Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

In light of Rachel Dolezal, remember Iron Eyes Cody


Most people middle aged or older remember the "Crying Indian" campaign for Keep America Beautiful:





Most of them, by now, also know that Iron Eyes Cody was no Native American. Born to Sicilian Immigrants in southwestern Louisiana in 1904, Espera Oscar de Corti became an actor in his youth, and found that he could "pass" as a Native American in Hollywood.

de Corti, changing his name to "Cody," claimed to have Cherokee-Cree heritage. He played native roles in dozens of westerns, with John Wayne and other stars of the mid-20th century. His chanting was featured in the Joni Michtell song "Lakota." And, of course, he was the Noble Savage face of Keep America Beautiful. All while sharing more heritage with Christopher Columbus than with the people who got the shit end of the Columbian Exchange.

By all accounts Iron Eyes Cody tried to honour his assumed ancestry. He became an activist for Native American causes, and did lecture tours preaching against the harm of alcohol. He married a Seneca archaeologist, Bertha Parker, and they adopted two adopted two Dakota and/or Maricopa children. He even wrote a book about native sign language.

He also invented a backstory, quoted by Glendale News Press from  a 1951 local newspaper article:
“Iron Eyes learned much of his Indian lore in the days when, as a youth, he toured the country with his father, Thomas Long Plume, in a wild west show. During his travels, he taught himself the sign language of other tribes of Indians” 
The article said that the television star and his wife would appear at a Glendale Historical Society event to tell the story of the “Indian Sign Language in Pictures'' and would demonstrate Indian arts and customs. Plus, the couple would bring along their 3-month-old “papoose” Robin (Robert Timothy). All were to be attired in Indian regalia.
In 1996, three years before his death, Iron Eyes Cody was outed as European by his half-sister, May Abshire, who offered proof of the actor's Sicilian parentage to the Times-Picayune. Cody denied the allegations.

Today, such a shocking exposé, proving that an upstanding member of an ethnic community was really an outsider, would be all over social media. Just like Rachel Dolezal.

I'm having a hard time digging up any initial reactions to Iron Eyes Cody's outing from indigenous people in the United States or Canada. How is he remembered? Did he help make native issues more visible, or did he obnoxiously appropriate an oppressed culture that didn't belong to him?

Please comment below. It's moderated, but I'll approve it ASAP.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

1979: O.J. Simpson's 'third leg' sells boots in Playboy #TBT


When I was scanning an old NORML ad for today's Osocio post, I stumbled across this bizarre pre-Photoshop ad for Dingo Boots.

The copy, "the man's all legs" refers to the fact that then (as now) he held the record for the highest single season yards-per-game average in the NFL. But considering this ad was placed in a 1979 Playboy magazine, you have to wonder if the old "third leg" pun was in play.

People younger than me, who only know OJ Simpson from his murder trial, may not realize what a huge deal this man was in the '70s. I still have my original copy of The Book Of Lists that gives the results of an August, 1976, Ladies' Home Journal poll of children's "Top 10 Heroes And Heroines."

Here are the results:

Girls
1. O.J. Simpson

2. Neil Armstrong     
3. Robert Redford
4. Elton John
5. Billie Jean King
6. Mary Tyler Moore
7. John Wayne
8. Chris Evert
9. Katherine Hepburn
10. Henry Kissinger

Boys

1. O.J. Simpson
2. Elton John
3. John Wayne
4. Chris Evert
5. Neil Armstrong
6. Joe Namath
7. Henry Kissinger
8. Robert Redford
9. Gerald Ford
10. Mary Tyler Moore

Times sure have changed.

Thanks to Kerry for the ad

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Forget Double Downs and Dorito tacos... this is a pizza with a crust made of Kraft Dinner

Via lolriot
I guess there's nothing new under the sun. If this ad is from the '80s, which I'll assume from the font and layout, the Kraft beat KFC, Taco Bell, and even Epic Meal Time in the innovation of extreme junk food mashups.

This pizza with a Kraft Dinner (Mac & Cheese, for my American readers) crust is both intriguing and horrifying. Anyone up to test-kitchening it?

Monday, March 3, 2014

Dirty old ads for male-only spaces

Via Retronaut
We tend to think of the mid-20th century as a prudish era, but it was only that way in public. In bars (top), garages (centre) and men's magazines (bottom) women were presented as sexually-available playthings — even as they were expected to be virginal angels or dutiful wives in the outside world.



This was the time of our parents and grandparents, when sexual discussion and fantasy was the privilege of men. Which is why pool halls and barbershops were off-limits to my mother, when she grew up in small-town Canada.


It's not that we're any more or less dirty-minded than previous generations. We just brought it out in the open, where the differences between harmless jokes, sexist tripe, and serious harassment are exposed in the light.

