Thursday, April 11, 2013

Pepsi Cola is Light Refreshment! (1955-1958)

Good morning!

I'm still trudging through this work week, and while I was doing my usual Google Books lurking yesterday, I found a series of Pepsi-Cola ads from the mid century that are juuuuuust out of this world. The fashion illustrations are gorgeous! Repeat after me: The fashion illustrations are gorgeous. However, the message of some of these ads isconfusing to me. Let's take a look:


The above ad was the first show-stopper in my morning's perusings, and I thought, wow, Pepsi Cola! Way to hire top notch advertising artists for your ad campaign. I wonder what the copy in this ad says. Don't you? Such a beguiling, gamine figure in black capris and shimmy top, bangles at her wrist,  OH MY GOD THOSE EARRINGS, and neat leopard print belt cinching in an impossibly tiny waist. Well, wonder no more! From this ad:

WOW, Pepsi-Cola. Wow. Can you see Peggy Olsen and the gang sitting around the conference table trying to brainstorm ways in which Pepsi-Cola is better than its obvious cola competitor, Coca-Cola? HEALTH. ANGLE. In the same can-do spirit that would drive the gents to building an addition to the house out of scrap material and plans from Popular Mechanics, this ad seems to be encouraging the housewives of fifties' America to swear off sugar and cream in their coffee, put their tiny feet down against midnight refrigerator raids, and drink Pepsi-Cola "whenever refreshment's called for" for that form-fitting figure so desirable to wear New Look garments. According to this timeline on the Pepsi website, "[In] 1953, Americans become more weight-conscious, and a new strategy based on lower caloric content of Pepsi is implemented with "The Light Refreshment" campaign". Ah HA! The plot thickens. That same year, a no-sugar, no calorie soda, initially developed for diabetics rather than dieters, called No-Cal was released, but it wouldn't be until 1958 that diet sodas specifically aimed at people looking to "reduce" would appear in the form of Diet Rite.


I think this one may be the most brutal. "FASHION IS FOR THE SLENDER", reads the caption under the illustration of a slim, slim girl getting dressed in what I want to be my 1890's New Orleans influenced bedroom (see the wrought iron head board and the gas lamp light fixture [what in the hello do you call one of those? I see them ALL. THE. TIME and I'm blanking so hard]). On the vanity with her nail-polish and Coty powder? A bottle of Pepsi Cola. In the ad text? "Today's stylists are doing wonders for the looks of a modern women. But give some credit, too, to the woman herself. For the modern figure is her own creation." I don't know where to stand on this! On the one hand, it's completely true that portion control, proper diet, and exercise can contribute to a girl being a size where off-the-rack clothes just drape elegantly from her slender form. On the other hand, is it nice to point out that people over a size 12 have troubles, possibly not at all related to their choice in sodas, in keeping up"the slender lines that fashion insists on, that men admire, that health authorities and insurance companies applaud"? Nice work throwing in both boyfriends and insurance companies there at the end, Mad Man responsible for this ad.


Did Pepsi actually have less calories than Coke in the 1950's? According to these nutrition facts, they're almost identical in calories nowadays. It would be almost ten years (1963) before Pepsi added "Patio", later just Diet Pepsi, its no calorie diet-soda. Remember the Mad Men season three fiasco over the Ann-Margret/Bye Bye Birdie clone ad that flopped so stupendously? That was for Patio. So from 1955-1958, were they just blowing smoke about being "light refreshment"? 

Still, I can't say I don't love these ads, principle aside, for the freaking AMAZING fashions we're looking at here. I'm not saying I could get into 90% of these get-ups, but oh, how I like to look at them. Example, this woman's straw hat, taupe suit, brown t-strap pumps, and a boyfriend that coordinates with the Eames chair's blue upholstery, right down to his socks! Sold.

 How about this couple? The man is wearing periwinkle blue and olive drab green stripes on his shirt, with a red ascot tucked into the collar (YES?), and the gal sitting surrounded by records looks crisp and autumnal in that tiny vest and florid, puff-sleeved blouse.


This is my favorite of the bunch. AGAIN with the plaid pants looking chic as chic can be. I think the answer to the quandary of wearing these successfully is just being whippet thin and putting them on with panache. Both this and the next ad advise brides that if they want to be light as a feather when their groom sweeps them up to be carried across the threshold,  Pepsi-Cola is the answer. Honestly, I would drink turpentine if I thought it would it would give me a midriff-baring ready figure like Miss Plaid Capris in the first panel here.

