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Rated: 13+ · Column · Satire · #1243378
My first column, published on my school website. Topic: Old-time television commercials
Hello various column readers! In the absence of anyone actually bothering to send me anything or email me, Iā€™ll have to talk at you some more. As you can expect, I have a bit of hardship trying to think of things that are actually entertaining to read about, since I am generally either playing video games or watching television commercials with cartoons in between. Hey! Maybe that will work! Iā€™ll talk about commercialsā€¦hmmā€¦what to start withā€¦
Being an avid TV-watcher, as I expect most of you are, Iā€™ve seen all matter of these commercials, and since I sometimes watch Nick-at-Nite (proof that sitcoms reduce peopleā€™s IQ to the point that they canā€™t read or spell the word ā€˜Nightā€™), Iā€™ve also seen a few of those ancient, pre-human commercials for anti-dandruff shampoo or popcorn or, lord help us all, Ovaltine. What, exactly, is Ovaltine? Apparently I can still purchase it in stores, but Iā€™d never find it. Iā€™d be looking in Automotive, next to the Pennzoil.
Anyway, back to commercials. There were basically two types of commercials shown back then:
1) The Anti-Communist commercial ā€“ These were rather blatant attacks on communist ideals. Communism is a form of government in which the leader, called a ā€˜Comradeā€™ or ā€˜Castroā€™, goes around peopleā€™s homes, taking everything the families own. The families are happy to help the community. ā€œWe love our community and our government!ā€ they cry out, usually adding, patriotically, ā€œDonā€™t shoot!ā€
2) The Depressed Housewife commercial ā€“ This form of commercial usually is for some kind of new household or hygiene product, like shampoo or laundry detergent. The commercial usually begins with a housewife with a problem, which apparently is on par with Global Warming or the war in Iraq. It is difficult to explain this type of commercial, so I will write one:

SuprSuds Detergent Commercial

Scene: A Kitchen in a Common Suburban Home. There is a woman staring soulfully at a white dress shirt with a stain on it.

Woman: Oh no! My husbandā€™s best dress shirt has a stain, which means that his boss will reject him for a promotion and weā€™ll all be forced to live in the train yard and eat diseased rats!

Enter Best Friend #1, who is in a shirt that is stain-free

Best Friend #1: Hello Nancy, how are you today?

Nancy: *Sob*

Best Friend #1: Ah, I see your shirt is stained. Why not try this new detergent, SuprSuds?

Woman: I heard about SuprSuds! Itā€™s made one hundred percent out of ingredients!

Best Friend #1: Thatā€™s how you know it works!

Cut to scene of Nancy living in extravagance. A butler hands her a glass of wine and continues to fan her with palm leaves.

Nancy: Oh, Jeeves, would you be so kind as to hand me another thousand dollar bill?

Jeeves: Yes maā€™am

Enter Best Friend #1

Nancy: Oh! Hello Best Friend Number One! Please, have some broiled snow owl! (Nancy blows nose on thousand dollar bill)

Best Friend #1: Thank you! Isnā€™t it great, living the good life?

Nancy: It sure is! Thank you SuprSuds!

Cut to picture of SuprSuds box

Poorly Recorded Young Womanā€™s Choir: ♪SuprSuds! It makes your life worth livinā€™! ♪

Authoritative Male Voice: Now with real ingredients!


Needless to say, these sorts of commercials worked well for the fifties, but todayā€™s citizens are too ā€œcleverā€ for that sort of marketing. We laugh with scorn at SuprSudsā€™ ā€œmarketingā€ strategy. The marketing ā€œconsultantsā€ needed to ā€œup the anteā€, to add ā€œwitā€, ā€œhumorā€, and ā€œinterestā€ into their commercials if they were to still have ā€œjobsā€. They neededā€¦a ā€œgeckoā€?

NEXT WEEK
MODERN COMMERCIALS: I DONā€™T CARE HOW MUCH MONEY YOU SAVED!
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