P&G: Pampers Disposable Diapers, 1970s
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
- | Come on, mom, it's feeding time for the elephants. | 0:01 |
(baby cries) | 0:03 | |
- | Hold on, I think it's changing time for your brother. | 0:04 |
Let's go, back to the car. | 0:08 | |
- | Aw, we can't go now. | 0:09 |
- | Jill, I've got extra Pampers. | 0:11 |
- | Pampers? Thanks. | 0:13 |
I've got diapers back in the car. | 0:14 | |
- | Diapers? You mean, you're not using Pampers? | 0:15 |
- | Are they as good as cloth diapers? | 0:18 |
- | They're better. | 0:20 |
They keep Lizzie's bottom a lot drier than cloth diapers. | 0:21 | |
Narrator | Here's why: when a cloth diaper gets wet, | 0:25 |
it stays wet, inside and out. | 0:27 | |
But moisture passes through Pampers' Stay-Dry lining | 0:29 | |
and is absorbed in the padding below. | 0:32 | |
Inside, next to baby, the lining stays dryer | 0:34 | |
and helps keep the wetness from coming back | 0:37 | |
on baby's skin so he stays dryer. | 0:39 | |
Outside, Pampers are waterproof | 0:41 | |
so you don't need plastic pads. | 0:43 | |
- | And you don't wash them. | 0:45 |
- | That feels pretty nice, doesn't it? | 0:46 |
- | Mom, look, it's a baby elephant! | 0:50 |
- | Aw, isn't he funny? He doesn't even mind being wet. | 0:51 |
Narrator | Pampers, for dryer, happier babies. | 0:56 |
Item Info
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