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Posted: 10/16/2021 3:31:58 PM EDT
So there's a joke a couple times the husband and wife couple he orders a second cup of coffee and she wonders , he never has a second cup of coffee.
What is the parody? |
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Just that she's suspicious of him being unfaithful, even justifying it with him getting another cup of coffee to show he's on the prowl.
That's how I take it. |
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1970s Yuban Commercial |
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Quoted: It’s a play on an old Yuban coffee commercial from the ‘70s. View Quote 1970s Yuban Commercial Damn it, beat! I guess it's worth a second post. |
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View Quote Same actress too |
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Quoted: So there's a joke a couple times the husband and wife couple he orders a second cup of coffee and she wonders , he never has a second cup of coffee. What is the parody? View Quote |
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Quoted: Same actress too |
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Yuban is still a thing. Never seen it on the store shelves but then again I don't look for it.
BTW Have you ever seen a grown man naked? |
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Quoted: So there's a joke a couple times the husband and wife couple he orders a second cup of coffee and she wonders , he never has a second cup of coffee. What is the parody? View Quote ‘ Dang millennial…. . |
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View Quote Isn't his name Leon |
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Quoted: Isn't his name Leon |
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Quoted: So there's a joke a couple times the husband and wife couple he orders a second cup of coffee and she wonders , he never has a second cup of coffee. View Quote What kind of sentence is that? |
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Quoted: Quoted: Isn't his name Leon |
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We have clearance, Clarance.
Roger, Roger. What's our Vector, Victor? |
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View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: It’s a play on an old Yuban coffee commercial from the ‘70s. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJ4kCF22O2w Damn it, beat! I guess it's worth a second post. The coffee was worth a second cup, the commercial is worth a second post. The question is, do you make a second post at home too? |
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Interesting! I didn't catch on to that the 50+ times that I have seen it!
Interesting indeed! |
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Quoted: Just that she's suspicious of him being unfaithful, even justifying it with him getting another cup of coffee to show he's on the prowl. That's how I take it. View Quote Very observant. That’s actually the subliminal message of the original advertisement too. As we all know, ad agencies seek to prey on our deep psychological insecurities and offer a product which will calm our greatest fears. For example, a housewife’s greatest fear is not a “stain in clothes,” but she fears the unspoken social shame of being seen as a bad mother/wife if her family is seen in public wearing stained, grungy clothes. Hence, the Tide advertisements (for example) try to capitalize on this without saying it out loud. In the case of this Airplane coffee gag, the original Yuban coffee commercial was hinting that the husband is “unsatisfied” by what his wife normally has to offer at home, hence the reason he’s seeking his “cup of coffee” from another woman. Pretty blatant. The ad sought to capitalize on unspoken fears and anxieties of housewives of that era. “Buy this brand of coffee to keep your man satisfied.” Who knows if it sold more coffee or not. Airplane lampooning this is one of the reasons it’s such a funny movie — it’s not only slapstick— there’s some actual brains behind a lot of the gags. |
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Airplane Movie - Classic - Whisky OR Coke? This is better than coffee anyway. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Isn't his name Leon How bout some coffee, Johnny? |
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Airplane! Coffee Scene: The Original and the Spoof |
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Quoted: Very observant. That’s actually the subliminal message of the original advertisement too. As we all know, ad agencies seek to prey on our deep psychological insecurities and offer a product which will calm our greatest fears. For example, a housewife’s greatest fear is not a “stain in clothes,” but she fears the unspoken social shame of being seen as a bad mother/wife if her family is seen in public wearing stained, grungy clothes. Hence, the Tide advertisements (for example) try to capitalize on this without saying it out loud. In the case of this Airplane coffee gag, the original Yuban coffee commercial was hinting that the husband is “unsatisfied” by what his wife normally has to offer at home, hence the reason he’s seeking his “cup of coffee” from another woman. Pretty blatant. The ad sought to capitalize on unspoken fears and anxieties of housewives of that era. Who knows if it sold more coffee or not. Airplane lampooning this is one of the reasons it’s such a funny movie — it’s not only slapstick— there’s some actual brains behind a lot of the gags. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Just that she's suspicious of him being unfaithful, even justifying it with him getting another cup of coffee to show he's on the prowl. That's how I take it. Very observant. That’s actually the subliminal message of the original advertisement too. As we all know, ad agencies seek to prey on our deep psychological insecurities and offer a product which will calm our greatest fears. For example, a housewife’s greatest fear is not a “stain in clothes,” but she fears the unspoken social shame of being seen as a bad mother/wife if her family is seen in public wearing stained, grungy clothes. Hence, the Tide advertisements (for example) try to capitalize on this without saying it out loud. In the case of this Airplane coffee gag, the original Yuban coffee commercial was hinting that the husband is “unsatisfied” by what his wife normally has to offer at home, hence the reason he’s seeking his “cup of coffee” from another woman. Pretty blatant. The ad sought to capitalize on unspoken fears and anxieties of housewives of that era. Who knows if it sold more coffee or not. Airplane lampooning this is one of the reasons it’s such a funny movie — it’s not only slapstick— there’s some actual brains behind a lot of the gags. Yup |
