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80's Commercials Disc 20

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80's Commercials Disc 20 DVD

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Roughly four hours of original 80s broadcast advertising captured straight from the tape, with original audio and the imperfect transitions that prove no one has touched these spots since they aired. From cereal-aisle staples to late-night infomercials, this disc is a time capsule of grocery store impulse buys, toy aisle dreams, and movie theater anticipation.

The 1984-1989 window was peak mass-market TV advertising. Saturday morning kid-vid, prime-time sitcoms, late-night talk shows, and the cable expansion all crowded the dial. Every commercial break was its own short film, and brands still believed in a loud end card. Local-station IDs, weather teases, and 1-800 numbers stitched the reel together.

The heart of this disc is its parade of beloved icons and family-friendly spots. Cereal mascots, toy aisle gold, soda jingles, fast-food deal cards, and the local-news weather lady. Every entry below is a real moment captured on this exact disc, listed in the order it aired.

If you grew up with this era of television, this disc is your ticket back. Original audio, original broadcast order, no remasters or modern restoration. Add this volume to your cart and bring the CRT-glow nostalgia of 80s television home tonight.

Approximately 4 hours of original commercials with original audio, in broadcast order.

Featured commercials:
Coca-Cola (1985)

The fizz, the smile, the unmistakable red can. A sun-soaked celebration of the soft drink that defined a generation, complete with that iconic jingle still humming in the back of your head.

McDonald's (1984)

Golden arches glowing under a summer sky as families pile into booths for Big Macs and fries. Pure feel-good Americana with a side of nostalgia.

Pepsi (1986)

The choice of a new generation explodes onto screen with pop stars, neon lights, and that fresh cola crackle. Every sip felt like an event.

Burger King (1983)

Flame-broiled burgers sizzle as the Whopper takes center stage. Have it your way with that catchy refrain that lived rent-free in every kid's brain.

Wendy's (1984)

Three little old ladies peer at a tiny patty buried in a giant bun. Where's the beef indeed. A pop culture moment that became a national catchphrase overnight.

Kool-Aid (1985)

Oh yeah! The big red pitcher bursts through a wall as kids cheer for sugary fruit punch on a hot afternoon. Pure 80s backyard bliss.

Hi-C (1986)

Ecto Cooler, fruit punch, and tropical blends fill brown paper lunch bags everywhere. The juice box that powered playgrounds across America.

Jell-O Pudding Pops (1985)

Bill Cosby grins as kids devour frozen chocolate treats on sticks. Cold, creamy, and gone in three bites.

Cap'n Crunch (1984)

The good Cap'n battles soggies and rallies cereal lovers with crunch that stays crunchy even in milk. Saturday morning gold.

Honey Nut Cheerios (1986)

Buzz the Bee zips around stealing spoonfuls as kids dig into the sweetened oat rings. Breakfast never felt so cheerful.

Lucky Charms (1985)

They're magically delicious! Lucky leaps over rainbows protecting his marshmallow treasures from cereal-hungry kids. Pink hearts, yellow moons, orange stars.

Trix (1984)

The Trix Rabbit schemes once again to snag a bowl of fruit-shaped cereal, only to be foiled by smug kids reminding him Trix are for kids.

Cookie Crisp (1986)

The Cookie Crook and Cookie Cop chase each other across kitchens trying to swipe bowls of cookie-shaped cereal. Saturday morning capers at their finest.

Frosted Flakes (1985)

Tony the Tiger roars his approval as kids power up for the day. They're grrreat! Spoken with that signature thunderous growl.

Sugar Smacks (1984)

Dig'em Frog hops through the kitchen passing out kisses and bowls of honey-roasted puffed wheat. Pure sticky-sweet sugar rush.

Pop-Tarts (1985)

Toaster pastries pop up steaming with frosted strawberry filling. Breakfast on the run never tasted so sweet, especially with sprinkles.

Eggo Waffles (1986)

Leggo my Eggo! Family members tussle over the last frozen waffle as the toaster pops up another golden round. Mornings made syrupy and warm.

Quaker Oats (1985)

The smiling Quaker man assures families that hot oatmeal is the right thing to do. Wholesome warmth in every steaming bowl.

Chef Boyardee (1984)

Beef-a-Roni and Spaghetti-Os tumble onto plates as kids cheer for Italian-style canned dinners. The chef's mustachioed grin sealed every deal.

Spaghetti-Os (1985)

Uh oh, Spaghetti-Os! Those little orange rings in tomato sauce slid off spoons and into hungry mouths across America.

Hamburger Helper (1986)

The friendly Helping Hand mascot waves as ground beef transforms into a hearty skillet meal in just one pan. Weeknight dinner solved.

