In case you can't read the copy it proudly states one of the positive features of the small, easily-concealed camera is:"Your girlfriend and other bathing-beauties will all relax in their natural pose and make a swell pin-up collection. Through a paper is just one of many ways to go about it."
Posts mit dem Label Comic Book Ad werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Comic Book Ad werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Freitag, 22. Juli 2011
Voyeur enabling comic book ad
While not being privy to the creation of the ad copy for this mini-camera from a 1958 girl's romance comic book it is hard to believe that the following sales point for the camera was meant for anyone other than emerging pervs or creepy adults. It is possible that it was totally innocent but the sleaze-factor, combined with the explosion of "camera clubs" during that time period leads me to doubt that the camera was meant just for laughs.
In case you can't read the copy it proudly states one of the positive features of the small, easily-concealed camera is:"Your girlfriend and other bathing-beauties will all relax in their natural pose and make a swell pin-up collection. Through a paper is just one of many ways to go about it."
In case you can't read the copy it proudly states one of the positive features of the small, easily-concealed camera is:"Your girlfriend and other bathing-beauties will all relax in their natural pose and make a swell pin-up collection. Through a paper is just one of many ways to go about it."
Labels:
Comic Book Ad,
creepy,
Seduction of the Innocent,
voyeurism
Donnerstag, 21. Juli 2011
From the Library of Ada Winemiller, Part 2
The advertisements that appeared in comics were not really targeted to both genders back in the day. Comic books were primarily and rightly so aimed at the young male demographic. Female customers were almost an after-thought and romance comic books held the same place the more adventure oriented books had as a product, as a safer alternative to the racier and more lurid pulp and gossip magazines that dominated the news stands.
Comic book advertising was almost certainly sold based upon volume, not a targeted youth or older group. Ads for submarines, rockets, space suits, cowboy gear and body building dominated pages set aside for outside revenue. What the sales department was selling was eyes on the page, not what percentage of boys versus girls were tempted by their products. Even the romance or female-oriented magazines for the most part contained advertising directly aimed at the young male reader. Ads for fashion and makeup were typically published in titles like Miss America or Calling All Girls which while they contained sequential art were considered full-fled magazines and were on a different tier than the other four-color comics.
The opposite may be true for the male youth market as the amount of T&A in most of the mainstream comic books were obvious and gratuitous far beyond what the artist or writer knew was sensible. The romance books, while not as adventuresome thematically, supports my personal theory that even the girl-oriented books were also primarily meant for the male reader and served as a safe and acceptable form of pornography or at least a source to satisfy curiosity, somewhat like the notorious lingerie ads in a Sears catalog. Given that so many stories feature panels of women in their underclothes and showing them fitfully tossing and turning on their bed with frustration is provocative to be sure. A scene in an issue of Marvel Comics 2003 mini-series Unstable Molecules, reflecting the era, bears anecdotal witness to the idea. You can view the semi-NSFW page here.
These type of cheesecake voyeuristic images were almost exclusive to the romance comics. Unfortunately when this imagery, combined with the more violent ones that were ubiquitous to the action and adventure comics reached a sort of parental saturation the result was government and group involvement that resulted in the Comics Code Authority.
Of the eight pages of ads in Brides of Love #9 there are three are shilling body building, four are pushing a combination of toys and science-related instruments. Arguably given the perceived audience of the time these ads were correctly and most effectively aimed at a young male.
One ad features photographs of popular media stars, which is the only ad that might be considered by advertisers to be directly of interest to a girl of that era. But what sort of young woman was Ada Winemiller? If she took any interest in the ads at all who is to say she wasn't the most intrigued by the rocket kit? Maybe she liked the idea of breaching the walls of America's enemies in a tank? It could be she grew up to be a force to be reckoned with in the business world after learning entrepreneurship from selling salve or Grit. Out of all the advertisements from Brides in Love #9 presented here, which ones may have captured the attention of Ada the most?
Maybe she chose her own path and did whatever she wanted be it in business, science or as homemaker. Perhaps the old men editing the romance comic books of the 1950s, who mandated stories of women who yearned to be housewives and mothers and nothing else because there was no other goal worthier than domestic breeder, would be shocked to learn how Ada Winemiller ultimately turned out.
Labels:
ada winemiller,
Comic Book Ad,
Comic Book Romance
Samstag, 7. Mai 2011
These are things that exist
From only two years ago?
These cosplay films appear pretty earnest but I'm pretty surprised it wasn't something produced in the late 1980s. Where are these movies now? Why don't I own them? Is it because my wife would finally move out?
Men of Mystery #80 (2009).
