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Edward R. Feil, Harold S. Feil, Nellie Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, Daniel Hellerstein
Summary:
An event celebrating 50 years of the PTA at Roxboro Junior High in Cleveland Heights. Harold and Nellie walk through an exhibit that has been set up in a classroom with historical documents and photos. Teachers, parents, and sponsors mingle and talk. Outside, student bands members (including Daniel Hellerstein) perform for the crowd.
From the series Ripples. It seems easy to get on a plane and fly somewhere, but it takes about 55 people to get a jet ready to fly. Each has his own job handling baggage, fueling, preparing and storing food, checking weather and maps,servicing the aircraft. Some important people you don't usually see are maintenance men,meteorologists at the weather station, and controllers in the tower. All these people and more work together so passengers can travel safely and comfortably by jet.
Edward R. Feil, Harold S. Feil, Nellie Feil, Naomi Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, Beth Hellerstein, Susan Hellerstein, Daniel Hellerstein, Jonathan Hellerstein, George Feil, Helen Kahn Weil, Julius Weil, Edward G. Feil, Ken Feil
Summary:
Home movie of an anniversary party for Harold and Nellie Feil at their home. Friends and family mingle and enjoy refreshments.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which a jingle plays over shots of animated graphics and live-action female dancers moving around a psychedelic backdrop of stars, bubbles, and lights. One of the winners of the 1975 Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which an offscreen male narrator describes how the product "freshes up" one during a busy office workday. Shots of 7 Up bottles sitting in office and meeting settings are interspersed with stock footage from silent-era movies. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which an offscreen narrator describes the beverage as the perfect sandwich companion over shots of sandwich ingredients stacking atop one another on plates and young people dancing and drinking the product. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up featuring the folk music group the Kingston Trio as cowboys in an old western town. The Trio sings about shooting a bartender after he serves them the wrong drink after they request 7 Up. One of the Trio ends up imprisoned in a chain gang as the other two drink bottles of 7 Up nearby. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up featuring the folk music group the Kingston Trio in a small mountain town. The Trio sings about buying bottles of 7 Up from a woman selling them outside her shop. A man being chased by a law officer gives the officer some 7 Up to call a truce. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up featuring the folk music group the Kingston Trio as circus promoters. The Trio sings to a crowd of patrons about a trapeze artist called "Lovely Louise." One of the trio climbs up a ladder to give Louise a 7 Up, only to fall off in shock upon discovering she looks like a man. Submitted for the Clio Awards. (Note: ad contains an instance of transphobia.)
An advertisement for 7 Up in which an offscreen male narrator describes the product's refreshing features over close-up shots of bottles of 7 Up on ice, an ingredient list on a bottle, and young people smiling and dancing. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which an offscreen narrator describes how the product is the perfect refresher for a busy business executive's work day over humorously re-appropriated footage from silent-era films. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which a man and woman are thwarted in their attempts to flirt with each other on a bus and a cafe, before finally meeting in their shared work office and going out to a restaurant. An offscreen narrator repeats how it is "always 7 Up time" and praises the qualities of the product as the man and woman drink bottles of 7 Up at the restaurant. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which a narrator named Eloise talks about her routine for preparing lunch and a 7 Up before talking on the phone. Still sketches of Eloise by cartoonist George Clark accompany the narration. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which an offscreen male narrator lists a variety of situations that are perfect for drinking the product, such as sightseeing, friend gatherings, barbecues, etc. Shots of 7 Up bottles in different home and recreational settings are interspersed with stock footage from silent-era movies. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which an offscreen male narrator describes how the product quenches the thirst of suburban homeowners over various scenes of silent-era movie footage. Interspersed among the silent movie scenes are shots of family-size 7 Up bottles sitting in a fridge or standing on a table with glasses for serving. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for sugar-free 7 Up in which an offscreen narrator explains how the product is the latest stage in soft drink evolution. Submitted for the Clio Awards International category.
An advertisement for 7 Up in which an offscreen male narrator describes how the product is perfect for teenagers in various school and recreational settings. Shots of 7 Up bottles in beach, homework, and party contexts are interspersed with stock footage from silent-era movies. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for 7 Up chronicling a woman's life through still stencil portraits as she grows up from 1929 (the year that 7 Up debuted) through the early 1960s, set to the song "Thank Heaven for Little Girls." The ad concludes on an image of the woman entering a maternity ward, while an offscreen narrator urges the viewer to "stay tuned" to part two to find out whether she gives birth to a boy or girl. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Part two of a two-part advertisement for 7 Up chronicling a woman's life through still stencil portraits from her birth in the early 1940s until her marriage in the 1960s, set to the song "Thank Heaven for Little Girls." An offscreen narrator describes how 7 Up has served three generations of consumers since 1929. Submitted for the Clio Awards.