97. Chesterfield (1940s)
The woman and child are buying plenty of tobacco goods for dad, and it’s incredible to see advertising like this anymore, knowing how bad smoking is for us.
98. Lucky Strike (the 1930s)
There are two major reasons individuals struggle to stop smoking: the apparent addiction to nicotine and societal pressure to be physically fit. So it was a good idea to promote smoking to make everything taste terrible.
99. Du Pont (1950s)
Babies are not food, and we suspect that whoever developed this commercial, even so, many years ago, didn’t get to maintain their job for very long.
100. Jell-O (the 1920s)
The bigotry in this 1920s advertising is everywhere, from every other phrase to the artwork, and it is not a good look for Jell-O.