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Q: Who Invented Body Odor? A: Advertising Men In the 1910s and particularly the 1920s, advertising agents focused their attention on identifyingand often inventingpersonal anxieties that could be resolved by the purchase of specific products. Advertising, wrote one commentator in a trade publication, helps to keep the masses dissatisfied with their mode of life, discontented with ugly things around them. Satisfied customers are not as profitable as discontented ones. Advertisers, as historian Stuart Ewen notes, tried to endow people with a critical self-consciousness directed especially at their personal appearances. That was the strategy followed, for example, by Odo-Ro-No, a deodorant for Listerine mouthwash took a similar approach. The Lambert Pharmacal Company had developed the antibacterial liquid back in the 1880s, and it was long sold as Although there was some worry about whether such a delicate subject could be handled in magazines and newspapers, Seagrove and his collaborator, Milton Feasley, launched an ad campaign that played heavily on fears about how others In response to the ad campaign, Listerine sales went from $100,000 per year in 1921 to more than $4 million in 1927. Meanwhile, the strategy of ads as quick-tempo socio-dramas in which readers were invited to identify with temporary victims in tragedies of social shame, writes historian Roland Marchand, led to a new school of advertising practice. Sources: Stuart Ewen, Captains of Consciousness (1976); Roland Marchand, Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 19201940 (1985); Jane and Michael Stern, Encyclopedia of Culture (1992); Julian Lewis Watkins, The 100 Greatest Advertisements (1949). |
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