"Winston tastes good — like a cigarette should" is an advertising slogan that appeared in newspaper, magazine, radio, and television advertisements for Winston cigarettes, manufactured by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Reynolds used the slogan from Winston's introduction in 1954 until 1972. It is one of the best-known American tobacco advertising campaigns. In 1999, Advertising Age included the "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should" jingle in its list of the 10 best radio and television jingles in the United States during the 20th century.
The advertising agency William Esty Co. deliberately, and ungrammatically, used "like" rather than "as" (subordinating conjunction) in the slogan and jingle. The Esty executives Wendell Adams and Arline Lunny were in charge of the overall campaign. Lunny produced and directed most of the campaign's content during its early years. Although Adams was a classically trained musician, Margaret Johnson (a singer, pianist, and model) ghost wrote the jingle; Johnson and her husband, Travis Johnson, recorded it with their group, the Song Spinners.[1]
The slogan was included in the 1988 edition of Simpson's Contemporary Quotations.[2]
In a departure for the time, the advertising campaign targeted distinct niche groups within the broader market of smokers, such as American Jews[3] and African Americans.[4]
Beginnings
Bowman Gray Jr., who later became the president of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, was in charge of marketing Winstons, which were a new addition to the R.J. Reynolds line in 1954. Gray listened to advertising employees from the William Esty Co., and the slogan "Winston tastes good like a cigarette ought to" was considered, then replaced by the more succinct "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should."[5]
The first print ad appeared in The Pittsburgh Press in September 1954, although with 'real' added: "Winston tastes real good—like a cigarette should!"[6][7] An ad in Life followed, then other outlets, using the now well-known wording.[6][8] In 1955, Winston took over as the sponsor of Walter Cronkite
Radio and television
In the radio and television advertisements, the slogan is presented in a singsong fashion with a noticeable two-beat clap near the end, so the jingle would sound like Win-ston tastes good like a (clap clap) cigarette should. The "clap" noise was sometimes substituted for actors in the commercials knocking twice against a truck carrying Winston cigarettes, or an actor flicking his lighter twice to the same conceit.
Winston cigarettes were sponsors of popular television series. In The Beverly Hillbillies,[9] the stars Buddy Ebsen, Irene Ryan, and Nancy Kulp extolled the virtues of Winstons while smoking them and reciting the jingle. The Flintstones[10] was criticized for advertising cigarettes on an animated series watched by many children, and Winston pulled their involvement with it after the Pebbles Flintstone character was born in 1963.[11]
Grammar controversy
During the campaign's long run in the media, many criticized the slogan as grammatically incorrect, asserting that it should say, "Winston tastes good as a cigarette should." Ogden Nash, in The New Yorker, published a poem that ran "Like goes Madison Avenue, like so goes the nation." Walter Cronkite, then hosting The Morning Show, refused to say the line as written, and an announcer was used instead.
Canadian journalist Malcolm Gladwell, in The Tipping Point, says that this "ungrammatical and somehow provocative use of 'like' instead of 'as' created a minor sensation" in 1954 and implies that the phrase itself was responsible for vaulting the brand to second place in the U.S. market. Winston overtook Pall Mall cigarettes as the #1 cigarette in the United States in 1966, while the advertising campaign continued to make an impression on the mass media.
In the fall of 1961, a small furor enveloped the literary and journalistic communities in the United States when Merriam-Webster published its Third New International Dictionary. In the dictionary, the editors refused to condemn the use of "like" as a conjunction, and cited "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should" as an example of popular colloquial use. After publication of Webster's Third, The New York Times called the edition "bolshevik," and the Chicago Daily News wrote that the transgression signified "a general decay in values."
When the players in The Beverly Hillbillies spoke the line, they stretched the grammatical boundaries further:
Parodies
The jingle was often parodied. The first line was typically, Winston tastes bad like the one I just had.[13] The second line was commonly some variation on No filter, no flavor, it tastes like toilet paper,[14] or, No filter, no taste, just a fifty-cent waste.[15]
See also
- "Happiness is a cigar called Hamlet"
- "Us Tareyton smokers would rather fight than switch!"
- Legacy Tobacco Documents Library Multimedia Collection
Bibliography
Further reading
External links
- Winston - Taste Good Like A Cigarette Should! ad via YouTube
- The Beverly Hillbillies Winston ad via YouTube
- The Flintstones Winston ad via YouTube
References
- Ad Age Advertising Century: Top 10 Jingles Advertising Age, March 29, 1999, retrieved October 28, 2018^
- James B. Simpson. Simpson's Contemporary Quotations Houghton Mifflin, 1988, retrieved October 29, 2018^
- R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Something Wonderful Happens. Winston Tastes Good-Like A Cigarette Should! Ad Notebook.