Do You See the Stereotypes?
Product: American Optical Company
Date: 1948
It’s 1948. The war is over, but for many Americans Pearl Harbor is still a raw wound. Just a few years earlier, Japanese-Americans were rounded up by the thousands, robbed of their property and sent to internment camps. Anti-Asian sentiment still runs high.

Out comes this ad with the headline, Whose eyes are better?
Shocked? Surprised? Nope and nope. Racism (and other -isms) are par for the course in vintage advertising.
It’s the next line that’s the jawdropper:
Neither. American eyes are no better than others.
Wow. I was definitely not expecting that.
I’m pretty sure the American Optical Company knew exactly what it was doing when it ran a picture of an Asian woman and a white woman side by side with a provocative headline. I’d bet money they figured to catch a lot of people who were confident they knew the answer.
Then that little word: Neither.
Pow. Stereotypes exploded.
It probably caught a lot of people by surprise, just as it caught me by surprise more than 60 years later, albeit for different reasons. Whoever penned that ad was a savvy copywriter, skilled at eliciting reaction.
Technorati Tags: vintage advertising, racism in advertising, Asian eyes, optician, American Optical Company, eye doctor, 1940s advertisement
Because “New” Is Forever When You Call It “Smart”
Product: Admiral Radio-Phonographs
Date: 1948
These smart new radio phonographs CAN’T GO OUT OF DATE! Right? Am I right? Smart never goes out of date. And when television comes to town, you’ll be ready. In the meantime, you’ve got a nice spot for that 16-volume encyclopedia bound in white leatherette. Everyone knows you’ll always need that.

Technorati Tags: vintage advertising, false promises, radio-phonograph, early television, old TV set


