The advertisers in comic books of yesteryear had this down to a science. If you wanna sell sea monkeys and body-building kits, if you need to advertise Daisy Air Rifles and crappy Atari 5200 videogames, there's no better place than buying a four-color ad in your upcoming issue of Power Man and Iron Fist or Batman and the Outsiders. And for maximum effect, why not have your crack team of ad managers create a campaign of advertisements that actually are in comic book format? Hokey smokes, McMahon and Tate, I think we're onto something here!:
Ad for International Correspondence Schools from [Uncanny] X-Men #47, September 1968
Click on any ad to super-economy-size it
Ad for GI Joe's Major Mike Power from [Uncanny] X-Men #94, August 1975
Ad for Acclaim's Remote Controller for Nintendo from an early 1990s issue of Incredible Hulk (circa #360?)
Ad for Magic Snake Puzzles from Fantastic Four #251, February 1983
4 comments:
So, according to the advertisers, comic books are read by dropouts, cyborgs, console gamers and jewel thieves. Sounds about right to me...
While I know it's not the true gist of your post, I just HAD to link to this to direct readers here to view the perfect concept of "Fruitpie; Master of the Bakery Arts".
http://sanctumsanctorumcomix.blogspot.com/2009/01/theyre-agamottoliscious.html
I love it.
I can't help feeling disturbed at the image of a little stuffed bull watching Torchwood.
Man, Hostess Fruit Pies were like Kryptonite. They could defeat ANY villain!
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