Electric cigarettes reviews – the vapestick brand
Many of these electronic cigarettes UK reviews will talk about the important things you’ll need to consider and acquire if you’re thinking about taking up vaping as a healthier alternative to tobacco smoking. At VAPESTICK, we have carefully considered the inclusion of everything you’ll need to start your vaping journey in our e cig starter kits, ensuring our products will always be at least one notch above the rest, and with our Classic model we make no exception.
Like many of the other products you’ll read about in those electronic cigarettes UK reviews, the VAPESTICK Classic is a model that closely resembles a real cigarette with a traditional white body and brown filter and the same length and dimensions. But there’s no harmful chemicals, no tobacco and no lit materials in it at all. It does contain nicotine however (in the strength you prefer), which is the main reason most smokers keep coming back to their cigarettes. As you’ll no doubt read in the reviews, the VAPESTICK Classic produces a terrific amount of vapour for its size and unlike many of the other products referred to in those electronic cigarettes UK reviews, the Classic comes with our signature blue LED light tip, so that others wont mistake you for smoking the real thing in those public places where tobacco smoking has been banned.
In fact, quality is a byword here at VAPESTICK, and all our products are made from the very best materials, using the latest technologies, to deliver the best possible vaping experience across all the models in our range. Reading electronic cigarettes UK reviews can sometimes scramble your mind a bit, so we’ve created an easy to understand and totally satisfying model in our Classic UK e cigarette. Its simplicity is its key and its looks and feels just great in your hand.
The VAPESTICK Classic E Cigarette UK Starter Kit is a wonderful way to introduce yourself to the world of vaping, and once you’ve read all the electronic cigarettes UK reviews out there, we think you’ll need to look no further. Our Classic Starter Kit comes with two atomisers (the clever tech that produces the vapour from the e liquid in the cartridges), two 150mAh rechargeable batteries, which you can charge using the included USB charger, or via the UK wall plug adaptor. We also include a carrying pouch and our exclusive V Card (which you definitely won’t read about in electronic cigarettes UK reviews about other brands) which gives you, or anyone else who sees it, all the information about why vaping doesn’t break the strict UK smoking ban laws.
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Joe camel – wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
European made cigarettes online
The U.S. marketing team of R. J. Reynolds, looking for an idea to promote Camel’s 75th anniversary, re discovered Joe in the company’s archives in the late 1980s.
Quoted from The New York Times
Joe Camel was actually born in Europe. The caricatured camel was created in 1974 by a British artist, Billy Coulton, for a French advertising campaign that subsequently ran in other countries in the 1970s. Indeed, Mr. O’Toole recalled a visit to France many years ago during which he glimpsed Joe Camel wearing a Foreign Legion cap. The inspiration behind Mr. Price’s cartoon was the camel, named Old Joe, that has appeared on all Camel packages since the brand’s initial appearance in 1913. 1
Joe Camel first appeared in the U.S in 1988, in materials created for the 75th anniversary of the Camel brand by Trone Advertising. Trone is a mid size agency in Greensboro, N.C., that Reynolds used on various advertising and promotional projects.
Physical appearance edit
The character lacked many camel traits. Feet were always to be covered (except in one of the first six images returned in a Google image search, which shows the character on the beach with bare feet on full display), in footwear consistent with the rest of the outfit. The character also lacked a tail or hump. 2 Advertising presented Joe Camel in a variety of “fun and entertaining, contemporary and fresh” situations, wearing “bold and bright” colors, blue and yellow where appropriate. His face remained the same in different advertising pieces, and images of his hands only used when necessary. 2
Controversy edit
In 1991, the Journal of the American Medical Association published a study showing that by age six nearly as many children could correctly respond that “Joe Camel” was associated with cigarettes as could respond that the Disney Channel logo was associated with Mickey Mouse, and alleged that the “Joe Camel” campaign was targeting children, 3 despite R. J. Reynolds’ contention that the campaign had been researched only among adults and was directed only at the smokers of other brands. At that time it was also estimated that 32.8% of all cigarettes sold illegally to underage buyers were Camels, up from less than one percent. 4 Subsequently, the American Medical Association asked R. J. Reynolds Nabisco to pull the campaign. R. J. Reynolds refused, and the Joe Camel Campaign continued. In 1991, Janet Mangini, a San Francisco based attorney, brought a suit against R. J. Reynolds, challenging the company for targeting minors with its “Joe Camel” advertising campaign. In her complaint, Mangini alleged that teenage smokers accounted for US$476 million of Camel cigarette sales in 1992. When the Joe Camel advertisements started in 1988, that figure was only at US$6 million, “implicitly suggesting such advertisements have harmed a great many teenagers by luring them into extended use of and addiction to tobacco products.” 5
R. J. Reynolds has denied Joe Camel was intended to be directed at children the company maintains that Joe Camel’s target audience was 25 49 year old males and current Marlboro smokers. In response to the criticism, R. J. Reynolds instituted “Let’s Clear the Air on Smoking”, a campaign of full page magazine advertisements consisting entirely of text, typically set in large type, denying those charges, and declaring that smoking is “an adult custom”.
Internal documents produced to the court in Mangini v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, San Francisco County Superior Court No. 959516, demonstrated the industry’s interest in targeting children as future smokers. 6 The importance of the youth market was illustrated in a 1974 presentation by RJR’s Vice President of Marketing who explained that the “young adult market . . . represent s tomorrow’s cigarette business. As this 14 24 age group matures, they will account for a key share of the total cigarette volume for at least the next 25 years.” 7 A 1974 memo by the R. J. Reynolds Research Department points out that capturing the young adult market is vital because “virtually all smokers start by the age of 25” and “most smokers begin smoking regularly and select a usual brand at or before the age of 18.” 8
In July 1997, under pressure from the impending Mangini trial, Congress, and various public interest groups, RJR announced it would settle out of court and voluntarily end its Joe Camel campaign. A new campaign with a more adult theme debuted instead of Joe Camel, it had a plain image of a quadrupedal, non anthropomorphic camel. This image is still used in advertisements for Camel today. As part of the agreement, RJR also paid $10 million to San Francisco and the other California cities and counties who intervened in the Mangini litigation. This money was earmarked primarily to fund anti smoking efforts targeted at youth. 6
References edit