Could use a dusting down.
Measures approximately: 7 3/4" (H) x 3" (L) x 2 1/4" (W).
I see no breaks, no chips, no cracks, no stains, no fading of coloring (paint).
When was the first Marlboro campaign featuring a cowboy?
In the United States, where the campaign originated, it was used from 1954 to 1999.
The Marlboro Man was first conceived by Leo Burnett in 1954.
The images initially featured rugged men portrayed in a variety of roles but later primarily featured a rugged cowboy or cowboys in picturesque wild terrain.
Was the Marlboro Man a real cowboy?
Darrell Winfield, one of the most recognizable Marlboro Men who roamed the countryside of the western United States, appearing in ads for the cigarette brand, has died.
What kind of cigarettes did the cowboys smoke?
Image result for When did they come up with Marlboro Europe Western Cowboy?
Cowboys referred to their roll-your-own as “quirlys.”
Tailor-made or ready-made cigarettes were looked down upon as “sissy sticks.”
Others referred to them as “pimp sticks” because only pimps could afford them.
What cigarettes were cowboy killers?
The four other cigarette cowboys died much younger of smoking-related diseases after a lifetime of smoking Marlboro Reds, which later became known as cowboy killers.
The cigarette cowboy was rugged, virile and asexual with no family nor home.
He was first created by the Leo Burnett advertising agency in 1954.
Eric Lawson, who portrayed the rugged Marlboro man in cigarette ads during the late 1970s, died Jan. 10 at his home in San Luis Obispo, Calif.
He was 72.
The cause was respiratory failure because of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, said his wife, Susan Lawson.
Bob Norris himself never smoked.
His image graced thousands of billboards and magazine ads, always with a Marlboro cigarette.
Philanthropist and rancher Bob Norris, best known as the original "Marlboro Man," died earlier this week.
He was 90.
The Marlboro Man too is an egoistic ideal; a noble and conscious being, at home in his universe, master of his destiny.
Thus the Marlboro Man has come to symbolize individualism, independence and capitalism.
What killed the Marlboro Man?
Actor Eric Lawson, once the face of Marlboro cigarettes, has died from respiratory failure due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), at the age of 72.
From 1978 to 1981, Lawson appeared in print ads as “The Marlboro Man,” a rugged cowboy synonymous with the cigarette brand.