Game show host/announcer Jack Clark is the man in the FSLIC commercial at 11:34. The commercial stops abruptly when he mentions that "no one has ever lost a penny [in the S&Ls]". I don't think that remained true about 10-15 years afterward.
"Withdraw $50 a month, every month for the rest of your life " Be still my beating heart . Btw , $50 in 1974 is equivalent to $263 in 2020 . If the people who did that were still living today and the S&L s didn't go under , the deal couldn't get you a week's worth of groceries, now
Interesting to see three separate ads referencing US dependence on foreign fuels, and Don Shula promoting energy conservation, but the two car ads haven't caught up at all. Only a few years later and not only did every car ad include gas mileage (I assume by law?) but plenty of ads made a virtue of fuel economy.
0:00-0:34 The way banking used to be. Savings accounts paid 5-7 percent. Now you are lucky if savings or checking accounts pay more than 2-2.5 percent.
0:35 That Burning, Churning, Durning, Kaburrming, Incinerating, Blazing, Smoking, Hot as Bulma Briefs-ing GODDAMNING Towering Inferno... I love that film.
The "Columbo" promo is for a rerun of the May 5, 1974 episode, where Richard Kiley played Columbo's boss, who murdered his wife and enlisted the aid of a friend who had also murdered someone else, to cover up both their murders.
I remember that movie the towering inferno watched it on tv that first commercial sounds good but it probably be $50 a week now instead of a month but still if it is true I would do it
That commercial about shale oil was right on the money. 40 years later shale oil has made the USA energy independent. However the world is moving to renewable resources. Too bad shale oil extraction wasn't more efficient back in the 1970s. Oh well. Technology develops slowly.
Still don't know what the inventors of football were thinking putting the goal post smack on the goal line. Makes no sense. It does give new insight in what a "post route" is. The idea was to use the goal post as a pick, hoping that the defender would run into it.
hi hi mr D Branch stoping by. Go smart machines and smart Technologys. and Go good times. N ice. Go good Technologys and Smart Machines and Technologys , and Department s. Good looks and Good Construction looks. Go safe Technologys and Computers. and Go A lists. and Go A safe computers and lists. Goo dlook backs and with also logs and Data bases and with scince. Go good Librarys and Recording Departments and with also well Wishes and Bests to Deskska nd Departments and and To accurate Dekska and datat groups and lists. Mr D. Branch
I love these vintage commercial channels. I'd rather watch endless loops of these than just about anything on tv these days.
You had me at The Towering Inferno ad.
The unmistakable tones of Richard Basehart on the Chrysler commercial.
I Was 9 Months Old!
Thank you! I love these classic commercials.
“The Towering Inferno. See it for Christmas.” What a wonderful gift for the entire family!
Excellent quality
2:06 That is one of the best Columbo episodes.
Go organized.
you're probably old if you remember when the SB was played in Jan.
11:02 - 1974 Dodge ‘Charger’: Bebara’s 🥇🚗!
Loved the old commercials
They bring back memos for me.
4:46- David Wayne speaks for IBM.
I like these selling things American made and not sad Sack like today endless lawyer abd drug bs commercials..tnx
Go good Files and Xerox[s].
Game show host/announcer Jack Clark is the man in the FSLIC commercial at 11:34. The commercial stops abruptly when he mentions that "no one has ever lost a penny [in the S&Ls]". I don't think that remained true about 10-15 years afterward.
Joel Crager is speaking for your Saving and Loan Association. Mel Brandt is doing the voiceover for "Columbo" on NBC.
Mel Brandt was the announcer for SNL for 1981-82, after Michael O'Donoghue had Don Pardo "fired" from the show for a year.
I LOVE THESE!! More please!! Thanks!
Todd Grunwald
"Withdraw $50 a month, every month for the rest of your life "
Be still my beating heart .
Btw , $50 in 1974 is equivalent to $263 in 2020 . If the people who did that were still living today and the S&L s didn't go under , the deal couldn't get you a week's worth of groceries, now
I think that's Pat Morita as the tourist taking a picture of the Dodge Charger at around 11:10.
Good catch! That is Pat Morita.
I miss Sears.
I was 14 years old living in Okinawa ..,
I was 6 years old living in Kentucky
Interesting to see three separate ads referencing US dependence on foreign fuels, and Don Shula promoting energy conservation, but the two car ads haven't caught up at all. Only a few years later and not only did every car ad include gas mileage (I assume by law?) but plenty of ads made a virtue of fuel economy.
I want to see Frankenstein. I was 7. I loved Columbo. I didn't like Towering Inferno. I felt like I couldn't breathe in the theater.
It was interesting to see what oil shale looks like.
