Virginia Slims Advertisement
1 media/virgina slims 60s_thumb.jpeg 2020-01-23T20:15:56+00:00 Katie Bauer edee6c7ef934f719db613c56c705c45916075d84 1 1 Virginia Slims advertisement from the 1960's showcasing a made up "historic" event when a woman was punished for smoking. Tag line You've Come a Long Way" plain 2020-01-23T20:15:56+00:00 Katie Bauer edee6c7ef934f719db613c56c705c45916075d84This page is referenced by:
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2020-01-10T18:57:25+00:00
Flappers, Suffragettes and Cigarettes
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After World War One, women demand more equality and freedom, and take up cigarette smoking. Cigarette manufacturers see and opportunity.
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2020-02-13T17:06:57+00:00
After World War I, younger women began to reject old ways and customs and embraced more modern styles of dress and behavior. Flappers emerged after World War I, and were seen as younger women who wore shorter skirts, wore their hair in a bob and were sometimes also suffragettes. Cigarettes became an integral part of what became known as the flapper persona. The challenge for cigarette manufacturers was to make the adaptation of cigarettes among women more acceptable to a wider group of women.
Changes were not just about clothes, and women were also increasing demanding equal rights. Cigarettes could be seen as part of this.
Girls begin smoking to demonstrate that they are strictly modern and up-to-date in their views and habits of life. Girls, too, make the point that they have as good a right to smoke as have men. (Benson 193)
In this change was an opportunity for the tobacco industry, which began to advertise cigarettes directly to women. These often featured celebrities or society women endorsing the cigarette, and sometimes showed cigarettes as part of an elegant life.
The head of American Tobacco Company, George Washington Hill, saw the female audience as "a gold mine right in our front yard." Lingering stigmas against women smoking in public seemed and barrier to sales, and Hill wanted to find ways to remove that stigma and encourage more women to smoke in restaurants or on the street. He believed women would smoke more if they could smoke everywhere.How can we get women to smoke on the street? They're smoking indoors. But damn it, if they spend half the time outdoors and we can get 'em to smoke outdoors, we'll damn near double our female market.
Hill hired a leader in the emerging field of public relations and marketing, Edward Bernays. During World War I, Bernays worked for the Committee on Public Information where we developed his views on creating effective propaganda. A nephew of Freud, Bernays sought to use psychology to shape public opinion. He believed that only using advertising was not a good enough tactic--people needed to believe that they totally exercised free choice in deciding to smoke, and should feel they came to the decision on their own without influence. Brandt, A. The Cigarette Century. p. 87. Bernays believed that there was a relationship between the desire for equal rights and the right to vote for women, and the right to smoke in public. Wishing to establish this more widely in the minds of women without overtly advertising, he devised a staged "news" event to have women at the annual New York City Easter Parade light up Lucky Strikes.. He enlisted the help of a committed feminist, Ruth Hale, who invited women to come to the parade to smoke, urging:
Bernays and Hale successfully recruited a few prominent women to appear in the parade smoking.Women!
Light another torch of freedom!
Fight another sex taboo.
It's now a matter of some debate how successful the stunt truly was in promoting smoking in public for women. Bernays claimed that it was a hugely successful and seminal event, but perhaps this was part of his own publicity in shaping of his reputation. Modern historians have started to doubt his claim, and have shown that coverage was more modest than Bernays claimed in his memoir. The New York Times did cover the parade and included a mention of the women smoking, but not in an extensive way. As a master of public relations it is possible that the story of "Torches for Freedom" as a great victory for cigarette sales was an example itself of fake news.Murphree, V. (2015). Edward bernays's 1929 “Torches of freedom” march: Myths and historical significance. American Journalism, 32(3), 258-281. doi:10.1080/08821127.2015.1064681
As seen in the advertisement below, Lucky Strikes cigarettes emphasized the event and celebrated the freedom of women to smoke anywhere. The theme of equality for women was revisited in the Virginia Slims advertising of the 1965's-1980's.
