these old commercials. Thank you for posting
Great commercials from the late '60s(I was yet to be born!). 📺😁
It was a great time to be a kid believe me despite the Vietnam War and the war protests and the assassinations it was still a great time to be a kid
@@gardensofthegods So I've heard from late Boomers like you. 🙂
@@dariowiter3078 Yeah , I believe it was ... we had great music and a lot more freedom .
Seems to me around where I lived they didn't start with the curfew until I was around 18 .
But it just seemed back then as a teenager you didn't really have to worry about getting stopped by the cops things like that as much back then... well at least not where I grew up in a suburb of Philly but it was not a rich neighborhood it was a lot of row homes ... what some call townhouses .
@@dariowiter3078 I was born in '58 , and so yeah the economy was really great in this country after World War II in the late forties but especially in the 1950s this country had an incredible economy .
Still good in the 60s , so jobs were really easy to find and you didn't have to go through the nightmare they've been making people go through to get jobs .
Mortgages were cheap , a lot of regular jobs included really good benefits : we had 7 kids and we were covered by really good Blue Cross and Blue Shield plus the dental plan .
Cars were pretty cheap and no nonsense , gas was cheap .
Good quality real clothing made out of wool and 100% cotton and well-made was cheap compared to the crap people buy today in a lot of its synthetic .
But wow ! ... incredible how cheap food and paper products like paper towels and napkins , toilet paper and all that were .
You never heard people back then say it was expensive to live in America .
@@dariowiter3078 Then there was the oil embargo in the early 70's ... people waiting in real long lines for gas .
Then something with the jobs started to change by around '75 , '76,, '77 ... suddenly a store a major corporation would claim bankruptcy and its employees who have been there for a long time would be screwed out of what was owed to them ... can you find out later another company with a different name was that same company after it regrouped and had screwed over its hard-working loyal employees ... a lot of them who were going to get a pension of course lost those .
And then even though we were getting cheaper electronics ( lot of electronics were still more expensive back then including color TVs especially in the 50s and 60s ) and cars coming from Japan ... I already knew a little bit about International Trade even though I was just a kid and knew that if we're importing a real lot of these things from another country there's going to be a shift , things are going to change and they did and then also in the 70s a lot of companies up in the north left and went to the South and they called the north the Rust Belt and then a lot of those industries that were in the south later move to Mexico ... and then we started doing a lot of our manufacturing overseas ...
Once that happened in the corporations became greedier just seems like everything changed .
I remember looking at jobs in the papers 1991 , 92 and 93 ... I'm seeing so many jobs for being a risk assessment attorney or working with risk assessment where suddenly it was a new field where they're trying to convince bosses and companies and everybody of all the reasons other people can be a liability to you and get you sued .
And then came the at will jobs ... you'd go to fill out an application on first you'd have to sign this at will form that basically told you you had no rights and F you if you don't like it don't work here but that they can fire you anytime they want for no reason and without an explanation ... I remember walking away from those jobs and not finishing the application and just tearing it up and throwing it out .
This country has been destroyed by corporate greed and too much government where we don't need it and not enough where we do .
When I was a teenager and again when I was 25 years old my dad who had fought in World War II said he had a lot more freedom than we did when he was our age .
I noticed the same thing with my son that his generation had less freedom than when I was his age .
Also in the 90s is when they started with the asset seizure laws and suddenly SWAT teams being able to bust into your home and being allowed to destroy your property and even if they went to the wrong house they don't have to pay for any repairs .
We have been losing our freedoms and struggling with more and more greed and having less and less unless you just want to get yourself into debt .
I'm sorry for that whole long history lesson and I don't know if you'll read it all but I just can't stand the way everything has changed it almost feels like an alternate universe
Brings back such wonderful memories. Thank you!!
0:17 Now THAT is a hairdo!
2:07 The iconic voice of Mel Brandt, one of NBC's best announcers.
The Kellogg's Raisin Bran spot features Daws Butler as the voice of the Sun.
Vocal by Jo Mapes.
Thanks so much for posting these!
Back in 1966..I was 12..had everything Yardley: Slickers..Pot O' Gloss..Original Oatmeal Soap with the brush..Eye palette..face powder compact..and Oh de London! Bubble Bath..Talc and Cologne..those were the days..so fun!
Margo in 1966 I was 8 but I had older sisters and I remember most of those products being in the house but I do remember having a few of them when I got a little older or getting the cast off from my sisters .
They had the coolest products and do you remember LOVES LEMON ?
