B.O.G.A.R.T.
Recruit
★★★★★
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2020
- Posts
- 434
Did it really take diversity hires in their favorite capeshit films and fast food ads for white nationalists to get 'awakened' to capitalism and the nature of mass advertising? Like usual, even when he get things almost right then decides to dunk dive from a retarded ledge in the last frame.
The marketing technique alt-rightcels have discovered as definite proof of a jewish plot has been already analyzed by Edward Bernays in his 1928 book "Propaganda". Bernays' was interested in Freud's theory that irrational forces drive human behavior. His book soon caught the attention of a tobacco magnate named George Washington Hill who just became the president of American Tobacco Co. and was interested in expanding his Lucky Strike brand to a wider audience. Washington hired Bernays and gave him a task -- to convince women to smoke -- but remember this was in the late 1920s when smoking was deemed a masculine trait -- smoking was absolutely out of bounds for women, it was considered a taboo, a woman that smoked was either a lesbo bulldyke or a tramp (meaning a slut back in the day). The marketing strategy had a tough sell, since smoking was seen as a mans thing, you couldn't sell it as 'feminine' and 'attractive' to women. Washington and American Tobacco Co., to broaden the market for Lucky Strike brand, decided to endorse the feminist movement by equating smoking with challenging male power --
-- "CIGARETTES?" -- Lucky Strike did a "BURGERS?" almost 100 years ago, and it was done by a wasp guy for the purpose of selling cigarette packs to women, for this pandering to feminist shit irrelevant to tobacco was required. Lucky Strike went woke and became a hit, amidst the depression they were packing it up Lucky Strike constituted 38% of all cigarette sales . The "Torches of Freedom" campaign, which debuted during New York's annual Easter Parade on April 1, 1929. Bernays had procured a list of debutantes from the editor of Vogue magazine and pitched the idea that they could contribute to the expansion of women's rights by lighting up cigarettes and smoking them in the most public of places-- Fifth Avenue. The "Torches of Freedom Parade" was covered not only by the local papers, but also by newspapers nationwide and internationally.Women were no freer for having taken up smoking, but linking smoking to women's rights fostered a feeling of independence.
"WEB HOSTING?" -- Go daddy obviously pushing the incel agenda circa 2013
The marketing technique alt-rightcels have discovered as definite proof of a jewish plot has been already analyzed by Edward Bernays in his 1928 book "Propaganda". Bernays' was interested in Freud's theory that irrational forces drive human behavior. His book soon caught the attention of a tobacco magnate named George Washington Hill who just became the president of American Tobacco Co. and was interested in expanding his Lucky Strike brand to a wider audience. Washington hired Bernays and gave him a task -- to convince women to smoke -- but remember this was in the late 1920s when smoking was deemed a masculine trait -- smoking was absolutely out of bounds for women, it was considered a taboo, a woman that smoked was either a lesbo bulldyke or a tramp (meaning a slut back in the day). The marketing strategy had a tough sell, since smoking was seen as a mans thing, you couldn't sell it as 'feminine' and 'attractive' to women. Washington and American Tobacco Co., to broaden the market for Lucky Strike brand, decided to endorse the feminist movement by equating smoking with challenging male power --
-- "CIGARETTES?" -- Lucky Strike did a "BURGERS?" almost 100 years ago, and it was done by a wasp guy for the purpose of selling cigarette packs to women, for this pandering to feminist shit irrelevant to tobacco was required. Lucky Strike went woke and became a hit, amidst the depression they were packing it up Lucky Strike constituted 38% of all cigarette sales . The "Torches of Freedom" campaign, which debuted during New York's annual Easter Parade on April 1, 1929. Bernays had procured a list of debutantes from the editor of Vogue magazine and pitched the idea that they could contribute to the expansion of women's rights by lighting up cigarettes and smoking them in the most public of places-- Fifth Avenue. The "Torches of Freedom Parade" was covered not only by the local papers, but also by newspapers nationwide and internationally.Women were no freer for having taken up smoking, but linking smoking to women's rights fostered a feeling of independence.
"WEB HOSTING?" -- Go daddy obviously pushing the incel agenda circa 2013
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