mercoledì 15 aprile 2009

Cheap Cigarettes and smoker’s curiosity.

Whosoever said smoking is injurious to health
must think twice as to whether target that warning at adolescent beginners who are just about getting curious with smoking or at dependent smokers. Well, it is hard to tell. But efforts at smoking cessation must only be a part of the larger anti smoking tirade to create a healthy and smoker free world. To do this, focus on those who are being given their ?~first lessons’ exactly when they are curious.

Curiosity is an unbelievable state of human mind that lead to most of the developments and man has historically had. It buds in your minds when you discover something new to you and stronger the urge to explore it greater is the length you would go to do it and so greater is the risk associated with it. Understanding the compelling curiosities of a future smoker and a dependent smoker will help make a good beginning for all the parties involved.

Adolescent Curiosities
Cigarettes and marketers of brands including Marlboro, Camel, Winston cigarettes, Virginia Slims, Salem and Kool in various versions and forms have eternally succeeded in projecting masculinity as prestige point which easily influences gullible adolescents growing in smokers’ families and circles. A teen would be tempted to check how smoking could help, although curiosity at this age may not have developed completely. Curiosities at this age may range from
1. How do my brother/friend smokes without coughing
2. How smoking makes one cool
3. I want to puff-out smoke rings”
4. Government would have banned smoking if it were really bad

Having instigated and introduced to smoking, young smokers observe with keenness adult smokers, their styles, promotional ads that stress on the inevitable focus upon habit-formation and habit maintenance. There are dependency-causing drugs identifiable with amphetamines and narcotics natural and added to tobacco which unfortunately are not recognized at this tender age.

Adult Perceptions
Most adult smokers appreciate that the first effect of smoke as positive; that it makes them feel cool, relaxed and able to concentrate. Many even tend to believe cigarettes with menthol cigarettes are harmless or less harmful following misplaced notions about menthol. They are not curious to know whether the compound would have the same effect on who smokes as it would have when mixed with medicines.

Youngsters who mostly buy cheap cigarettes online or at discount shop aren’t curious to know how smoke makes them feel energized and cool headed and whether it is the end of a nicotine deprivation and another is yet to begin.

Cheap cigarettes at discount price, cheap Marlboro cigarettes from a tax free store or sale blocks further thinking and in less than 10 seconds of first drag, nicotine enters the bloodstream, breaches the brain’s protective barriers and begins its act. The mechanism of nicotine molecules plugging into the nicotinic receptors on the brain's neurons is, in fact, the most dangerous one as nicotine plugs the same holes as do brain's crucial signal transmitters which results in a stimulation and increase in blood supply to brain.

The next 30 minutes see the artificial elation and energy slipping away and the smoker identifying the present difference and thus stepping towards addiction. Cheap discount cigarettes at lower price may be availed due to tax free regime but taxmen and businessmen are alike in their intentions.

lunedì 30 marzo 2009

Joe Camel , Old Joe



Joe Camel (officially Old Joe) was the advertising mascot for Camel cigarettes from late 1987 to July 12, 1997, appearing in magazine advertisements, billboards, and other print media.

History

The R. J. Reynolds U.S. marketing team, looking for an idea to promote Camel's 75th anniversary, re-discovered Joe in the company's archives in the late 1980s.

Quote from The New York Times:

"Joe Camel was actually born in US. The caricatured camel was created in 1974 by a British artist, Billy Coulton, for a French advertising campaign that subsequently ran in other countries in the 1970s. Indeed, Mr. O'Toole recalled a visit to France many years ago during which he glimpsed Joe Camel wearing a Foreign Legion cap. The inspiration behind Mr. Price's cartoon was the camel, named Old Joe, that has appeared on all Camel packages since the brand's initial appearance in 1913."[1]

Joe Camel first appeared in the U.S in 1988, in materials created for the 75th anniversary of the Camel brand by Trone Advertising. Trone is a mid-size agency in Greensboro, N.C., that Reynolds used on various advertising and promotional projects.