In this movie, Late Night with the Devil (2023), where the timeline is set in the 1960s or 1970s, one of the guests is smoking a cigar when the program is on the air.
Were people allowed to smoke on TV back in the 1960s to 1970s?
In this movie, Late Night with the Devil (2023), where the timeline is set in the 1960s or 1970s, one of the guests is smoking a cigar when the program is on the air.
Were people allowed to smoke on TV back in the 1960s to 1970s?
Famously, Edward R. Murrow, an american news broadcaster and commentator was often shown smoking on television.
An example video of a 1962 broadcast is found on youtube.
Indeed, many shows were sponsored by tobacco companies and smoking was even advertised as "healthy" by doctors.
Yes. And, it's still perfectly legal to smoke on TV even today (at least in the US).
Sean Penn in 2018 smoking on The Colbert Show:
What's illegal is cigarette advertising (see Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act).
From the 1950's: "The Jack Benny Show" (sponsored by Lucky Strike) went so far as to incorporate the sponsor's product into the "entertainment" portions of the show.
The link is direct to "smoking advertising as entertainment." However, I recommend watching the full episode. Jack's guest is Marilyn Monroe herself. Goodbye, Norma Jean. And, promoting to college students at t=00:00 is simply delicious in 2024...
Perhaps for reasons of copyright, at least one other version of the linked episode exists on YouTube (at the time of writing). This other version does not include the "sponsor's product promotion as entertainment".
It must have been "entertainment" as the audience applauds after this musical interlude.
Dean Martin often sang his songs with the smoke of a cigarette in his fingers wafting around him.
Jackie Gleason ended his show "The Honeymooners" by walking on stage in a bathrobe, often with a beverage ("it's not a whiskey, nudge-nudge") and a cigarette in hand.
Late-nighter Johnny Carson often failed in his attempts to hide his occasional discrete (ahem) puffing during interviews (when he thought he was not on camera).
And, it wasn't just people smoking on TV in the 60s. According to USA Today, these characters appeared in "TV's First Animated PrimeTime Program".
As for "the 70s", I never watched the series, but one particularly well-known quirk of the TV detective "Columbo" was the (often lit) cigar his character always had in his hand.
Anyone living in the US or Canada during those halcyon days would remember Rowan and Martin's "Laugh-In". Here we see one of the show's hosts coming on stage with a lit cigarette. Series ran 1968-1972. (Skip to 00:20 for a glimpse of Mr. Spock as his alter ego, Leonard Nimoy...)
Then there's the disgraced comedian Bill Cosby (affectionately known as "America's Dad") in
this poignant 11 minutes from 1971. (Part II here) Hard to miss the role of tobacco in this monologue.
Perspective: Schoolmates, in the '70s, were sent to prison (in Canada) for possession of marijuana. 50 years later and... "No problem, bro'! Just make sure you're in a designated smoking area at the airport, okay?" Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose
Another data point, as recently as the '90s: here is comedian Denis Leary on Late Night with David Letterman, 19 February 1993, smoking.
People used to smoke in aeroplanes, elevators, offices, and in cinemas. This post claims that smoking was allowed in cinemas in New York as late as 1988. I was surprised, though, to see a former nurse say:
I started working as a Respiratory Therapist in 1983. In those days we were smoking by the monitors at the nursing station in the ICU!
So I don't see why TV would have been an exception.