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Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Just that she's suspicious of him being unfaithful, even justifying it with him getting another cup of coffee to show he's on the prowl. That's how I take it. Very observant. That’s actually the subliminal message of the original advertisement too. As we all know, ad agencies seek to prey on our deep psychological insecurities and offer a product which will calm our greatest fears. For example, a housewife’s greatest fear is not a “stain in clothes,” but she fears the unspoken social shame of being seen as a bad mother/wife if her family is seen in public wearing stained, grungy clothes. Hence, the Tide advertisements (for example) try to capitalize on this without saying it out loud. In the case of this Airplane coffee gag, the original Yuban coffee commercial was hinting that the husband is “unsatisfied” by what his wife normally has to offer at home, hence the reason he’s seeking his “cup of coffee” from another woman. Pretty blatant. The ad sought to capitalize on unspoken fears and anxieties of housewives of that era. Who knows if it sold more coffee or not. Airplane lampooning this is one of the reasons it’s such a funny movie — it’s not only slapstick— there’s some actual brains behind a lot of the gags. Yup Not only what you’ve noted, but older wife physically steps between hubby and younger woman offering “coffee.” Husband steps around older wife to accept younger woman’s “coffee.” Message is “satisfy your man or your competitors will…” There’s more too, but I’m typing in a tree stand. |
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Quoted: Very observant. That’s actually the subliminal message of the original advertisement too. As we all know, ad agencies seek to prey on our deep psychological insecurities and offer a product which will calm our greatest fears. For example, a housewife’s greatest fear is not a “stain in clothes,” but she fears the unspoken social shame of being seen as a bad mother/wife if her family is seen in public wearing stained, grungy clothes. Hence, the Tide advertisements (for example) try to capitalize on this without saying it out loud. In the case of this Airplane coffee gag, the original Yuban coffee commercial was hinting that the husband is “unsatisfied” by what his wife normally has to offer at home, hence the reason he’s seeking his “cup of coffee” from another woman. Pretty blatant. The ad sought to capitalize on unspoken fears and anxieties of housewives of that era. “Buy this brand of coffee to keep your man satisfied.” Who knows if it sold more coffee or not. Airplane lampooning this is one of the reasons it’s such a funny movie — it’s not only slapstick— there’s some actual brains behind a lot of the gags. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Just that she's suspicious of him being unfaithful, even justifying it with him getting another cup of coffee to show he's on the prowl. That's how I take it. Very observant. That’s actually the subliminal message of the original advertisement too. As we all know, ad agencies seek to prey on our deep psychological insecurities and offer a product which will calm our greatest fears. For example, a housewife’s greatest fear is not a “stain in clothes,” but she fears the unspoken social shame of being seen as a bad mother/wife if her family is seen in public wearing stained, grungy clothes. Hence, the Tide advertisements (for example) try to capitalize on this without saying it out loud. In the case of this Airplane coffee gag, the original Yuban coffee commercial was hinting that the husband is “unsatisfied” by what his wife normally has to offer at home, hence the reason he’s seeking his “cup of coffee” from another woman. Pretty blatant. The ad sought to capitalize on unspoken fears and anxieties of housewives of that era. “Buy this brand of coffee to keep your man satisfied.” Who knows if it sold more coffee or not. Airplane lampooning this is one of the reasons it’s such a funny movie — it’s not only slapstick— there’s some actual brains behind a lot of the gags. This. Classic satires are actually pretty intelligent. You can see the glaring differences between those and modern attempts at the same thing |
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View Quote That movie was absolutely shameless! |
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You had to be alive in the early 70's, Yuban coffee commercial.
1970s Yuban Commercial ETA: And beat like a stepchild, a few times. |
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Quoted: So there's a joke a couple times the husband and wife couple he orders a second cup of coffee and she wonders , he never has a second cup of coffee. What is the parody? View Quote That you don't know how to use Google? |
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Airplane! Coffee Scene: The Original and the Spoof |
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Quoted: Not only what you’ve noted, but older wife physically steps between hubby and younger woman offering “coffee.” Husband steps around older wife to accept younger woman’s “coffee.” Message is “satisfy your man or your competitors will…” There’s more too, but I’m typing in a tree stand. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Just that she's suspicious of him being unfaithful, even justifying it with him getting another cup of coffee to show he's on the prowl. That's how I take it. Very observant. That’s actually the subliminal message of the original advertisement too. As we all know, ad agencies seek to prey on our deep psychological insecurities and offer a product which will calm our greatest fears. For example, a housewife’s greatest fear is not a “stain in clothes,” but she fears the unspoken social shame of being seen as a bad mother/wife if her family is seen in public wearing stained, grungy clothes. Hence, the Tide advertisements (for example) try to capitalize on this without saying it out loud. In the case of this Airplane coffee gag, the original Yuban coffee commercial was hinting that the husband is “unsatisfied” by what his wife normally has to offer at home, hence the reason he’s seeking his “cup of coffee” from another woman. Pretty blatant. The ad sought to capitalize on unspoken fears and anxieties of housewives of that era. Who knows if it sold more coffee or not. Airplane lampooning this is one of the reasons it’s such a funny movie — it’s not only slapstick— there’s some actual brains behind a lot of the gags. Yup Not only what you’ve noted, but older wife physically steps between hubby and younger woman offering “coffee.” Husband steps around older wife to accept younger woman’s “coffee.” Message is “satisfy your man or your competitors will…” There’s more too, but I’m typing in a tree stand. Even as a kid I thought the message in the commercial was clear. OP was correct to pick it up even though he didn’t see the original commercial. Very memorable and psychologically powerful commercial. |
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Quoted: So there's a joke a couple times the husband and wife couple he orders a second cup of coffee and she wonders , he never has a second cup of coffee. What is the parody? View Quote Here's an example Maxwell House 'Last Drop' Coffee Commercial (1976) |
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Yuban was a version of Maxwell House with a lighter roast mostly marketed on the west coast, also a General Foods brand and the commercials were done by the same ad agency.
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