Kraft Macaroni and Cheese (1985)

That iconic blue box meets boiling water and bright orange cheese powder magic. The cheesiest bowl of comfort in the cupboard.

Velveeta (1984)

The famous gold-foiled brick melts into creamy queso for nachos and casseroles. Smooth, gooey, and unmistakably 80s.

Oscar Mayer (1985)

My bologna has a first name! Kids sing the classic jingle while sandwiches stack high with that distinctive lunch meat.

Wonder Bread (1986)

Soft, white, and wrapped in a balloon-dotted bag. Builds strong bodies twelve ways and stars in a million PB&J sandwiches.

Skippy Peanut Butter (1985)

Creamy or chunky, Skippy spreads smooth across white bread for after-school snacks that powered countless playground hours.

Jif Peanut Butter (1984)

Choosy moms choose Jif. The smooth, scoopable spread that turned ordinary sandwiches into lunchbox legends.

Welch's Grape Jelly (1986)

That deep purple jar of pure grape goodness paired with peanut butter for the sandwich every 80s kid carried in a paper sack.

Smucker's (1985)

With a name like Smucker's, it has to be good. Strawberry preserves glisten on toast in soft morning light.

Tang (1984)

Astronaut-approved orange drink mix stirred into water for breakfast. The powdered citrus blast that fueled space-age mornings.

Country Time Lemonade (1985)

Tastes like real homemade. A cold pitcher of yellow refreshment poured at a summer porch gathering with banjo music swelling.

Crystal Light (1986)

Linda Evans and active women everywhere sip the low-calorie powdered drink that made hydration feel sophisticated.

Hawaiian Punch (1984)

Punchy the mascot in his red suit and straw hat asks if you want a nice Hawaiian Punch, then knocks the answer right out of the screen.

Capri Sun (1985)

That shiny silver pouch of tropical fruit drink, pierced with a yellow straw and squeezed for every last drop on hot summer days.

Juicy Juice (1986)

One hundred percent real fruit juice in cartons that lined lunchboxes. The wholesome alternative parents felt good about packing.

Ocean Spray Cranberry (1985)

Crisp cranberries bob in clear water while farmers in waders harvest the tart red fruit. Wholesome and refreshing in every gulp.

Minute Maid Orange Juice (1984)

Sun-ripened oranges squeezed into frosty glasses for breakfast tables across America. Pure sunshine in a carton.

Tropicana (1986)

That iconic orange with the striped straw stuck in it promised pure premium juice not from concentrate. Fresh squeezed brilliance.

Sunny Delight (1985)

The tangy orange citrus blend that wasn't quite juice but kids didn't care. SunnyD jugs ruled the refrigerator door.

Gatorade (1984)

Athletes sweat and chug the lemon-lime electrolyte drink that powered champions. Replenish, rehydrate, and dominate the field.

Yoo-hoo (1986)

Me-e-e and my Yoo-hoo! The chocolate drink in the yellow-labeled bottle that tasted like nothing else on the shelf.

Nestle Quik (1985)

The Quik Bunny bounces through kitchens stirring chocolate powder into cold milk for an instant cocoa boost. Strawberry too!

Carnation Instant Breakfast (1984)

A tall glass of chocolate-flavored breakfast in a powder pouch promised vitamins and energy for busy mornings on the go.

Slim-Fast (1986)

A shake for breakfast, a shake for lunch, then a sensible dinner. Tommy Lasorda smiles as pounds melt away the easy way.

Diet Coke (1985)

Just for the taste of it! Sleek silver cans crackle open as the sugar-free cola becomes the sophisticated soft drink of the decade.

Tab (1984)

The pink-canned diet cola for beautiful people who watch what they drink. A retro slice of calorie-counting cool.

7UP (1986)

The Uncola! Crisp, clear, and lemon-lime fresh, with bubbles that danced in tall glasses. The un-thirst quencher with attitude.

Sprite (1985)

Lymon-flavored bubbles burst out of green cans. Crisp, clean, and unmistakably refreshing in every effervescent sip.

Dr Pepper (1984)

Be a Pepper! Whole crowds break into song and dance celebrating the unique 23-flavor soda. Wouldn't you like to be a Pepper too?

Mountain Dew (1986)

Get that barefoot feeling drinking Mountain Dew! Country folks splash through creeks chugging the bright yellow citrus soda.

Mello Yello (1985)

Smooth, mellow, and citrus-charged. The yellow soda that promised a chill cousin to its bolder siblings on the shelf.

Fanta (1984)

Bright orange bubbles fizz as kids reach for the fruit-flavored soda that brought a sunny burst to every sip.