Personally, I like it better that way.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Can this 1974 "Raped by Mick Jagger" ad be real?


It has to be a hoax. I truly hope so, anyway.

I just saw this posted in the Facebook group "1960's and 1970's Advertisements". From there I tracked it back to a post from last June in Anorak. The oldest post I found was on Flickr from 2008.

Does anyone have provenance on this? Claimed to be from a 1974 "rock magazine," it parodies a long-running campaign for Maidenform begun by the William Weintrob Advertising Agency in New York:

Via Blogspot
So, if you combine 1970s political incorrectness, the bad-boy image of the rock press, a cheap shot at consumerism, and a wink at the contemporary rumours about a Bowie-Jagger affair, would you end up with such an ad?

If you have any information about this, please comment below.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

1972 Bowie review is a good reminder for all music critics

Via That Eric Alper

Every once in a while, I find it good to remind myself that every new movement in popular music provokes curmudgeonly dismissal. Jazz, country, early rock 'n' roll, funk, electronica, rap, dance... no matter how good an artist is, there's never a shortage of people who simply don't get it.

This news clipping from Memphis in 1972 is one of those reminders:

Via Guerrilla Monster Films
"David Bowie probably could be a talented musician. But his show is not selling music. He has substituted noise for music, freaky stage gimmicks for talent, and covers it all up with volume."
The live album recorded in California slightly later on that tour, long a favourite bootleg for Bowie fans, had its first "official" release in 2008. It has 4.5/5 stars on Allmusic. (Not to mention that the studio album he was touring ranks on almost everyone's all-time "top" lists.)

How many of today's musicians have been described in similar terms? And how will history judge them?

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Not your mother's milk calendar

aurumlight.com

Despite what you may have heard on the internet, these images are not for any of the upcoming Milk Calendars produced by dairy farmers' organizations. They're part of a series of "Milky Pinups" by photographer Jaroslav Wieczorkiewicz.

aurumlight.com

Mr. Wieczorkiewicz is somewhat of a specialist in liquid effects, which he teaches in a touring workshop. Of this series, he says "This time I thought it will be cool to approach the liquid theme in a more relaxed and funny way. So we threw some colours into the mix and came up with a personal Milky PinUp tribute to my favourites pinup style artists."

aurumlight.com

If you're concerned about the overt and antiquated sexism in the images (especially the clichés of ironing and weight-watching) I can at least say that the photographer was true to his source material:

aurumlight.com

Most of the reference pin-ups are by Gil Elvgren, who was a master of the genre. Whether these interpretations, with their biologically-correct yet somehow unsettling combination of breasts and milk, are great homage, technically interesting, sexually objectifying or just plain weird... is up to you. But there will be a 2014 calendar. Just not an industry-sponsored one.

Thanks to Ivan for sharing Behance coverage of this.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

The "tiny" world of the 1961 housewife


This 1961 Boston Globe ad by BBDO stars a certain Pat White as the saddest housewife I have ever seen in an ad:



The weird part of it is that she's supposed to be fulfilled by this isolated existence, but when she says "I wouldn't change a single peanut butter and jelly sandwich of it" you expect her to head for the medicine cabinet for some phenobarbital.

Instead, she pours a cup of tea and opens the Globe, to be reminded that there is a great big world out there. One she can only read about, briefly, before returning to the soul-deadening housework.

Sure, times have changed. But not for everyone. Jezebel just ran a post today about some place called "Fix The Family" that thinks women should not go to college/university because "If we look COMPREHENSIVELY at the Catholic doctrine, we’ll see very little that promotes a woman working outside the home" (ALLCAPS not mine)

You've come a long way, maybe?

Tip via AdAge

Monday, July 29, 2013

Creepiest movie poster of all time?



I was just perusing Slate's "A Brief History of the Bikini" when this image jumped out and touched me inappropriately:



IMDB provides this plot summary:
Baby photographer Ronnie Jackson, on death row in San Quentin, tells reporters how he got there: taking care of his private-eye neighbor's office, Ronnie is asked by the irresistible Baroness Montay to find the missing Baron. There follow confusing but sinister doings in a gloomy mansion and a private sanatorium, with every plot twist a parody of thriller cliches. What are the villains really after? Can Ronnie beat a framed murder rap?

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Queen's University featured in sexist old MGB video


The Facebook page Vintage Kingston shared this hilariously outdated 1960s promotional clip for MGB cars, set at my alma mater, Queen's University:



My Mom went to Queens around this time. I'll bet it wasn't nearly as hilarious to live through that sexist era as it is to look back at its primitive views on women.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Sex as predation: Nothing new here

Via peepgame.net
It's a very old, and very tired, cliché. Women hunt men. Men hunt women:



And yet the ad industry keeps churning it up. The latest is from Baci lingerie:



Just goes to show that originality and creative storytelling are less valued in the ad world than good old tits and ass. (Or as Don Cornelius' character in Tapeheads called them, "Production Value")

Tip via Ads of The World

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Monday, April 29, 2013

This 40-year-old PSA will start your week off with a "WTF"?



