Comic Book Advertisers In The 21st Century.
These guys were big in print in the 1970s - they still exist today online.

Famous Artists School
http://www.famous-artists-school.com
"Do you have art talent worth developing?" the ad asks. "Take our free test and see." The test booklet you send for measures your ability to compose a picture, graphically recognize image elements that portray conflict, stability, rising and more. If you pass the test, you then get the privilege of enrolling in the school. Today, thanks to the Internet, you can take the test and other preliminary exams online. The tests from the comics and online are virtually identical - what's changed is the method for taking the tests.

Grit
http://www.grit.com
"You can be among the thousands of boys and girls in small cities and towns all across America who earn their own spending money every week by introducing GRIT to their family, friends and neighbors," the comic ads read. You got to be the "paperboy" or "papergirl" for a long-established newspaper featuring down-homespun homilies, humor and down-to-earth, inspiring articles. The Grit newspaper of the 1970s has been replaced by the Grit magazine of the 21st century. The Web site is deep with interesting stories, references and resources. The spirit and flavor of the publication remains unchanged.

Johnson Smith Novelties
http://www.johnsonsmith.com
The products are legendary to almost any kid growing up with comics in the 1970s: X-Ray Specs, Vampire Blood, Garlic Gum, Hercules Wrist Band, Spy Pen Radio, Razzie Cushion, Candy Covered "Cockroaches," and more. This is the stuff of the Johnson Smith Co., a household name in novelties, gifts and collectibles since 1914. Their comic book ads were typically full page in size and usually in the inside front or back covers. The company is still around and thriving today online. Many of the old novelty items are still around, along with thousands of new ones.

Charles Atlas Bodybuilding http://www.charlesatlas.com
Charles Atlas bodybuilding goes back to the late 1920s and the famous ads showing a beach bully kicking sand in the face of a skinny "97-pound weakling." After taking the Atlas course, the scrawny kid - now muscular - comes back to beat up the bully. The 1970s comic book ads featured photos of Charles Atlas and the headline, "Check the kind of body you want and I'll show you how EASILY you can have it." Charles Atlas thrives today online selling not only the bodybuilding course but a line of vitamins, supplements, memorabilia and more.

Joe Weider Bodybuilding
http://www.weider.com
Joe's ads are famous for featuring a now well known bodybuilder (a very young Arnold Schwarzenegger) holding a bikini-clad woman in one arm. What young boy could resist that appeal in the 1970s comic ads? "The strongest, most virile and admired men are built by the Wieder system - fast!" the ads proclaimed. Today, the business focuses on nutrition, fitness, wellness, vitamins and athletic apparel in addition to bodybuilding.

Plastic Soldiers/Helen Of Toy
http://www.michtoy.com/MTSCnewSite/newplastic_folder/helen_of_toy/helenoftoy.html
The toy soldiers would come in a cardboard footlocker and were usually flat, plastic action figurines mounted on a base so you could stand them up, position them and then fight any battles you could imagine. The company, Helen of Toy, also sold "period collections" such as Revolutionary War sets. You also could pick up battleship collections. Helen of Toy apparently doesn't exist anymore, but its products live on through the Michigan Toy Soldier Co. and its Web site. You can buy the comic book soldiers you remember as well as dozens of other modern toy soldier products.

Strat-O-Matic
http://www.strat-o-matic.com
Before there were home computers and rotisserie leagues, there was Strat-O-Matic, a detailed baseball (and other sports) simulator using cards, dice and your managerial skills. A player's real life playing skills and odds for producing certain results were converted to dice percentages, allowing you to play games that were reasonably close to what you might expect in the real world. The computer revolution and digital age haven't killed Strat-O-Matic - the game lives on through Web-based play, computer games and improved board game versions.

 
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