Philip Morris: Parliament Cigarettes, 1950s
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| Mike Wallace | This is Mike Wallace for Parliament. | 0:01 |
| Extra margin. | 0:04 | |
| What does extra margin mean to you? | 0:05 | |
| To a driver, extra margin can mean that extra | 0:08 | |
| burst of speed he needs to pass the car ahead. | 0:11 | |
| To a photographer, extra margin can mean his light meter | 0:14 | |
| but in a cigarette, extra margin means Parliament. | 0:18 | |
| Every Parliament gives you an extra margin today. | 0:21 | |
| Extra margin for flavor because parliament puts the filter | 0:25 | |
| where it does the most good. | 0:28 | |
| Recessed a clean quarter inch away. | 0:30 | |
| Extra margin because month after month, | 0:33 | |
| Parliament is tested for uniformity | 0:35 | |
| by the United States Testing Company. | 0:37 | |
| Extra margin because tobacco tastes best | 0:40 | |
| when the filters recessed | 0:42 | |
| and your own good taste confirms it. | 0:44 | |
| Why smoke any other way | 0:47 | |
| when every Parliament gives you an extra margin. | 0:48 | |
| Pop after pop all through the day. | 0:51 | |
| You're so smart to smoke Parliament. | 0:53 | |
| Extra margin, no extra cost. | 0:56 |
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