Winston tastes good like a cigarette should — wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  1. «Top 10 Jingles of the century». Advertising Age. Retrieved 2006 07 16.
  2. «Something Wonderful Happens. Winston Tastes Good Like A Cigarette Should! Ad Notebook.». Anne Landman’s Collection. Tobacco Documents Online. April 1963. Retrieved 2006 07 16.
  3. Winston advertisement featuring African Americans
  4. «Simpson’s Contemporary Quotations, #2482». Simpson’s Contemporary Quotations. Houghton Mifflin. Retrieved 2006 07 17.
  5. «Winston beginnings». JournalNow. Retrieved 2006 07 16.
  6. Examples of the «Winston tastes good like a cigarette should» marketing campaign, various magazines, 1955 1969.
  7. «Expert says tobacco pitched ads to young smokers». CNN Interactive. Archived from the original on May 12, 2006. Retrieved 2006 07 16.
  8. «Winston Tastes Good, Like a Cigarette Should (original spot featuring the Flintstones)». VideoSift. Retrieved 2006 07 16.
  9. Billy Ingram. «Cigarette Advertising on TV». TVparty!. Retrieved 2006 07 16.
  10. Thomas Parrish (2002). The Grouchy Grammarian A How Not To Guide to the 47 Most Common Mistakes in English Made by Journalists, Broadcasters, and Others Who Should Know Better. Wiley. pp. 155 156.
  11. Garrick Utley (2000). You Should Have Been Here Yesterday A Life Story in Television News. PublicAffairs. p. 4. ISBN 1 891620 94 0.
  12. Malcolm Gladwell (2002). The Tipping Point How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference. Back Bay. p. 25. ISBN 0 316 34662 4.
  13. Edward Finegan (2004). Language in the USA Themes for the 21st century. Cambridge University Press. Foreword. ISBN 0 521 77175 7.
  14. «Winston tastes good like a cigarette should». Historical Winston Ads. James A. Shaw. Archived from the original on March 14, 2006. Retrieved 2006 07 16.

Are e-cigarettes safe? ‘vaping’ facts, chemistry compared to cigarettes

The electronic cigarette, which aims to deliver nicotine without the harmful effects associated with tobacco, has become incredibly popular for smokers looking for a possibly healthy alternative to tobacco or who are trying to quit smoking. But the marketing around e cigarettes provides few details regarding the safety of the product. The American Chemical Society has looked at recent studies regarding the healthfulness of «vaping.»

Recent research has found that e cigarettes are healthier than tobacco products they contain fewer carcinogens and other harmful products but the studies noted that the science is in its infancy and little is known about the long term effects of the product. In one study, researchers found small amounts of formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, acrolein and three other toxic compounds. The study also found metal particles cadmium, nick and lead in both e cig vapor and cigarette smoke. Nicotine exposure also is a concern the drug can be deposited on surfaces through e cigarette vapor, according to the American Chemical Society.

«What will happen after many years of vaping? To see some of the long term effects we just need time,» Maciej L. Goniewicz, a toxicologist at Roswell Park Cancer Institute and author of the harmful compound study, told ACS.

Researchers say the marketing of e cigarettes could lead to a false sense of security in users, much the way «light» cigarettes may be seen as safer despite higher levels of tar. «There s a great deal of ambiguity about product content in the largely unregulated e cigarette industry right now, and considerable debate over the safety, long term risks, and effects of secondhand smoke exposure,» Greta Hsu, an associate professor at the Graduate School of Management at the University of California, Davis, said in a statement. «At the same time, acceptance and popularity of e cigarettes is rapidly growing, creating a market where consumers are vulnerable.»

The ACS’ «Are E cigs Safer Than Cigarettes? Reactions» video, looking at the chemistry and science of vaping, can be viewed below.