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The Male Mystique1 of 24
by Christina Austin
We recently compiled lists of the best and worst ads from 2012. It's instructive to see just how much better modern advertising is compared to "modern" advertising from 40 years ago.
So we flipped through the pages of "The Male Mystique," a book about vintage men's advertising by Jacques Boyreau, and picked out the worst ads from men's magazines in the 1960s and 1970s.
Some of the brands, like Gordon's gin and Lee jeans, ran ads that would be regarded as parodies today. Others, like the defunct Broomsticks pants company, appear to have doomed the brands they were trying to promote by tying them too closely to the fads of the time.
Even in 1976, some advertisers were still suffering from a 1960s hangover.
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The Male Mystique2 of 24
This 1971 Hush Puppies ad is one of the company's most recognizable pieces of vintage promo material. Numerous copies of this ad are currently being sold on eBay.
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The Male Mystique3 of 24
Amazingly, pipe-smoking among the 20-something set never caught on.
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The Male Mystique4 of 24
You can tell that companies were trying to play off whatever random pop culture events are trendy no matter how irrelevant it is to the brand.
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The Male Mystique5 of 24
Following the 1967 law requiring cigarette companies to warn consumers about the harmful effects of smoking, this 1975 ad features a surgeon general's warning.
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The Male Mystique6 of 24
Tiparillo had an extremely odd view about the effect of cigarettes on female musicians.
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The Male Mystique7 of 24
This 1967 ad looks like it may have provided inspiration for current Axe advertisements.
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The Male Mystique8 of 24
The $10 slacks promoted in this 1969 ad would cost more than $60 today.
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The Male Mystique9 of 24
These $3 shirts from 1967 would cost $20 today.
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The Male Mystique10 of 24
In 1971, Lee ran a series of ads with the lion head theme, all with the slogan "Lee can change your image."
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The Male Mystique11 of 24
This was how Gordon's saw itself in 1969.
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The Male Mystique12 of 24
This 1969 ad has fine text that reads "More than a billiard table, a piece of fine furniture. Get one for the (heh, heh) kids."
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The Male Mystique13 of 24
This Broomsticks slacks ad from 1971 was one of a string of incredibly sexist ads from the company.
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The Male Mystique14 of 24
This 1972 Winston ad features a spin off of the cigarette company's slogan: "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should."
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The Male Mystique15 of 24
The space obsession of the '60s and '70s permeated advertisements during this period as well.
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The Male Mystique16 of 24
Tipalet's tagline makes this perhaps the company's most well-known ad.
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The Male Mystique17 of 24
David Ogilvy's 'Man in the Hathaway Shirt,' with his trademark eye patch, was regarded as the height of adventurous sophistication at the time.
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The Male Mystique18 of 24
This ad was racist and made a rape joke at the same time.
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The Male Mystique19 of 24
Note the text at the bottom of the ad for "design your own" beach jeans.
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The Male Mystique20 of 24
Botany 500 suits were worn by many leading TV stars, including Dick Van Dyke and Sherman Hemsley on 'The Jeffersons.'
Related: The 20 Most Popular Ads on YouTube in 2012
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The Male Mystique21 of 24
Somehow, the Big Brute brand never survived.
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The Male Mystique22 of 24
This appears to be some sort of Lone Ranger/Jewish joke.
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The Male Mystique23 of 24
This kind of thing happened all the time in the 1960s.
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The Male Mystique24 of 24Next: The Funniest Photos You Will See Today
Sport coat maker Stanley Blacker is still in business today despite this ad.
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