johnbasalla said:
I agree with the sentiment about freedom expressed by WhoDat! So, don't vote for people who want to legislate your freedom out of existence because they think they know better then you how you should live your life.
I appreciate the freedom to go to work and sit in a meeting, or to go to a restaurant and NOT breathe in somebody else's cigarette smoke and NOT go home smelling like an ash tray.
John Stuart Mill, the father of libertarianism, had an apt phrase for this: Your rights end at the tip of my nose.
I also notice that many of the same people who think they should have the freedom to blow cigarette smoke into other people's space, also oppose legalization of marijuana and reproductive freedom.
That said, I miss cigarette commercials. I still know all the jingles. There's another thread going about Jack Benny episodes now running on AntennaTV and JLTV. In some episodes, the syndicator has not removed the middle (integrated) Lucky Strike commercial, and the Lucky Strike jingle plays as the closing theme. (Be happy, Go Lucky. Be happy, Go Lucky Strike. Be happy, Go Lucky. Go Lucky Strike today.)
And remember, as reported last week on Weekend Update: Women like guys with good grammar. So, Winston takes good, as a cigarette should.
My favorite of all time, though, was before the Marlboro man: Julie London sings the Marlboro Song. Julie London on the deck of the Staten Island Ferry wearing a trench coat (and, in my imagination, nothing else). Foggy night. Lights of Manhattan in the background. Julie's soft, sultry purr...
"Why don't you settle back, and have a full flavored smoke.
Settle back, with a Marlboro.
Make yourself comfortable whenever you smoke
With a Marlboro cigarette.
You get a lot to like with a Marlboro.
Filter.
Flavor.
Flip top box."
The way she sang "flip top box" made my toes curl.
If you never saw it, it's on You Tube.
Also on You Tube, the Lark ("Show us your pack") commercial, which should be viewed with Stan Freberg's satire of it for Jeno's Pizza Rolls.