We also had the Oh ! de London cologne ... yes we had the soaps .
I missed the 60s and the 70s so much
I had the Yardley slickers, and my sisters had the Oh! De London fragrance. So fab! And of course, Twiggy was the model of the century (to us).
That was really good. I had forgotten about most of those commercials. Nice to see again.
They bring back memories but I especially like the Yardley ones and that's what I was here for
Yardley Black Label aftershave. I remember this sitting on my dad's dresser at around this time. He would have been a young man around 32 then. Obviously, my mom, then 26, liked it on him.😊
Here in America I do remember seeing it in some stores but I'm not sure I remember seeing it in advertising .
But I remember the wonderful Yardley models and my older sisters had the products .
I was born June 18, 1967. Hello from Tyler Texas!
67 was, in my opinion, the last big chance for the country to right itself. Then came 68.
I love the Sixties!
I remember every one of those commercials. Especially the Yardley and the Lady Clairol commercials. My friends and I wanted to go to London so bad but simce it was impossible at the time we changed to California. Closer to home. We all wanted straight blonde hair. And to have a body like the girl in the hair commercial. Alas we were 2 brunettes and a redhead. Doomed to miserable lives because we knew only blondes had fun. We wanted to surf and spend days on the beach. IDK how we would have supported ourselves. I think we figured if we could just get to California (LA of course) that everything would magically work out for us. Things didn’t turn out that way. And I haven’t thought of those ridiculous dreams in decades. Right when I was getting ready to go into my sophomore year of high school my parents moved me from the school district both my sisters graduated from and I expected to. I never felt close to any other girls the way I did and all I wanted to do was graduate and go out on my own. I managed that much of the dream!
I love the Midnight Sun commercial the best. I’ve been lightening my hair since I was fifteen. That was a long, long time ago. I remember all the “blonde” products such as Born Blonde, Lady Clairol lightening kit and Summer Sun-In. I fried my hair a couple of times. Lol! I also had such a crush on the Monkees especially Micky Dolenz. He was so groovy, baby!
bethrogers,. I believe Mickey Dolenz is single now. Go for it.
The Raisin Bran commercial was adorable
Not adorable for metabolic health LOL.
grew up in that time and as a 12 yr old wood marvel at the woman with their daughters coming in to glam their daughters up in the mod look
Slicker lipsticks were great - I only used one color at the time - would love to have the set now. And Oh! de London was a great cologne. I got the updated scent several years ago - it didn't smell at all like the original.
They never do....
Thanks! I love The Monkees!
Sugar in all the cereal is so outdated. But we used it on everything ha!
My fav products back in the day. ❣❣❣❣
I would LOVE to have any of those Yardley products today, in particular the Oh! De London fragrance splash. They are so collectible. As I'm sure every woman watching knows.
I was born in 1967. BTW, lip polish is now called LIP GLOSS! 😃 🙃
I love this post...thank you!!!
These old commercials have class ,,
I'm pretty sure there was a version of that closing theme from the Monkees without the Kellogg's cereal boxes.
never before seen Raisin Bran ads!
What the hell happened????? I can’t even watch tv anymore because the Fakemercials make me want to puke. Now THESE were decent commercials. Ahh, the land where blonde began 💕💕💕💕💕
The Monkees and Kelloggs yay
Back in a time when America🇺🇸 was America long gone now. Generation I miss terribly
Yes no homeless people taking over Los Angeles and San Francisco .
The Raisin Bran sun was a cute little character
It’s crazy that some of the young people in these commercials are all elderly by now
And some--most notably three of the Monkees (Davy, Mike, and Peter)--are no longer with us 😢
The Monkees and Kellogg's rock!
I remember the old school unfrosted Pop-Tarts. Up till a few years ago you could still get them that way at most supermarkets. Now to get my favorite, unfrosted brown sugar-cinnamon, I'd probably have to order it through Amazon and buy in bulk.
I loved Yardley Black Label. Wish they'd bring it back
In the Army overseas, so no television where we were
Jimmy Durante put sugar in his corn flakes by hand when he could have got Frosted Flakes with sugar already in it.
Yardley savait si bien nous faire rêver avec ses fragrances fleuries ! J'étais folle de la lavande tellement fraîche et racée !! Je la trouve encore aujourd'hui dans certaines parfumeries c'est un ravissement pour moi !!
Back in the 1960s we had the OH! de London but the and I have a vague recollection of the lavender .
