These all seem pretty obscure to me. Maybe they were from before like 1965. I was 5 in 1965. That GE one has that Rankin-Bass "Rudolph" vibe. But I do remember: "Avonn..! DING-dong lady calling!" 😁
I was 4 in 1965, I was born in 1961. 1960s - early 1970s, best times for me to be a kid :) I remember a foster mother of mine using that hair dryer. It was pretty groovy.
It is easy. They are selling wokism, which is the new name for Nazism. The Nazis were socialist. Just barely right of communism. But they convinced the world they were far right.
My mother once agreed to see an Avon Lady because she was the mother of one of my brother's friends. They sat at the kitchen table and the woman applied much more makeup than my mother usually wore. My grandmother, visiting that day, came into the room and burst out laughing. She said to my mother "You look like Charlie Chaplin!" Needless to say, my mother was very embarrassed, and I'm pretty sure the woman never came back.
Our country was self sufficient. We had the best engineers. 😊Americans making products that last forever. Cheap Chinese crap breaks down as soon as you start using it.
Remember that you could safely answer the doorbell
Wish i could go bacl and live at that time.
Excited when Avon ladies came, always gave free samples
I loved the mini lipstick tubes. But they had a liquid blush in the 70s I used as a teen. Best blush ever.
The Avon ad strikes a chord with me, because my mom used to be an Avon lady.
💟☮️
My mom and later my daughter.
Truly a gift. Than you for compiling.
Imagine, products made in the USA!
Ahhh yes. soap on a rope!
I bought Chanel no 5 for my wife this year for Christmas.
I bought my Mom Jean Nate toilet water and asked her if I could use it also when I went to the bathroom.lol
These all seem pretty obscure to me. Maybe they were from before like 1965. I was 5 in 1965. That GE one has that Rankin-Bass "Rudolph" vibe. But I do remember: "Avonn..! DING-dong lady calling!" 😁
i was 15
I was 4 in 1965, I was born in 1961. 1960s - early 1970s, best times for me to be a kid :) I remember a foster mother of mine using that hair dryer. It was pretty groovy.
@@tvdays Being born in years that are a five or a zero, make it a snap to recall your age in any given year!😉👍
I seem to remember that when "Rudolph" first aired in 1964, GE was the sponsor and I vaguely remember the commercial.
Percolator, best coffee, ever!!!!
POUR THROUGH COFFEE POT! My Dale wouldn’t use anything else!
Back in the days when you could actually tell what product the ad was pitching.
It is easy. They are selling wokism, which is the new name for Nazism. The Nazis were socialist. Just barely right of communism. But they convinced the world they were far right.
And it wasn’t about Johnny and his two mommies…..
@@stormgirl09: So true!
Far as I could remember beings 8 years old my parents would Drink Folgers coffee and hated Maxwell House coffee.
Mine too!
Thank you colleague.
I don’t remember any of these but the Rankin Bass characters point to a rime after Rudolph, which was 1964 I think
My mother once agreed to see an Avon Lady because she was the mother of one of my brother's friends. They sat at the kitchen table and the woman applied much more makeup than my mother usually wore. My grandmother, visiting that day, came into the room and burst out laughing. She said to my mother "You look like Charlie Chaplin!" Needless to say, my mother was very embarrassed, and I'm pretty sure the woman never came back.
☮️💟💟
Do we have any idea what the GE spot is from?
It came from the holiday special "Rudolph The Red-Nose Reindeer".
Our country was self sufficient. We had the best engineers. 😊Americans making products that last forever. Cheap Chinese crap breaks down as soon as you start using it.
Let's talk joyful...
I sold Avon