Cigarette Advertising

Shadows

Well-Known Member
#2
lol wtf.

Yah, it took forever but they got banned b/c ppl got offended that it was obvious that they were trying to attract very young consumers.

The younger, the longer they are likely to smoke...and the older you are, either you are already smoking or you could give a rats ass by then.

I personally never smoked a cig. A black and Mild and swisher a few times but only socially.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#3
Proof that advertising works:

Up until, oh I dunno, something like 2001/2002 - there were still billboard ads for cigarettes in this country. TV and radio ads had been banned for a long time I guess, but you'd still see these billboard advertisements whilst out and about.

I'd ALWAYS see a billboard for the brand "Lambert & Butler" on the road near to my aunts house. They used to run these comedy-adverts where there'd be a guy on one side of the billboard saying something, and a Butler/Jeeves sort of character on the other side replying with a witty remark (here's one I found on Google):



Anyway, I guess the company owned this particular billboard as it would always have their ads on it.

When I started smoking (when I was 11), the first cigarette I had was Camel brand (because I was in France with a friend and his family, and it was all they served).....but when I got back to the UK and actually habitually started smoking, for the first few years, my brand of choice was always Lambert & Butler.
 

Prize Gotti

Boots N Cats
Staff member
#5
I remember the billboard ads very well, use to see them all the time. I also remember television commercials in the 80s for rolling tobacco and cigars, but never for cigs, cig ads got banned in the 60s I think.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#7
They "served" cigarettes? And to an eleven year old? "Would you like some cookies, milk, cigarettes?"
I clearly remember me and my friend buying a beer and a pack of cigarettes at the bar. They just didn't give a fuck in France I guess. I couldn't have been older than 11, because I stopped being friends with that guy not long after that.

It's tough for many Americans to understand just how liberal and lax Europe is when it comes to these kind of things.

I mean, me and my friends regularly walked into stores and bought hard alcohol from the age of 12/13. I remember smoking weed and getting drunk on lunch break from school at that age also.

And places like France are even more liberal than the UK is.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#8
True. I was smoking when I was 14 or so and I never had a problem buying cigarettes. When I was in England they only asked me if I'm really 18 (or was 16 the legal age at that time?) and I was like "yeah" and there was no problem. Same with alcohol. I think once or twice I had to ask someone else to buy me some beers.
 

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