21. Tart-Chestaut Co. (the 1930s)
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Though unsuitable sources did not influence the “Big Tits” logo, it is nevertheless disgusting. Titus Tart, the chip company’s proprietor, was known as “Big Tits.”
22. Sony (the 1960s)
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Ah, the days before smartphones—how many of us knew they existed? But, then, a video camera was not only enormous in the 1960s, but it was also a costly and rare device that was difficult to get.
23. Kelloggs (the 1930s)
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Kelloggs wasn’t always synonymous with sugar cereal. Back in the 1930s, marketing pushed for an energy-infused version aimed at men to persuade their wives to make them do even more housework than they were already unfairly doing.
24. Toothache Drops (1885)
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We’re going far back in this commercial, and while cocaine was legal and did assist with a painful toothache, as we now know, the adverse effects of the now-illegal substance were not worth the risk.