Burma-Shave: Difference between revisions

boldface on title drop
m (quote markup)
(boldface on title drop)
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 7:
|''Burma-Shave''}}
 
In 1928, a hitherto-unknown shaving cream manufacturer got a clever idea for [[Advertising]] its new product: They put four-line poems, one line at a time, along the roadside on various highways in 4544 of the 48 US states,<ref>MA wasappears to have been deliberately omitted, along with a couple offew sparsely-populated desert states (NM AZ NV). AK and HI attained statehood during the 1928-63 ad campaign, but they were also left out - along with any non-US points.</ref> such that each line was just short enough to read while driving along. The fifth line was almost always the product name: '''Burma-Shave'''.<ref>[[Subverted Trope|Subverted]] once: "If you don't know / Whose signs these are / You can't have driven / Very far" (with the last sign, which normally said "Burma-Shave", deliberately omitted.)</ref> There were hundreds of different jingles, plus thousands made up by customers. The first jingles [[Played Straight]] to explain why the product (shaving cream) differed from the conventional cup, soap and brush in widespread use at the time. Once the campaign was familiar, different verses were introduced annually with either road safety themes or clever jokes. The vast majority of the jingles probably insinuated questionable or obscene uses of the product.
 
As the last of these signs were removed in 1963, a few of the rhymes have passed through time to the point that many people today won't get them. The following would have been a [[Shout-Out]] to Smith Brothers Cough Drops, which showed two bearded men on the box:
Line 15:
We still can't shave
Those Coughdrop Brothers
]|''Burma-Shave''}}
 
When Burma-Shave came out, the idea of using a special cream (rather than soap) was a new idea, so the company needed a new way to get noticed. Thus became the original use of what would later be referred to as "the jingle": a short, catchy tune to remind you of the company's product--only Burma-Shave's ads were simply silent poems.
Line 34:
It might go home
In another car
|Burpa''Burma-Shave]]''}}
 
As expected during [[World War II]], Burma-Shave reflected wartime sentiment and put up ads urging people to contribute to the war effort either by selling scrap metal or buying war bonds. Of course this wouldn't be complete without [[Take That|the usual jabs]] against the Axis:
 
{{quote|Let's make [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]]
And [[Hirohito]]
Feel as bad
as Old [[Benito Mussolini|Benito]]
Buy War Bonds
|''Burma-Shave''}}
 
{{quote|Slap
The [[Nicknaming the Enemy|Jap]]
With
Iron
Scrap
|''Burma-Shave''}}
 
Line 48 ⟶ 64:
* [[Billboard Epic]]: Burma-Shave is, in fact, the first example on that page.
* [[Literal Genie]]/[[The Cake Is a Lie|The Cake Is Not A Lie]]: [http://www.snopes.com/business/market/mars.asp Detailed here] -- one series of signs read "Free Free/A Trip/To Mars/For 900/Empty Jars". Arliss French, a supermarket manager in Wisconsin, took them up on their challenge, and thanks to a series of ads in the local paper and displays in his store, he succeeded in gathering the required number of containers. After some negotiations, the company presented him with tickets to [[wikipedia:Moers|Moers]] (pronounced "Mars"), a small town in West Germany. Mr. French got a free European vacation, and Burma-Shave got tons of positive publicity.
* [[Racing the Train]]: Several safety jingles point out what a bad idea this is; a few border on [[Grave Humor]] to [[an Aesop|make their point]].
* [[Shout-Out]]: One of them was this to Smith Brothers Cough Drop
* [[What Could Have Been]]: There are some signs that were considered to be used but for whatever reason never did.
Line 87 ⟶ 103:
Burma-Shave}}
* ''[[Kingdom of Loathing]]'' has a spirit [[Gratuitous Iambic Pentameter|speaking in rhyme]], ending its [[Fetch Quest]] request with a ''Burma-Shave''.
* The Arizona level in ''Harley-Davidson: Race Across America'' has a parody of the Burma-Shave signs halfway through the track.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
Line 97 ⟶ 114:
Takes more nerve
Than it does practice.
|[[Bland-Name Product|Burpa-Shave]]}}
|Burpa-Shave]]}}
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==