In early advertising Alka-Seltzer virtually promised heavy drinkers it could save their jobs. |
It
was the perfect product for a nation with a physical and spiritual hang over.
After the wild binge of the Roaring
Twenties fueled by bathtub gin
and bootleg beer and the pain of the
Crash and Great Depression, America was
ready for Alka-Seltzer which was
introduced on December 3, 1931.
The
breakthrough was combining two existing remedies—aspirin for relief of headaches,
fevers, and body pain and bi-carbonate
of soda to neutralize stomach acids and
“settle the stomach.” The active ingredients and fillers were
compressed into tablets about the size of a half-dollar—remember those?
That was neater than powdered products like Bromo Seltzer and dosages were better controlled.
The
tablets were to be dissolved in a tumbler full of water, releasing the fizz of the bi-carbonate of soda. The liquid form may have helped deliver the
pain relief of aspirin faster than Beyer
tablets and the water in the glass certainly helped combat de-hydration common after both hang overs and vomiting.
Counter dispensers were everywhere. |
Manufactured
by the
Dr. Miles Medicine Company, later known as Miles Laboratories, the tablets were
marketed stacked in a tubular bottle
with a screw top cap. The bottles could fit into dispensers that
soon set on most drug store soda
fountains, lunch counters, and bars in the country. Relief was only a nickel away. Soon the
bottles were also staples of home
medicine cabinets as the product was relentlessly advertized in slick magazine
ads and on radio programs like Alka-Seltzer Comedy Star of Hollywood
and National Barn Dance.
The
story of Alka-Seltzer is largely the story of marketing and advertising,
especially in the days after World War
II and the advent of mass television
broadcasting. The pain reliever was
the beneficiary time and again of some of the most memorable advertising in
history.
Speedy Alka-Seltzer was introduced
as Sparky in 1951 in print ads. By 1954 The cheerful stop-action animated figure on TV with both a body and hat of Alaka-Seltzer
tablets had became an icon and given a name change to reflect a new slogan,
“Speedy relief.” He sang a catchy jingle, “Plop, plop, fizz, fizz, Oh what a
relief it is” and appeared in more than 500 commercials before being retired in
1964. Speedy was been revived in a new series
of ads that started airing late 2010.
The
‘60’s saw memorable ads like the cartoon
man arguing with his own stomach, the jazzy No Matter What Shape Your Stomach’s
In featuring close ups of bellies
of all shapes and sizes while the catchy jingle played, and ads with the
classic catch phases like “Mamma mia, that's-a spicy meat a-ball!”, “Try it, You’ll Like it!”, and “I can’t
believe I ate the whole thing.”
Today
Alaka-Seltzer is owned and marketed by German
based pharmaceutical conglomerate Bayer. The glass tubes have long since been
replaced with blue boxes holding individual foil wrapped doses of two tablets.
The original Alaka-Seltzer is just the anchor of a line of home remedies
including flavored tablets, Alaka-Seltzer
Gold with no aspirin, just soda, and current best seller Alaka-Seltzer Plus, marketed as a cold and flu remedy.
With
so many competing products now on the shelves, Alka-Seltzer is neither as
ubiquitous or quite as iconic a product as it used to be. But it may still be a hangover’s best friend.
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