Difference between revisions of "Bufferin Man"
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− | '''Bufferin Man''' was a 1950's advertising design used to promote the Bufferin brand of [[Wikipedia:Aspirin|Aspirin]] it is included in the back row of people on the cover of [[We're Only In It For The Money]] between [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] and the torch of the [[Statue Of Liberty]]. Bufferin Man is a "mechanical drawing of the human body", shown at the moment the human is taking Bufferin. | + | [[File:Bufferinman.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Bufferin Man on the album cover of "We're Only In It For The Money".]] |
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+ | '''Bufferin Man''' was a 1950's advertising design used to promote the Bufferin brand of [[Wikipedia:Aspirin|Aspirin]] it is included in the back row of people on the cover of [[We're Only In It For The Money]] between [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] and the torch of the [[Statue Of Liberty]]. Bufferin Man is a "mechanical drawing of the human body", shown at the moment the human is taking Bufferin.<ref>http://globalia.net/donlope/fz/notes/We%27re_Only_In_It_For_The_Money_Cover.html</ref> | ||
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+ | ==Notes== | ||
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+ | <references/> | ||
==See Also:== | ==See Also:== |
Revision as of 19:18, 25 August 2014
Bufferin Man was a 1950's advertising design used to promote the Bufferin brand of Aspirin it is included in the back row of people on the cover of We're Only In It For The Money between Lyndon B. Johnson and the torch of the Statue Of Liberty. Bufferin Man is a "mechanical drawing of the human body", shown at the moment the human is taking Bufferin.[1]