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'''Jell-O'''<br /> | '''Jell-O'''<br /> | ||
− | By the 1920s–30s, Jell-O advertising often used patriotic imagery — Lady Liberty, the American flag, family scenes, and “Welcome to America” themes. Those ads helped cement the association between Jell-O and American identity, so later generations imagined new arrivals being welcomed with "red-white-and-blue Jell-O molds," a charming, but entirely advertising imagination, not Ellis Island reality. | + | 75; By the 1920s–30s, Jell-O advertising often used patriotic imagery — Lady Liberty, the American flag, family scenes, and “Welcome to America” themes. Those ads helped cement the association between Jell-O and American identity, so later generations imagined new arrivals being welcomed with "red-white-and-blue Jell-O molds," a charming, but entirely advertising imagination, not Ellis Island reality. |
{{ST Alpha Nav}} | {{ST Alpha Nav}} |
Latest revision as of 14:06, 8 October 2025
Jell-O
75; By the 1920s–30s, Jell-O advertising often used patriotic imagery — Lady Liberty, the American flag, family scenes, and “Welcome to America” themes. Those ads helped cement the association between Jell-O and American identity, so later generations imagined new arrivals being welcomed with "red-white-and-blue Jell-O molds," a charming, but entirely advertising imagination, not Ellis Island reality.