Nicotine Educational Video Hub: Unveiling the Secrets of Nicotine Addiction
Welcome to our Nicotine Educational Videos hub. Here, you’ll find expert insights, real-life stories, groundbreaking research, and historical videos on nicotine addiction, quitting smoking, quitting vaping, and more. Explore this curated collection to gain knowledge, make informed decisions, and begin your quit nicotine journey to freedom.
The past, present and future of nicotine addiction | Mitch Zeller
Tobacco use remains the leading cause of preventable disease and death in the United States, killing more people each year than alcohol, AIDS, car accidents, illegal drugs, murder, and suicide combined. Follow health policy expert Mitch Zeller into the murky depths of the tobacco industry.
Scene Smoking Cigarettes, Cinema & The Myth of Cool
Smoking in Film and Television: Hollywood Insiders Speak Out about Artists' Rights, Social Responsibility, and the First Amendment.
A Walk Through The 20th Century With Bill Moyers
Known as one of the pioneers of the public relations profession, Edward L. Bernays was hired by a tobacco company in the 1920s to try to attract more female smokers. Bernays tried to break down the social taboo against women smoking cigarettes in public by depicting it as a feminist issue and convinced some debutantes to march in the Easter Parade in New York with burning cigarettes, which they were instructed to call "torches of freedom." Bernays regretted the campaign after cigarettes were linked to cancer and worked to ban tobacco advertising from radio and TV in 1970.
January 1, 1971: The Last Cigarette Ads Appear on TV
Same day report on the end of an era includes a montage of cigarette TV ads from the previous 25 years. Viewers got their last glance at Marlboro Country earlier that day and later in the evening when, at 11:50 pm on Jan. 1, 1971, the last television ad for cigarettes, Virginia Slims Cigarettes, aired, titled: "You've come a long way, baby".