That's the late Jack Clark in the FSLIC (now FDIC) commercial and the late Pat Morita of "Karate Kid" fame in the Dodge Charger ad.
0:00-0:34 The way banking used to be. Savings accounts paid 5-7 percent. Now you are lucky if savings or checking accounts pay more than 2-2.5 percent.
Even less; you're lucky to get 0.5%
LOL. All we needed was Democrats being Democrats and interest rates are like the 70s.
0:35
That Burning, Churning, Durning, Kaburrming, Incinerating, Blazing, Smoking, Hot as Bulma Briefs-ing GODDAMNING Towering Inferno...
I love that film.
Just discovered your channel, you have got some great stuff!! Keep it up!
The "Columbo" promo is for a rerun of the May 5, 1974 episode, where Richard Kiley played Columbo's boss, who murdered his wife and enlisted the aid of a friend who had also murdered someone else, to cover up both their murders.
How and on what kind of media are these old commercials found from? I
know one that had a VCR before like 1980. Guess they were stored on
video tape?
3:30 - no tie off protection or lanyards required.
I remember that movie the towering inferno watched it on tv that first commercial sounds good but it probably be $50 a week now instead of a month but still if it is true I would do it
What is it about skyscrapers that are on fire that become Christmas movies?
Christmas Day biggest movie day of the year
It would be another year when a little-known film from Steven Spielberg would become the first ever Summer blockbuster, Jaws. 🦈
At 3:56, that looks like Alvarado Street in downtown Monterey, California
I didn't know that Genghis Kahn sounded like Bela Lugosi.
Who's the driver in the "Hey, Charger" commercial? He looks very familiar.
don shula the coach with the most wins in nfl :)
How is this aired on December 29th when at 1:00 it said "see on Christmas...?"
Hill Country
The Towering Inferno was released on December 14th, 1974.
The same way we still see Christmas commercials after Christmas now. Ad space is bought in blocks of time.
6:57 Bob Landers for Sears. He was a disc jockey on WNEW-AM in New York in the early to mid 60s.
The year of my birth!!!
lymarie1974
That is beautiful. I love the 70’s. I can name the amazing movies that were released in 1974. :)
Aww a good time to be born in and be a kid I was seven but I remember a lot.
If it was ten years after, no doubt "The Towering Inferno" would be rated PG-13.
Tower of Hell.
gladasya 10
The greatest movie ever made.
I saw that at the movies...I think it was The Norridge
@@King_Colombia_Inc Funny, James Cameron would beg to differ. 🤨
6:16 - Holy Shit !! Ted Bundy did commercials?
RIP USS
Thanks, China. 😡
5:46 - Derek Smalls for Schick.
Whatever became of that Lancers rotgut?
How was someone able to tape this? Betamax wouldn't exist for another year. A U-Matic machine, perhaps?
perchance a videotape recorder, a shibaden maybe
People able to tape commericals from the 1950s. Why not 1974?
Looks like an original tape that was stored at the network.
Commercials from the 50s were saved on 16mm film, not tape. They were transferred to tape later.
You mean like an aircheck that an affiliate of the network kept?
4:21 40s years? this commercial from 40 years ago.
well, if you posted in 2016, it was 42 years ago
That's Ted Cassidy doing the voiceover for Sears steelbelted radials.
Savings and loan, every one of them stole their customers blind.
10:02- John C. Becher, veteran commercial actor.
5
That commercial about shale oil was right on the money. 40 years later shale oil has made the USA energy independent. However the world is moving to renewable resources. Too bad shale oil extraction wasn't more efficient back in the 1970s. Oh well. Technology develops slowly.
6
Still don't know what the inventors of football were thinking putting the goal post smack on the goal line. Makes no sense. It does give new insight in what a "post route" is. The idea was to use the goal post as a pick, hoping that the defender would run into it.
Eveready is Mark is Black Cat alkaline ?
Towering inferno???... I saw that on TV September 11, that was reality!
Super Bowl IX of course, is when the Steelers won their first Super Bowl and first ever championship after 43 seasons.
The late Franco Harris for United Way.
hi
hi mr D Branch stoping by. Go smart machines and smart Technologys. and Go good times. N ice. Go good Technologys and Smart Machines and Technologys , and Department s. Good looks and Good Construction looks. Go safe Technologys and Computers. and Go A lists. and Go A safe computers and lists. Goo dlook backs and with also logs and Data bases and with scince. Go good Librarys and Recording Departments and with also well Wishes and Bests to Deskska nd Departments and and To accurate Dekska and datat groups and lists.
Mr D. Branch
How and on what kind of media are these old commercials found from? I
know one that had a VCR before like 1980. Guess they were stored on
video tape?