These cosplay films appear pretty earnest but I'm pretty surprised it wasn't something produced in the late 1980s. Where are these movies now? Why don't I own them? Is it because my wife would finally move out?
Men of Mystery #80 (2009).
Freitag, 6. Mai 2011
As easy as trying on a new hat
From Cowboy Love #31 (August 1955).
Freitag, 22. April 2011
Torn from today's headlines!
I wonder how carefully they vetted that newsprint? I could just see Sally obliviously wearing a jacket displaying the headlines "BRAVE ALABAMANS HALT DE-SEGREGATION", "COMMIES INFILTRATE DAIRY INDUSTRY" or "RELEASED ATOM CLOUD HARMLESS, SAYS OFFICIALS. MAY ACTUALLY CURE ILLNESS"or some other propagandistic horror common to the media. Imagine what a jacket like that would look like today.
- "GULF OIL LEAK BENEFICIAL TO ENVIRONMENT, REVERSES GLOBAL WARMING"
- "NOTHING TO SEE HERE, MOVE ALONG, SAYS GOVERNMENT"
- "JUSTIN BIEBER #1 ENTERTAINER ON EARTH"
Brrr...
From Personal Love #4 (Mar-Apr 1959).
Donnerstag, 30. Dezember 2010
Pimps trying to catch a woman that's weak
Sylvester is a pimp, that much is clear. I understand Sylvester keeping a bevy of birds to lure in some johns, he's got to pay for all that stuff he orders from Acme somehow and honey-traps are as good a way as any. What I don't get is why didn't Sylvester just eat Prostitweety when he had the chance then go after Tweety once the smack in her body hit his system and amped him up into a raging killing machine? Maybe she was a robot.
Dark Shadows #34 (Nov 1975).
Sonntag, 26. Dezember 2010
Drinking Companions
Donnerstag, 16. Dezember 2010
Do Not Tease the Golem
Labels:
advertising,
christmas,
Comic Book Ad,
Holidays,
Snowmen
Dienstag, 16. November 2010
The Third Man Theme
So the 1949 film The Third Man is to blame for the proliferation of all those Zithers in schools all over the nation. I don't believe there was one classroom anywhere in the United States in the 1970s that didn't have at least one vintage Zither sitting on a shelf. Where are all those millions of Zithers today? Sitting in landfills leeching toxic chemicals in our ground water? Precariously stacked 15 feet high in a forgotten storage closet in some elementary school, waiting to tumble down accompanied by tragic yet hilarious noises on the vulnerable and unsuspecting heads of curious children exploring the auditorium? Shipped to puzzled children of developing nations as critical teaching supplies? Cool tune, though.
The Zither is a fine example of vintage Trend Ort.
The Zither is a fine example of vintage Trend Ort.
Donnerstag, 28. Oktober 2010
GROG GROWS OWN TAIL
There's a great horror story to be found in this. And you can't beat those pre-graphic arts programs days of cutting, pasting and stenciling your own home-made ad copy.
From Teen-Age Hotrodders #4 (1963).
Donnerstag, 21. Oktober 2010
Dry those tears, Myra
Dienstag, 19. Oktober 2010
Sheena, Queen of the Prom
When I showed this ad to my Mom she asserted that her school would never have allowed such an icon to be used as a mascot since Sheena was such a provocative female figure. I can only speculate that the parents and faculty of the school of the 1940s didn't mind as they had friends and family that was used to glamorous pin-ups in the home, workplace and military barracks and a culture that was a little more rough and tumble from years of war and working the shipyards. I don't know what what the long ago class of that high school was like but I can't help thinking that Sheena would not go over as well today with the students as it may have done in 1947. The image of a Caucasian female dressed in leopard skin as the Queen of an African region would be as more unpopular (though for different reasons) than their current school mascot, what some have called a stereotypical Indian brave.
Samstag, 25. September 2010
Swooshy Peplum
Labels:
advertising,
Comic Book Ad,
fashion,
Pop-Culture
Sunday drive
Hi-Adventure Heroes #2 (August 1969).
Montag, 12. Juli 2010
Dienstag, 26. Januar 2010
Accept no imitations
Dienstag, 12. Januar 2010
The Answers To Everyone's Questions
Blank here.
Donnerstag, 5. November 2009
Your dog saved my baby
Labels:
advertising,
Comic Book Ad,
Dog,
education,
pets
Montag, 28. September 2009
An eye for the boys
From Linda Carter, Student Nurse #6 (July 1962).
Montag, 20. Juli 2009
Facial appearance turns healthy-looking, natural and EVIL
Soap Opera Love #3 (June 1983).
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