1. General Mills Jets cereal with Rocky and Bullwinkle (Boxing)
2. Cartoon Clip of Hanna Barbera's World of Super Adventure
3. Pepsi Cola (Pepsi and Pete and the Snowman)
4. Bromo Seltzer (with the train)
5. Bardahl (with Sticky Valves)
6. Flintstones clip with Alka Seltzer
7. Mr. Clean (with the famous jingle)
8. Sinclair with Dino the Dinosaur (has nickel, nickel, nickel and the Transistor Radio)
9. Space Ghost and Dino Boy 1966 Promo
10. 1964 Welchade with the Flintstones (Golf)
11. DX Gasoline (Monkey)
12. Roman Meal Diet Plan (with the growling lion)
13. Post Alpha Bits Cereal with the Postman
14. Peter Paul Mounds candy bar (with the irresistable urge)
15. Peter Paul Almond Joy candy bar (with the irresistable urge)
16. Cheerios with Rocky and Bullwinkle and Dudley Do Right (Old Mother Hubbard)
**These commercials are from my Best of Animated Commercials Set, ranging from the 1950s to the early 1970s. Also includes clips from cartoons**
The "Alpha-Bits" postman was known as "Lovable Truly" (Bob McFadden provided his voice)- introduced in 1963 before he became a regular character on "LINUS THE LIONHEARTED", the Saturday morning cartoon series General Foods packaged to sell Post cereals on CBS from 1964 through '66 (this ad is from 1965, when Post cereals came in new "compact boxes"). The Peter Paul ad is from 1965. The "Cheerios" ad is from 1962, when it originally appeared on "THE BULLWINKLE SHOW".
fromthesidelines 2 months ago
The "FLINTSTONES" spot is a sponsor I.D. from the first two seasons, for Miles Laboratories, their primary sponsor at the time; another variation was where Wilma asked, "Where's the One-A-Day Brand Multiple Vitamins?", with Fred pulling it out {"Right here, in the apothecary-style bottle!"}. I had one of those Sinclair transistor radios; my father got it for me when he stopped in at a Sinclair station in 1966 [sounded pretty good, too!]. Paul Frees is the announcer in the DX ad...
fromthesidelines 2 months ago
The "Jets" ad is from 1960, originally seen on "ROCKY AND HIS FRIENDS"; the Pepsi spot is a theatrical advertisement- probably from 1939, when "Pepsi" {the tall one} and "Pete" (the short one) began to appear in their newspaper and magazine ads, variously drawn by Rube Goldberg and Stan Randall (short color/black & white ads in movie theaters were quite common from the '30s through the '60s)...
fromthesidelines 2 months ago
Clip #2 intro sounds like Lex Luthor. Fantastic set!
dignityshmignity 4 months ago
Sticky Valves...love it.
LastTree 5 months ago
haha, these are better then most of the ads now'n days
Divixons 9 months ago
The Pepsi looks like a Fleischer theatric ad...or maybe Van Buren.
goodmaro 11 months ago