The Untouchables - long complete close of episode Kiss of Death Girl

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  • Опубликовано: 20 апр 2011
  • Includes last scene in the story plus commercials, promo for 'next weeks' episode, promo for another Chesterfield sponsored show: The Islanders and original closing titles with Chesterfield cigarette pack showing during them.
    For long 4th Season close see: • The Untouchables - lon...
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Комментарии • 17

  • @johnerwin9024
    @johnerwin9024 4 года назад +1

    thanks man, interesting to see the sponsors spots :)

  • @TheRetro64
    @TheRetro64 13 лет назад +2

    The woman in the Chesterfield commercial, Diane Brewster, also played Dr. Richard Kimble's wife, Helen, in the "Fugitive" TV series. She appeared via flashbacks in the episodes, "The Girl from Little Egypt" from Season One, and "The Judgement, Part 2" from the last episode of the series.

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines 9 лет назад +3

    Jackson Beck is the announcer in the Chesterfield King ad; Allen Swift speaks for Brylcreem. In 1960, they also provided voices for "King Leonardo" and "Odie Cologne" on "KING LEONARDO AND HIS SHORT SUBJECTS".

  • @stuartfanning
    @stuartfanning  13 лет назад +1

    On this episode you have the Chesterfield cigarette box instead of the book during the end credits. To my knowledge it is only the episodes where Chesterfield is the main sponsor that the book is replaced during end credits in the original airings.

  • @Sunsetdrivein
    @Sunsetdrivein 11 лет назад +1

    The Chesterfield cigarette commercial is from 0:27 to 1:27. Diane Brewster was also in Leave It To Beaver. I didn't know she smoked until I saw this commercial.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 5 лет назад

      Diane smoked on behalf of her primary sponsor, Liggett & Myers. I'm quite sure she didn't appear in commercials for the other participating advertisers of "THE ISLANDERS": J.B. Williams {Geritol, Sominex, Aqua Velva, Lectric Shave, et. al.}, Warner-Lambert {Listerine}, United Motors, DuPont {Zerex anti-freeze, et. al.}, and Brillo.

  • @tomservo56954
    @tomservo56954 11 лет назад +1

    She was a Warner Brothers contract player...as mentioned, co-starring in their series THE ISLANDERS, as well as other TV and film roles (notably Paul Newman's mother in THE YOUNG PHILADELPHIANS,,,don't look at me that way--it spanned three decades and they aged her).

    • @actionsub
      @actionsub 5 лет назад +1

      THE ISLANDERS was an MGM series, though. That said, advertisers back then, not studios, controlled the promotion of TV shows, so you'd even have "tune in to The Joe Blow Show, sponsored by Hackencoff Tobacco Co., seen on another network" promos.

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines 9 лет назад

    Originally telecast on December 8, 1960.

  • @TheGeminiStudios
    @TheGeminiStudios 12 лет назад +1

    @spacepatrolman Quinn Martin already left the show after the first season.

  • @tomservo56954
    @tomservo56954 11 лет назад

    Yes..."The Purple Testament"

  • @TheGeminiStudios
    @TheGeminiStudios 12 лет назад +1

    @spacepatrolman Desi fired him because of budget differences.

  • @02chevyguy
    @02chevyguy Год назад

    My dad smoked Chesterfields until he had his first heart attack in 1966. He also used Brylcreem (along with my brother and me).

  • @TheGeminiStudios
    @TheGeminiStudios 12 лет назад +2

    @spacepatrolman You got that right. Desilu was very stingy back in those days.

    • @johnerwin9024
      @johnerwin9024 4 года назад

      read that somewhere about Desi during the show's run-

  • @gidzmobug2323
    @gidzmobug2323 5 лет назад +2

    When did they pull the plug on tobacco advertising, and why?

    • @actionsub
      @actionsub 5 лет назад +3

      January 2, 1971, by act of Congress. For a couple of years prior to that, Congress applied the Fairness Doctrine requiring an anti-smoking ad for every 3 tobacco commercials shown. The number of smokers was declining, and Big Tobacco realized that a total TV ban would free up more money to advertise in other media, so they stopped fighting attempts by Congress to ban TV ads. Nixon finally signed a bill into law despite his habit of 8 bowls of pipe tobacco a day...