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ED INK: Bring Back Burma Shave
Removed as we are from the major infestations of outdoor advertising that
radiate out from New York City along the turnpikes and thruways, Newtown's few
billboards tend to take us by surprise when they do pop up along the
roadside... " We now interrupt the landscape to bring you this message ."
For a short time this month, Winston cigarettes interrupted the landscape on
Mount Pleasant and on South Main Street to bring motorists the truly tasteless
message that Winstons were "finally, a butt worth kissing." It seems like
we've come a long way (baby), since we passed those Burma Shave signs years
ago. Though R.J. Reynolds, the makers of Winstons, had finally stumbled on an
image that more accurately reflects the life-enhancing properties of its
product than other cigarette ads we've seen, it was still gross and offensive.
Evidently, many people thought so, too, because R.J. Reynolds canceled the
"butt" ad campaign abruptly. The billboard ads came down even before we had a
chance to photograph them.
Of course, the replacement ad -- a return to Winston's "No Bull" ad campaign
-- isn't much better. We all know that in the context of this ad, Bull is the
shortened version of a familiar and profane compound word. Apparently the
scatologists hold sway in R.J. Reynolds' advertising agency, which some might
think appropriate for a disgusting product that ruins health and shortens
lives.
Clearly this approach to product promotion is geared to be attractive to young
people. The cigarette companies know that 80 percent of all smokers start the
habit before the age of 18. Now that Joe Camel -- another R.J. Reynolds
creation -- has been discredited (parody ads now depict him as "Joe Chemo"),
the company has resorted to hip bathroom talk to attract new young customers.
Fortunately, most of the kids we know are smarter than that; they resist being
manipulated by corporate types.
R.J. Reynolds may think they have covered their "butt" ads once and for all,
and that people will forgive and forget. We won't be happy, however, until all
the cigarette ads come down from the signs on Mount Pleasant and South Main
Street and are replaced by ads for a product that actually has a useful
purpose -- like Burma Shave.