American Decades
Advertising and Public Relations
Buy! Buy!
The 1920s brought a boom in advertising as postwar consumerism and the cult of salesmanship coincided. Existing ad agencies expanded, and new agencies (Young 6c Rubicam, Dancer-Fitzgerald-Sample, and Benton & Bowles) were founded. J. Walter Thompson's agency's billings went from $10.7 million in 1922 to $37.5 million in 1929. Albert Lasker, the head of Lord & Thomas, worked with George Washington Hill of the American Tobacco Company (Lucky Strike) to increase that company's earnings from $12 million in 1926 to $40 million in 1930.
Slogans.
Most advertising still appeared in print during the 1920s, and ad revenue promoted the growth of the mass-circulation magazines, called slicks because they were printed on paper that would reproduce quality ad art. Cigarette advertising produced a war among Lucky Strike, Camel, and Chesterfield. The untapped market was women; before the 1920s no respectable woman smoked...
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1920's Media
- Overview
- Topics in the News
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Headline Makers
- Broun, Heywood 1888-1939
- Cerf, Bennett A. and Klopfer, Donald S. 1898-1971, 1902-1986
- Correll, Charles and Gosden, Freeman 1890-1972, 1899-1982
- Liveright, Horace 1886-1933
- Lorimer, George Horace 1867-1937
- Luce, Henry R. and Hadden, Briton 1898-1967, 1898-1929
- Mencken, H. L. 1880-1956
- Paley, William S. 1901-1990
- Patterson, Joseph Medill 1879-1946
- Perkins, Maxwell E. 1884-1947
- Ross, Harold W. 1892-1951
- Sarnoff, David 1891-1971
- Winchell, Walter 1897-1972
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in the Media, 1920–1929