Whatever worked, publicity stunts, advertising or product placement in movies and television, cigarettes consumption took off after the 1920's, largely through increased sales to women. Cigarette manufacturers also heavily promoted their product in movies and television.
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2020-02-13T15:17:39+00:00
Light a Torch for Freedom!
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Cigarette manufacturers attempt to influence public opinion on women smoking in public.
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2020-04-16T17:02:12+00:00
New attitudes toward women and smoking had helped sell more cigarettes in the period after the first world war. But for the head of American Tobacco Company, George Washington Hill, those gains were not enough. He saw the female audience as "a gold mine right in our front yard" which they were not properly exploiting due to some (Brandt 82) Lingering stigmas against women smoking in public seemed and barrier to sales, and Hill wanted to find ways to remove that stigma and encourage more women to smoke in restaurants or on the street. Hill believed women would smoke more if they could smoke everywhere:How can we get women to smoke on the street? They're smoking indoors. But damn it, if they spend half the time outdoors and we can get 'em to smoke outdoors, we'll damn near double our female market. (Brandt 83)
Hill hired a leader in the emerging field of public relations and marketing, Edward Bernays. During World War I, Bernays worked for the Committee on Public Information where he developed his views on creating effective propaganda. A nephew of Freud, Bernays sought to use psychology to shape public opinion. He believed that only using advertising was not a good enough tactic--people needed to believe that they totally exercised free choice in deciding to smoke, and should feel they came to the decision on their own without influence. (Brandt 87). Bernays genius lay in seeing that flapper society was not only about clothes and hairstyles, but also about women wanting more freedom and equality. Cigarettes could be seen as part of this.
Girls begin smoking to demonstrate that they are strictly modern and up-to-date in their views and habits of life. Girls, too, make the point that they have as good a right to smoke as have men. (Benson 193)
Bernays recognized that he could exploit the already existing relationship between a desire to be equal and a desire to smoke, pushing the right to smoke in public for women part of the push for equality. Wishing to establish this more widely in the minds of women without overtly advertising, he devised a staged "news" event to have women at the annual New York City Easter Parade light up Lucky Strikes.. He enlisted the help of a committed feminist, Ruth Hale, who invited women to come to the parade to smoke, urging:
Bernays and Hale successfully recruited a few prominent women to appear in the parade smoking.Women!
Light another torch of freedom!
Fight another sex taboo.
(Brandt 85)
The New York Times did cover the parade and included a mention of the women smoking, They wrote:About a dozen young women strolled back and forth between St. Thomas's and St. Patrick's while the parade was at its peak, ostentatiously smoking cigarettes. Two were asked which brand they favored, and they named it. One of the group explained the cigarettes were "torches of freedom" lighting the way to the day when women would smoke on the street as casually as men.
Lucky Strikes Cigarettes emphasized the event in advertising and celebrated the freedom of women to smoke anywhere.
The theme of equality for women was revisited in the Virginia Slims advertising of the 1965's-1980's.
While it is not possible to look back and measure how successful (or not) advertising and publicity campaigns were, it is clear that cigarette consumption took off after the 1920's, largely through increased sales to women. Interviews conducted by advertisers to judge the effectiveness of the Virginia Slims advertising demonstrates just how effective that advertising was embedding in women's minds that cigarettes were a signal of a strong, independent and sexy woman. "Sort of represent the type of person I think I am: A liberated, contemporary female." (at 0.35 minutes). Another pointed out that the "Woman is no longer like the way they had her in the olden times with the long dresses...now they show her sexy and like with the cigarette. She's like alive now." (at 8:20).
In his memoir, Bernays claimed the torches of freedom stunt was a hugely successful and seminal event in using a staged event to influence behavior. Modern historians have started to question how successful it truly was, or if the story is an example of Bernay's genius for creating fake news about the success of the stunt (Murphree 258-281).