If this woman looks familiar, don't be surprised. It's Joanna Cassidy, aka Zhora the Replicant from Blade Runner, aka Dolores from Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, aka Margaret from Six Feet Under.

Back in 1973, she was known from a couple of cop films, but not well enough to be named in this Ad Council PSA about forest fires. Instead, her sultry delivery seems to be a generic play on the "sex sells" cliché with a bizarre surprise ending:



Interesting that sex in advertising was already a target for parody forty years ago. And yet many advertisers continue to use women's sexuality to deliver unrelated messages to us with no irony at all.

Via Smokey Bear's YouTube channel.


Tuesday, March 26, 2013

This vintage ad illustration makes photoshopped ads look realistic by comparison




Retrogasm recently posted this old Jantzen girdle ad from the 1940s. 

Here are a couple more, via allgraphically.com (the second is fromt he '50s):



Portraying unrealistic body types in ads and fashion is nothing new. The difference between fashion illustration and manipulated photos, however, is that it is easy to mistake the latter for reality. 

The impossibly long and slender ladies in the ads above can more easily be dismissed as cartoons.

Ralph Lauren ad, via Photoshop Disasters

Via ynaija.com

Miu Miu ad via The Frisky

And that's the problem with digital image manipulation: It lets impressionable young minds believe they're looking at reality, rather than fantasy.

Jantzen was originally a swimsuit company. It's interesting to note that its ads for swimwear around the same time celebrated the way it exaggerated "curves":


via allgraphically.com

Here, the hourglass shape (itself a challenging, if more biologically useful beauty ideal) is the thing. And once again, it is exaggerated.

And it still is...


Via Joe Crazy











Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Vintage ads showing women as trophy kills



I recently caught this ad on Sociological Images' Twitter feed. While vintage ad sexism is easy enough to find, I'd never seen this one before. It lives on the site for Lucky Tiger, a men's grooming products brand, and Time says it's from 1957.

Apparently, taxidermied women was a thing in the 50s. This one is quite well known:

Via Retronaut


But it was still going on in the '70s:

Via Fashion Rat


Hunting metaphors have long been part of the culture when it comes to "courting", but taking it to its logical conclusion is beyond bizarre.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

1882 mechanical toy catalogue is an embarrassing look at old stereotypes




This 1882 catalogue for The Automatic Toy Works of New York was just posted on Retronaut. I'll let these excerpts speak for themselves. Then, let us never speak of them again.




See the rest here.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Wheat Board ad uses ironic pin-up, takes a threshing


Using images from more sexist eras in modern ads can be tricky business. If people trust your motives, it can be sassy and ironic. But if your motives are questionable, it can just make you look out-of-touch.

I will guess that the ad above, created for the Canadian Wheat Board, was intended to be sassy and ironic. But it was not taken that way. According to Adfreak's David Kiefaber, "The ad has drawn criticism from the National Farmer's Union for using what critics say is an irrelevant and sexist image to hype the Wheat Board's services."

"What an image of a long-legged woman straddling a fence has to do with selling grain is beyond me," Joan Brady, NFU women’s president said in a news release. 
Brady said the CWB apparently doesn't realize that women are farmers and make decisions about who they want to do business with. 
"Whether in our own right or in partnership, we are deeply involved in all aspects of farming," she said.
I think the problem here is that the Wheat Board is in an industry that is perceived as conservative and old-school. So even if they approved the image as a way to seem more hip, because of the context they were taken at face value. You could advertise a bar or a rock concert with this. But perhaps it's too soon for a big agriculture to be postmodern.

The image is a 1969 Gil Elvgren pin-up titled "Hi-Ho, Silver". 


Sunday, January 27, 2013

Telling women to send their boyfriends and sons to war


These posters are part of a series featured on Retronaut. At the beginning of the First World War in 1914, enlistment in the UK was still completely voluntary. Contrary to the accepted myth that every man was lining up to fight, the British Army actually had a hard time getting its numbers up. By 1916, conscription was enacted to compel service.



Thursday, January 17, 2013

Is advertising clutter getting worse?



Or are the media just getting more diverse? Whenever this topic comes up, I bring up how cluttered with ads the physical urban environment of a century past was. In the days before electronic media, but after the emergence of commercial brands, there was a time when every square foot of public space seemed like a potential ad medium.

These Retronaut photos of NYC's Times Square, circa 1900, are a good example of that.