• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

A childhood Christmas memory that I'd sure love to hear again!

MHB said:
ArtSpooner said:
I remember a jingle from the 50s or possibly the early 60s that went:

It's NEPCOnomical, NEPCOtritious
Hooray for the king
Well a ring-a-ding-ding

I remember the song, but I can't remember what the product was. It sounds food related. Anyone know?

NEPCO all-beef franks.

An ad from about 1951 (no jingle in this one):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLmJaT9XeDA
I thought it might be, but the "King" confused me. Now I see that the hot dog is wearing a crown. So that explains it. I can't say that franks, beans, and cheese sounds too appealing. I also remember "child mild" hot dogs. I don't know if they were Nepco, Essem, or another brand but I'm pretty sure that they were N.E. based.
 
I thought it might be, but the "King" confused me. Now I see that the hot dog is wearing a crown. So that explains it. I can't say that franks, beans, and cheese sounds too appealing. I also remember "child mild" hot dogs. I don't know if they were Nepco, Essem, or another brand but I'm pretty sure that they were N.E. based.
[/quote]

A look at Trademarkia shows "child-mild" was a trademark of the Columbia Packing Co. of Boston. The "newspaper archive" suggests they used "child-mild" with their "trimline" brand, Gem. I remember Bozo the Clown hawking "child-mild" franks, telling the child audience that they weren't "spicy."

And I remember the Essem jingle, too ("Yes'm it's Essem . . .").
 
MHB said:
A look at Trademarkia shows "child-mild" was a trademark of the Columbia Packing Co. of Boston. The "newspaper archive" suggests they used "child-mild" with their "trimline" brand, Gem. I remember Bozo the Clown hawking "child-mild" franks, telling the child audience that they weren't "spicy."

I remember hearing those ads on WBZ in the early-ish 60s. ISTR the jingle going something along the line of "there's only one ounce of pepper in every 5000 (?) child mild Gem franks". Apparently they weren't distributed in north/central N.H., don't ever recall seeing them in stores.
 
Hi there folks. Well, today I am ABSOLUTELY ELATED! Unfortunately Christmas day was a very sad and lonely day for me, and the only family member that I have, my younger sister is not too happy with me at the moment because she sent a package from Massachusetts up here to me in Canada, and I ended up having to pay $60 duty on it because of the price value that she put on one of the items in the package on the custom form. Anyway, man oh man, this makes up for it. joemarine, you have no idea how totally blown away and happy I was to discover that you had actually found that famous Whitings eggnog jingle anywhere on the net. I actually discovered your entry about this last Saturday night. As I think I've mentioned before, I am totally blind, which means that I need to use a screen reader to navigate around on the net, and in my case, the software package that I use is called Window Eyes produced by a company called GW Micro in Fort Wayne Indiana. Now, most of the time screen readers cause few problems and I can access most websites with no problem at all. Unfortunately though, this Bob and Ray page wouldn't open for me at all, and in fact the link you provided actually made my computer totally freeze, and I completely lost the
Window Eyes voice so I had to reboot, but then it happened again! But I knew there must be some way for me to gain access to this Bob and Ray December 23, 1950 show so that I could download it. Well, by Sunday night I had managed to download the html page but still, when I tried to open it with my browser which by the way is Internet explorer version 8, again my computer froze.

Well, over the next couple of days I ended up uploading a lot of special Christmas programs to my Audioldies website so I just didn't have time to mess around with this html page. But I've been looking for this Whitings eggnog jingle for so long, that I was not going to let anything even an annoying glitch stop me. I was bound and determined to find a way to access this Bob and Ray show and download it. Suddenly just about an hour ago, I got the idea to add the .txt extension to the html file which made it a text page, and I had to wade through a whole lot of stuff on the page, but at least that way I was able to find the actual links that would allow me to download the show in question, and again joemarine, I have to thank you so incredibly much for making this Whitings eggnog jingle available through the link to this Bob and Ray show on the Radio Echoes website.

Well, I am going to make this jingle available to all of you via my own website in two versions. One version will be just the jingle and the second version will include the Bob and Ray tag after the jingle. You even get to hear the old Whiting milk company phone number the way those numbers used to be given beginning with those old exchanges. Anyway, click here to
download just the Whitings eggnog jingle
or if you prefer,
click here to stream the jingle.
Now, if you want to hear the Whitings eggnog jingle complete with the Bob and Ray tag, then
download it from this link
or
stream it here.

By the way, Artspooner, MHB and oldbones, I too remember very well, the catchy little jingle that WBZ used to play a lot back in 1964 for Child Mild gem franks which had only one ounce of pepper in every five thousand franks. By the way oldbones, you mentioned in your post not ever seeing any Child Mild Gem Franks up in north central NH. I'm just curious to know where you lived at the time. If you don't feel like volunteering that info with the entire forum, please feel free to shoot a PM to me. I'm just curious because I love the granite state and have so many fond memories of visiting a friend's cottage up in Moultonborough, and then just a couple of years later, my dad's parents moved from East Providence up to Bartlett and that's how I became familiar with Skip Sherman, Joe Dodge, Jeff Hall and Peter Derkey at WBNC in Conway. Sure wish I could somehow get even one aircheck of WBRL in Berlin from the sixties or early seventies. Anyway, I do have some other Boston area commercial jingles, and as I find them, I'll post them for you folks if you're interested. I certainly remember that jingle "There's something about a Muntz
TV" very well. And how about this one? "They treat you right at the blue and white, Bay State stations." That was for a local Massachusetts gasoline called Bay State gasoline. And how about the jingles for Suffolk Downs and the Charlestown Savings Bank? Ah, those were the good old days.

Sam
 
I remember hearing the jingle too - it might have been later than 1962, as I would have been too young to remember it then. Perhaps '64 perhaps, potentially after that. My folks would listen to 'BZ, could have been on there. Catchy tune - definitely reminds me of the holidays.
 
One old jingle that sticks in my mind is for Mal's (marvelous Mal's, your dollar's pal)

"You'll love to shop where savings are tops and Mal's tops 'em all. Top's 'em all? Sure does! Mal's."
 
Two Christmas memories - one of my teen years and one as an adult,

As a teen I always looked forward to Jess Cain's Ode to To Christmas which started " ...And now it comes down to the final days...."
I had the opportunity to ask Jess about it, sadly months before he passed, and he didn't remember it. Does anyone else know it or have a copy of it. Jess Cain will always be missed. He was almost a part of every family that listened to him on WHDH 850. The real 850 before Entercom trashed it.

Also, and this is available of the memorial website to Jerry Williams - his reading of Dylan Thomas' " A Child's Christmas in Wales." Some other station should pick it up and broadcast it. Maybe, someone like Morgan White, Jr. or even Jordan Rich.
 
I'd love to find a copy of the "Londonderry Faire" jingle......"A memorable Christmas event...tra la la la la la....is Londonderry Faire"......
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom