The 1940s were an odd time in the manufacture of cars. For most of the decade automobile plants were converted to make vehicles for the war effort. At the start of the decade we were still in the Great Depression - so people could not afford cars. By the end of the decade the war was one and people had lots of spare cash to spend on cars. That's what makes The History Of Advertising: Automobiles 1940 to 1950 interesting. You get to see how ads were created at both ends of the marketplace. Included here among others you will find a theatrical screen advertisement for one of the last pre World War II automobiles emphasizing Oldsmobile's adaptability under wartime conditions and a series of theatrical commercials hawking the "B-44" line of "handsomer, huskier, heavier" Oldsmobiles. This is the complete track by track list of what is on the DVD: - The Girl on the Magazine Cover - Defense Comes First With Oldsmobile - Oldsmobile Presents The Handsome Husky B-44 - Classic Television Commercials - Olds Minute Movies A few of those films were designed to promote corporate citizenship rather than any specific model of automobile. While it forcefully demonstrates how central automobile manufacturing was to the American economy it even more strikingly shows the effects of the automobile on our landscape. The DVD work on any zone DVD player. It comes with a 30 day money back guarantee and ship in traditional Amaray style DVD cases.
I am a bona-fide, vintage-loving clothesmonger and shoe fiend. I’m not sure how it happened, exactly, but dollars to donuts says it’s as much defined by my love of a great deal as by my love of my grandparents. In edging ever closer to actual adulthood, though, my bargain-loving ways have taken the passenger seat to some longer standing and, dare I say it, practical characteristics: quality and ut...
The two basic types of flat-screen high-definition televisions or HDTVs on the market today are the plasma screen and the LCD. With either choice you get a bright, clean picture in a light package that’s generally about 3 1/2″ thick. Prices have gone down recently on HDTVs, but they are still a major purchase so you want to be certain that you make the right choice. There are some basi...
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