I love that this also intimates that the dress is being made at home, possibly with the help of a younger sibling. Sus, I need you to learn to sew (and sew extremely well) before September. I know you're reading this. COME ON. I will start preemptively drinking Pepsi Cola for the fittings, just in case.


Here's a bunch of the ad copy I compiled together in one little image. If you click on it, the print appears lifesize instead of antsize and you can see some of the hoodoo women were expected to perform on their own bodies in order to fit into Pepsi-Cola's unrealistic idea of their average soda enjoyer. WHHHOOO-WEE, what an ad campaign.


So! Had you seen these ads before? Do you have any particular allegiance to a soda brand, for diet reasons or not? What do you think of the message or (even better) the fashions of these spreads? Can you remember the first time you realized what the whole hubbub about diet sodas was about? I can specifically remember making single-pitchers of Kool-Aid back in the day with 2 to 3 cups of sugar per batch, so I am not the right one to talk to about early intervention in childhood obesity. I never drank a Diet Coke until I was in college! Can you remember a similar conversion pattern in your own life?

That's all for today! See you kids back here tomorrow. Til then!

15 comments:

  1. When you say "Can you imagen Peggy..." I cant! Haha Don wouldnt settle for anything less the Coca-cola! Wonderful colored ads!

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    1. Good point, though! :) I just love these illustrations.

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    1. I wish I was half so stylish as some of these slim ladies!!

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  3. 2 things: I covet that khaki suit/straw hat combo and that chic wedding look...and I had no idea by being a "coke" person all these years that I was depriving myself the health benefits of pepsi

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    1. Oh, I know! That hat was one of the first things that sold me on doing a post on these ads. Is it not adorable! Dang those Pepsi people, keeping their diet secret a secret all these years! ;)

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  4. Man oh man, I am saving some of these photos for inspiration. I have a gold/black plaid with which I promised to make a pair of capris for Mary - perfect!!!

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    1. Oooooh! How we love a Mr. Tiny sewing project post; I look forward to seeing what you come up with, mister! :)

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  5. Mom had that figure! She had a case of the Vanishing Waist. She suffered for it, though. I remember her eating "appetite suppressing" candy called Ayds. They were packed in a box that looked like a box of checks ordered from the bank. The idea was to eat an Ayds and drink black coffee. Which she did, hitting elegantly on a Salem 100. She wore a size 6. (That was what we now call a 2, or zero.) I remember walking along the street with her, watching men doing double takes because of her figure(extreme hourglass) I trundled along, wondering why I had a figure like a ten pound sack of flour.

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    1. I remember the Ayds! I haven't thought about them in years-my older sister tried them. I can still picture them...

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    2. Wow! I bet she had some amazing outfits to go with that super-hourglass figure. Sometimes I see tiny, tiny vintage formalwear at estate sales and kid myself into trying them on (ah, it's a size 6, I can squeeze, I think at the time....not taking into consideration that it's WAY smaller than a modern 6, like you said). I have been stuck in more than one bathroom with the hourglass part of the dress somehow not fitting back over my shoulders the way it did on the way down, so there's no way out! Still, a gal can dream...

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  6. first: this lamps i call "petroleum lamps"....

    with the soda: it´s laughable to drink such suger loadet stuff for being slender! oh the 50´s. BUT. the diet versions of pepsi/coke etc. are much more unhealthy. this sugar substitudes doing crazy things in your body. when i have to drink a cola then always the classic ones - but this comes over me only once a year :-)

    the fashion is gorgeous! and the drawings too. thank you for sharing this, lisa!

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    1. Re: diet sodas: Oh I know! I used to drink a case of Diet Coke a week but one of my new years resolutions was to swear off diet cokes and diet creamer in my coffee. I haven't missed it as much as I thought I would! I hate to think what USED to be in diet sodas, before they regulated them to even where they are now.

      Re: fashions: RIGHT? I love every one of these panels. You are welcome! More coming next week! :)

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  7. I'm a bilious, sad old queen who wonders why you didn't ID the artist of these sublime numbers...?

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    1. I didn't have the artists for this or the other post. Do you know any of them on sight? Happy to add the info--aren't they gorgeous?!

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