A&W Root Beer (1986)

That frosty mug topped with creamy foam at the drive-in. Carhops on roller skates deliver classic root beer floats to waiting cars.

Barq's (1985)

It's got bite! The bold root beer with a kick that set itself apart from sweeter rivals. Brown bottles, big attitude.

Jolt Cola (1986)

All the sugar and twice the caffeine! The wild new soda that promised a buzz strong enough to wake the dead.

Slice (1985)

The new soda from Pepsi loaded with ten percent real fruit juice. Apple, cherry, and lemon-lime in cans bursting with flavor.

Crush (1984)

Orange Crush poured cold and bubbly, sweet enough to make any afternoon feel like a carnival. A classic candy-store soda.

Schweppes (1986)

The distinguished gentleman pours fizzy tonic water into a tall glass. Refined refreshment with a touch of British class.

Perrier (1985)

The chic green bottle of French sparkling water that made hydration feel like a high-society event. Bubbles with prestige.

Folgers Coffee (1984)

The best part of waking up is Folgers in your cup! Steaming mugs and homecomings with that warm, familiar jingle.

Maxwell House (1986)

Good to the last drop! Rich, dark coffee poured into china cups for that morning ritual that meant comfort and routine.

Taster's Choice (1985)

The sophisticated couple sips instant coffee while sparks fly across the dinner table. Romance in freeze-dried form.

Sanka (1984)

Decaf coffee that promised the great taste without the jitters. Robert Young recommends it for nervous tummies everywhere.

Lipton Tea (1986)

Brisk! Iced tea poured over crackling cubes on a sun-drenched porch. The taste of summer in every amber glass.

Nestea (1985)

Take the Nestea Plunge! People fall backwards into pools clutching glasses of refreshing iced tea. Pure 80s commercial gold.

Snapple (1986)

Made from the best stuff on Earth! The all-natural fruit drinks in glass bottles that promised real flavor with every pop of the cap.

Hires Root Beer (1985)

The classic American root beer with that creamy head and old-fashioned flavor. A taste of soda fountain history in a chilled bottle.

Shasta (1984)

The budget-friendly soda in colorful cans crowded the cooler at every backyard barbecue. Cola, grape, orange, and beyond.

Faygo (1986)

Detroit's hometown soda with flavors like Rock & Rye and Red Pop. Remember when pop tasted like this?

RC Cola (1985)

Me and my RC! The underdog cola that promised big taste at a smaller price. Cool refreshment with a country twang.

Hershey's Chocolate (1984)

The classic brown wrapper with silver letters opens to reveal milk chocolate squares. Sweet simplicity that defined American candy.

Snickers (1986)

Packed with peanuts! The chocolate caramel nougat bar that satisfied hungry appetites between meals with every chewy bite.

M&M's (1985)

Melts in your mouth, not in your hands! Colorful candy shells tumble from the brown bag for every sweet tooth in the room.

Reese's Peanut Butter Cups (1984)

You got chocolate in my peanut butter! Two great tastes that taste great together in those iconic orange wrappers.

Kit Kat (1986)

Gimme a break! Snap apart that crispy wafer candy bar coated in milk chocolate to the tune of the most singable jingle of the decade.

Twix (1985)

Cookie, caramel, and chocolate in two crunchy bars wrapped in gold. The candy that gave you double the indulgence.

Milky Way (1984)

Whipped chocolatey nougat layered with caramel and dipped in milk chocolate. Soft, sweet, and unforgettable.

3 Musketeers (1986)

The fluffy chocolate-whipped center bar that promised great taste with less fat. Light, airy, and downright delicious.

Butterfinger (1985)

Nobody better lay a finger on my Butterfinger! Bart Simpson defends the crunchy peanut butter bar with cartoon ferocity.

Baby Ruth (1984)

That hefty peanut, caramel, and nougat bar covered in chocolate. The ballpark candy that filled candy aisles in iconic red wrappers.

Almond Joy and Mounds (1986)

Sometimes you feel like a nut, sometimes you don't! The coconut candy bars sing their way through the most stubborn jingle ever written.

Skor (1985)

The buttery toffee bar coated in milk chocolate that crackled with every bite. Crunchy elegance in a slim red wrapper.

Heath Bar (1984)

English toffee covered in milk chocolate that snapped sharp and melted slow. A timeless treat in classic yellow packaging.

Whatchamacallit (1986)

Crispy peanut-flavored crisp covered in caramel and chocolate. The candy bar with a name as wild as its taste.

Charleston Chew (1985)

Stretchy nougat dipped in chocolate that you froze and snapped into bite-sized chunks. Old-fashioned candy fun for modern kids.