We also had the wonderful products LOVES LEMON ... there was a wonderful commercial in 1970 and it's still here just look up LOVE'S LEMON .
You will hear the song by Donovan singing WEAR YOUR LOVE LIKE HEAVEN .
Rip mike Nesmith'!
Let's all go to A&W. I can taste it now-can't you? Hop in your car. Come as you are-to A and Wuuuuuuuuuuuuu.
Let’s all go to A and W! Foods more fun at A and W! We’ll have a mug of root beer! Maybe 2 or 3. Foods more fun with hospitality!
Hey Mickey, why are we in the desert eating breakfast? Are we tripping??
Just dandruff in Victor Mature's hair. 😎
I was probably missing a lot while in Vietnam.
At the end of The Monkees episode, Len Lesser is listed as George. That's Uncle Leo from Seinfeld.
Excellent catch!
Awwww poor tony!!!!
Love this look and hairdo😊so elegant 0:15
Not todays commercials!
Does anyone know the name of the wordless tune that's crooned in the background of the Oh! de London Splasher and other Yardley commercials? I was a child during this era but I loved the Yardley ads. Still do. Miss this time of my life so much...thanks for sharing them!
I was born June 1, 1967
It wasn't such a happy time if you were a young man of draft age, with the likelihood of being drafted and sent to the horror of Vietnam hanging over your head. I was nine in 1967 and for me it was a happy time. But two older boys, neighbors of ours, were drafted and sent over there. One came home in a box, the other came home without a scratch, but his mind messed up, later committing suicide.... sorry to spoil everyone's fun.
Generation Jones just got lucky; they came into the workforce amid high inflation and perhaps a recession, but road the wave of the '80s/'90s booms nicely. Sadly, younger generations take the "if you can remember the '60s, you weren't there!" motto too seriously only view the good stuff and don't take the stuff they learned in school too importantly.
Girls and women had to apply for ads under the Help Wanted: Female section of the newspaper, and most jobs were closed to them. Apply to law school? Med school? Forget it. Want a charge card? Get your husband's permission first. Of course, men had it terrible as well, with the Viet Nam War....where most enlistees were age 19. And they were the poorer young men, men of color. If you were a rich boy in college, you had a draft deferment. These ads are fun to look back on, but the lifestyle they're pitching is only an illusion.
I like The Jimmy Durante one!
Betterworld, He was "one in a million!"
Do firemen still go down those poles?????🏃♀️🏃♀️
And if BUFFERIN doesn't do it for you, there's lots of other things you could trip out on
The days before the word "sugar" was deemed anathema.
I never was fond of The Monkees. They used to scare me when I was little. The end credits with their disembodied heads and the one that looked as if he was screaming.
I'll tell you, back in those days you come to find out that products had different flavors that seemed interesting, but must have flopped since they are no longer around.
Are those women in the lip stick commercial as we call it here in America coming out of phone boxes?
Were most of these ads by the Leo Burnett ad agency in Chicago?
I was 6 during the summor so I don't remember much
...so Kelloggs and Yardley were responsible for 90% of advertising in 1967?
These 60's commercials are young targeted, clean, and the antidote for green gecko AARP investor scam pharmaceutical loud obsessive misleading pushy ads.
These ads are extremely misleading.
@@patricias5122Aren't most ads misleading?
So would I
The NBC peacock's colors have faded over the years!
Made This RUclips Date 2023-01-05 Which Is January 5, 2023
2:32 Were sixties commercials really this adorable? 😊 Today's TV advertising is just irritating and repetitive.
Very unhealthy breakfast cereals 😢.
6:15 S from Hell alert!! 😱
Were these ads from the UK?
Some
I think all of them were on NBC which is USA. Yardley products were very popular back then in America.
Do you notice a pattern? Wear lip gloss, get a sweetheart. Wear perfume, get a sweetheart. Lighten your hair, get a sweetheart. Use bubble bath, get a sweetheart.
Thank you so much for posting!
Oh my ! So much sugar for breakfast, no wonder there is a generation of diabetes (baby-boomers) 😱
I wonder if thats why my dad likes sugar so much he’s 56 you should see how much brown sugar he puts in his oatmeal! Its strange he’s not a diabetic.
Yep! And there were cigarette ads galore....
When women were beautiful not plastic.
I have NEVER met a woman from England who was pretty.
I was 10 in 1967 had my first Beatles record and monkees record watch the t.v show Tim tunnel Iiss it alot
Too repetitive. Plays the same ads over and over.