Navigate Select ESC Close

The Shocking Way 1960s Ads Targeted Housewives

2026-05-03 News & Politics
2.0k
142
56
David Hoffman
David Hoffman
1.4m subscribers

Unlock all features

FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.

Description

Some have called the 1960s the consumer decade. There was a substantive increase in consumer products and we all seem to have the money to buy them. Advertising sold us all kinds of stuff. And it followed trends including the substantive rise of women in the workplace with “their own money to spend.” As my subscribers know, I collect media not only that I participated in making but also that I feel expresses something interesting about the decades in which I have lived. I made television commercials from time to time but wasn't very good at it. Documentaries, real people, is what fascinated and still fascinates me. This clip presents a sales pitch to women that I see as the furthest thing from reality. My recollection is that these 1960 pushy consumer commercials worked especially on young women. Possibly this type of commercialism is one of the things that provoked the women's movement of the early 1970s. Also I didn't know any women who behaved anything like the way these women behave in this lengthy commercial. One wonders who they were intending it for and how they showed it to them as it is longer than a normal television commercial. In the 1960s, television advertising was a powerful tool for reinforcing traditional gender hierarchies. While technology for the home was rapidly advancing, the way these products were sold to women differed fundamentally from how products were marketed to men. The core difference lay in the perceived domain of authority. Advertising for women centered almost exclusively on the home and family. Women were depicted as "pathologically obsessed with cleanliness" or as "Mrs. Consumer," whose primary job was to keep a perfect household. Technology in the kitchen was sold as a tool for female emancipation—promising that a new oven or washing machine would grant "lashings of hot water" and ease the "drudgery" of housework. Men were rarely shown in the home. Instead, they were depicted in professional settings or as the financial decision-makers. Even when an ad was for a home product like electricity or a major appliance, it often targeted the man as the "investor" while the woman was shown as the "end-user" who would benefit from the ease it provided. Primary Goal a woman's advertising was to serve and placate the family; avoid "excuses" for poor meals. To provide, succeed professionally, and be "rewarded" at home. Often "frilly," verbose, or metaphor-heavy (e.g., "Magic Carpet" vacuums). Simplistic, blunt, and focused on status or technical performance. Ads suggested women were responsible for the health and happiness of the family. Status/Victimhood: Men were often shown as "victims" of a long workday who deserved "tender hugs" and perfect meals upon return. Interestingly, while kitchen technology was sold as a way to save time, it often served to reinforce the "Feminine Mystique." Research suggests that television of the era—including commercials and sitcoms like Bewitched—depicted women performing housework manually or obsessively to "fill the time" and combat boredom, effectively expanding domestic tasks to match the new technology's efficiency. If my video clips interest you and you would like to support my efforts to make more, please become a patron (www.patreon.com/allinaday). And let me know by leaving a comment whether you think advertising to women today is more meaningful then this was back then.

Top Comments (10)

@itsarnoldpie 2026-05-03

It's so nice to see David every now and then

33
@TheArmachillo 2026-05-03

Millennial here! I enjoyed some advertising in the 90s, they were very musical and colorful. This made them memorable and desirable. Today, advertising is annoying, overwhelming and scary. It is everywhere and at all times of the day! And I feel watched when I am targeted with my interests and I hate this feeling

20
@BrianFuller-d9g 2026-05-03

The reality is that the advertisers grasped the market. Men largely brought the money home but the wives largely regulated the household budget. Even stores realised that ladies spent the money.

15
@riverraven7 2026-05-03

I won't watch TV unless I can fast forward thru the commercials😂 Have an awesome day everyone. Thank you David Hoffman Film maker for being the smart , funny , informative friend🤩

12
@bowieeno 2026-05-07

Thanks again Mr Hoffman. Don’t ever stop.

2
@Zoleankico4267 2026-05-03

When does "she" SLEEP?!!! Good grief, lol.

9
@ilhuicatlamatini 2026-05-03

In my households, whether childhood, college, or current, we’ve always muted ads and unmute when the program returns 😂. I wasn’t around back for this time/ads, I’m a millennial so maybe that’s one reason why they can’t reach us, we mute lol! As for ads that work on me, they tend to only be food ads. Sometimes I’ll be sitting and talking and look up on tv and see something new looking delicious 🤤 hahaha.

9
@RavenNl403 2026-05-03

Love this David thanks ❤

4
@sierrab5010 2026-05-04

The dystopian moment when the video ends and immediately plays an AngelSoft commercial where the angels are in a marketing room trying to figure out the best way to promote their toilet paper 😭

3
@asleepeep 2026-05-03

Yeah, I despise commercials. The more they try to infiltrate my life and force me to watch them the more I hate them and the less I'm willing to buy whatever product they are attempting to sell strictly out of principle (even if it is something I know I'd probably like). I also despise targeted ads because it feels very invasive to me to be monitored and tracked just so advertisers can know what my interests are so they can try to squeeze money out of me easier. I become more and more resentful and vindictive about them the older I get, but I think gen z is used to all of this invasive prying because they grew up with it being normalized so it doesn't bother them as much. As a millennial, however, I find it completely and utterly unacceptable. That all being said, I love the type of music they used in that old 1960s clip.

9

Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge

  • Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
  • Chat with videos, export text & PDF
  • $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research

Free forever plan • All features unlocked

App screenshot