Bit-O-Honey (1984)

The chewy honey-flavored taffy with bits of almond. A long-lasting candy that promised serious jaw work for the price.

Now and Later (1986)

Eat some now, save some for later! Square fruit chews stacked in colorful packs that lasted all afternoon at the playground.

Starburst (1985)

Unexplainably juicy! Square fruit chews unwrapped from bright yellow packs delivered cherry, lemon, orange, and strawberry bursts.

Skittles (1984)

Taste the rainbow! Colorful candy-coated fruit chews tumble out of red bags into eager hands. Each color, a different sweet adventure.

Jolly Rancher (1986)

Hard fruit candies in cherry, watermelon, and green apple that lasted forever and stuck to every pocket lining ever known.

Life Savers (1985)

The classic candy ring rolls in colorful tubes. Five flavors in every pack with that signature hole in the middle.

Tic Tac (1984)

Just one and a half calories! Tiny mints rattle in the unmistakable plastic dispenser. Fresh breath, big personality.

Certs (1986)

Two, two, two mints in one! Breath fresheners with the magic Retsyn promise. Confidence in every chalky disc.

Bubblicious (1985)

Soft, juicy chunks of bubble gum in flavors like watermelon and grape that blew massive bubbles bigger than your face.

Bubble Yum (1984)

Soft and chewy bubble gum that came in cherry, grape, and original. The kind of bubble blower that made playground legends.

Hubba Bubba (1986)

Big bubbles, no troubles! Soft bubble gum that didn't stick to your face when those bubbles popped. A sticky-free miracle.

Big League Chew (1985)

Shredded bubble gum in a foil pouch that let kids pretend they were chewing tobacco like big league ball players. Pure baseball magic.

Bazooka Joe (1984)

Pink bubble gum wrapped in tiny comic strips starring the eyepatched mascot. A penny-candy classic with a corny joke inside every wrapper.

Fruit Stripe Gum (1986)

Yipes! Stripes! Fruit Stripe Gum! Zebra-themed bubble gum in five fruit flavors with tattoo-printed wrappers as a bonus.

Trident Gum (1985)

Four out of five dentists recommend sugarless Trident for their patients who chew gum. Fresh breath without the cavities.

Wrigley's Spearmint (1984)

The classic green gum stick wrapped in foil that freshened breath and entertained jaws since forever. A timeless staple.

Juicy Fruit (1986)

The taste, the taste, the taste is gonna move ya! Sweet yellow-wrapped chewing gum with that catchy upbeat jingle stuck in everyone's head.

Doublemint (1985)

Double your pleasure, double your fun! Twin sisters smile in perfect sync chewing the cool minty gum that powered countless commercials.

Big Red (1984)

Kiss a little longer, stay close a little longer! The bold cinnamon gum that promised romance with every chew.

Dentyne (1986)

The cinnamon gum in the iconic red and white pack that promised both fresh breath and dental defense. Sharp, spicy, and sophisticated.

Atari 2600 (1982)

Have you played Atari today? Joysticks gripped tight as kids battled aliens, raced cars, and saved kingdoms on the wood-grain console.

Nintendo Entertainment System (1986)

Now you're playing with power! Mario, Zelda, and a gray controller revolutionized living rooms everywhere with 8-bit magic.

Sega Master System (1987)

The challenger to Nintendo's throne arrived with sleeker games and bolder graphics. Sega does what Nintendon't!

ColecoVision (1983)

Arcade-quality graphics at home! Donkey Kong, Zaxxon, and a chunky controller brought arcades right into the family den.

Intellivision (1982)

The intelligent television computer system! Hand controllers with disc pads and overlay sheets ushered in a smarter kind of gameplay.

Commodore 64 (1984)

The home computer that loaded games from cassette tapes and floppy disks. Kids learned BASIC while parents marveled at the future.

Apple IIe (1985)

The personal computer that took classrooms by storm. Green-screen monitors and floppy disks sparked the imagination of a digital generation.

Texas Instruments TI-99 (1983)

The home computer with built-in BASIC. Bill Cosby grins as families learn, play, and program together on the silver-and-black machine.

Game Boy (1989)

Portable gaming arrives in a gray brick! Tetris, Mario, and that signature green screen turned every car ride into an adventure.

Speak & Spell (1983)

The educational toy with a robotic voice helped kids master spelling through interactive challenges. The future of learning, beep by beep.

Lite-Brite (1985)

Lite-Brite, makin' things with light! Colorful pegs poked into black paper revealed glowing pictures that lit up bedrooms everywhere.

