1950s Commercials and Vintage Commercials
2,818,175
Published 2015-11-29
A compilation of various 1950s commercials. Life was such a simpler time back then! Relax and enjoy these vintage commercials.
Commercials include:
Coca Cola Commercial
Promoting coca cola as a drink for all ages, but focused on young people.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coca-Cola
JELLO Commercial
JELL-O commercial for the gelatin dessert. Unfortunately, it uses a racist commercial invoking Chinese stereotypes and way of speaking. Definitely couldn't be used today.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jell-O
RITZ Commercial
Ritz crackers commercial featuring a couple.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritz_Crackers
Tootsie Roll Pop Commercial
Tootsie Roll commercial featuring young kids talking about a tootsie pop.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tootsie_Pop
Shasta Shampoo commercial
A vintage shampoo commercial featuring a narrator and a female model using the shasta shampoo.
Skippy Peanut Butter Commercial
Skippy Peanut Butter with a weird abstract advertisement. Not very interesting in my opinion.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skippy_(peanut_butter)
Belair Cigarettes Commercial
This commercial is all about belair cigarettes. What ever happened to this brand?
Mr. Clean commercial
This cool commercial features a housewife using Mr. Clean as a gun, which is neat.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Clean
Maxwell House Coffee Commercial
This commercial features a coffee pot popping along with the background music.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxwell_House
RCA Air Conditioner Commercial
A commercial for RCA Air Conditioner which uses the example of a baby enjoying the coolness of a new air conditioner.
All Comments (21)
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When you skip the regular ads on YouTube to watch old 50’s commercials.
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No one: Not a soul: Jello commercial: poor Chinese baby :(
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This randomly calms me and makes me feel at home I think in my past life I lived in 1950s
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Speaking of Tootsie-Rolls, I can still recall the comercial I watched when I was a litle kid, back in the early '60s: a cartoon of a wise owl holding a Tootsie-Roll pop: "How many licks," Mr Owl said, "does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie-Roll pop? Let's find out." He took one lick and said: "One." He took another lick and said: "Two." He took one more lick and said: "Three." (Mr Owl suddenly crunched down it.) "Three," he said again. Voice of a narrator: "How many licks does it REALLY take to get to the center of a Tootsie Roll pop? The world may NEVER know."
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I willingly watched a bunch of ads
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How tf did every man on tv sound exactly the same in the 50s
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God I've always loved the retro style of the 1950s I would definitely love to go back in time and spend a day in the 50's and the 1930s too
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Turning 70 in two weeks. Feel ancient. I like that!
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When we see an ad today we immediately skip it. We see a 1950 ad we are immediately fascinated.
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Nothing has changed . Teenagers are still into coke.
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I want to see the jello commercial remade for today. People would immediately melt down on social media.
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I love how imaginative and cool those commercials were. Especially the Mr Clean one was almost like a 70s or 80s commercial. I really enjoy these. And it really showcases the quality of the product and makes you want to buy it
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I love how the high school kids look about 27
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What I find interesting in these 50's commercials is that they actually tell you what the product is all about.
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I remember the smell of my grandmothers house when she would use her percolating coffee maker it smelled so good in her house. I love the smell of it!
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In 50 years when I'm dead, someone is going to be skipping YouTube Ads to watch a collection of ads I skipped to watch this ad.
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The commercials of the 1950’s were almost like documentaries
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1950's ads: pOoR cHiNeSe BaBy :( 2019 ads: I CaNt ReAcH lEvEl 2 :(
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My parents had that RCA air conditioner. It was bought six YEARS before I was born. It was still in use until I was in HIGH SCHOOL! (1977) Good luck with THAT now! (Of course, it cost as much as a good used car when it was new..But still. it LASTED!).
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It's cool that Mr. Clean is still around today as is Maxwell House. I know that you'd never get away with that Jell-O commercial today.