Easy-Bake Oven (1984)

Bake real cakes with a light bulb! The miniature oven let kids whip up tiny treats in pastel mixes and pretend pans.

Cabbage Patch Kids (1985)

Each one unique with their own birth certificate! The yarn-haired dolls sparked riots at toy stores during the holiday craze of the decade.

My Little Pony (1986)

Pastel ponies with brushable manes and cutie marks galloped into bedrooms. A magical herd of friendship and rainbow tails.

Strawberry Shortcake (1984)

The sweet-smelling doll with her berry-themed friends and pet cat Custard charmed the toy aisle with scratch-and-sniff hair.

Rainbow Brite (1985)

Colorful sprite Rainbow Brite battles gloom with the help of Starlite the horse. Brought color back to a gray world with magic and song.

Care Bears (1986)

The Care Bears Stare! Pastel teddy bears with belly badges spread caring and cheer from Care-a-lot to every kid's bedroom.

He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (1985)

By the power of Grayskull! Muscle-bound action figures with swords and beasts of Eternia ruled boys' toy chests across the land.

She-Ra: Princess of Power (1986)

For the honor of Grayskull! He-Man's twin sister led the Great Rebellion with a shimmering sword and a cast of heroic warrior women.

G.I. Joe (1985)

A real American hero! Cobra-fighting action figures, vehicles, and playsets brought military adventures to backyards everywhere.

Transformers (1984)

More than meets the eye! Robots in disguise transformed from cars and jets into towering Autobots and Decepticons. Vehicles with attitude.

Voltron (1985)

Form Voltron! Five robotic lions combined into the defender of the universe. Lion Force assembled with thunderous theme music.

M.A.S.K. (1986)

Illusion is the ultimate weapon! Vehicles transformed and heroes wore masks of power in epic battles against V.E.N.O.M.

ThunderCats (1985)

ThunderCats, ho! Lion-O raised the Sword of Omens as the cat-like heroes battled Mumm-Ra on Third Earth.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1988)

Heroes in a half shell! Pizza-loving mutated turtles and their action figures invaded toy aisles with their sewer-dwelling style.

Lego (1985)

The colorful interlocking bricks built castles, spaceships, and pirate ships. Imagination snapped together one stud at a time.

Hot Wheels (1984)

Tiny die-cast cars zipped down orange plastic tracks. The miniature speed demons that turned hallways into raceways.

Tonka Trucks (1986)

Built tough! The yellow construction trucks could survive sandbox battles, kid stomps, and decades of backyard adventures.

Big Wheel (1984)

The low-rider plastic tricycle that tore up driveways with screeching speed and that signature plastic rumble. Three wheels, all attitude.

Power Wheels (1986)

Battery-powered ride-on cars and Jeeps that let kids cruise the cul-de-sac in style. The first set of wheels every kid begged for.

Slip 'N Slide (1985)

The yellow plastic water slide that turned suburban backyards into wet, slippery playgrounds. Pure summer thrill in a hose.

Super Soaker (1989)

The pump-action water blaster that revolutionized water fights and ended summers with soaked clothes and ear-to-ear grins.

Nerf (1985)

The foam ball that could be played indoors without breaking lamps. Football, basketball, and beyond, all in soft yellow foam.

Koosh Ball (1988)

The squishy rubber-stranded ball that flopped through the air and stuck to your hand on the catch. Tactile fun for restless fingers.

Stretch Armstrong (1984)

The blond-haired action figure who stretched four feet without snapping. The squishy gel-filled hero of every backyard tug-of-war.

Slime (1985)

The Mattel green goo in a plastic trash can. Squishy, slimy, and absolutely gross in the best possible way.

Silly Putty (1984)

The bouncing, stretching, comic-copying putty in a plastic egg. Endless desk-side entertainment in pastel-colored shells.

Etch A Sketch (1986)

The red plastic frame with twin knobs that drew silver lines on a gray screen. Shake to erase and start fresh.

Mr. Potato Head (1985)

The classic spud face got plastic eyes, ears, and noses popped into him for endless silly combinations. The original toy with personality.

Rubik's Cube (1982)

The colorful 3D puzzle that frustrated and fascinated millions. Twist, turn, and try to align all six sides into solid colors.

Pound Puppies (1985)

Plush puppies with droopy eyes waiting to be adopted from cardboard kennels. Each one needed a loving home with you.

Teddy Ruxpin (1985)

The animatronic storytelling bear with a cassette tape in his back. His mouth moved as he read stories to wide-eyed kids.

Glo Worm (1985)

The squeezable worm whose head lit up green when hugged. The bedtime buddy that glowed in the dark with every cuddle.

Popples (1986)

The plush creatures that turned insid

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