T:F True or false: "Electric Train" was a martial arts cry for Black Belt aftershave lotion. T:F True or false: "Nobody doesn't like Lorna Doones." T:F True or false: "Yuletide" was a martial arts cry for Hai Karate aftershave. T:F True or false: AMC once made a "Levi's" Gremlin. T:F True or false: Ajax is known as "the White Tornado." T:F True or false: Alan Alda serves as spokesperson for Atari game machines. T:F True or false: American Express cards come in two colors, green and gold. T:F True or false: Arco gas still offers credit-card service to its customers. T:F True or false: Barbara Eden did commercials for L'Eggs. T:F True or false: Bill Blass is a famous designer of cars. T:F True or false: Bob Hope was a spokesperson for Crest toothpaste. T:F True or false: Cadillac is a brand of dog food. T:F True or false: Chock Full o' Nuts ads used to say, "Even a Rockefeller's money couldn't buy better coffee"? T:F True or false: Crest once ran ads that featured small children bursting in on their parents shouting that they only had one (or two) cavity(s). T:F True or false: Crest toothpaste is a product of Procter & Gamble. T:F True or false: Datsun's ad used to claim, "We are driven." T:F True or false: El Exigente chooses the coffee for Savarin. T:F True or false: Evelyn Wood offers a speed reading dynamics course. T:F True or false: Fernando Lamas did commercials for the Chrysler Cordoba. T:F True or false: Fruity Pebbles breakfast cereal was named after Fred Flintstone's daughter. T:F True or false: GM is an accepted abbreviation of General Motors. T:F True or false: Gillette Super Foamy, to prove its superior lather, once attempted to stop a car with a mound of foam. T:F True or false: IT&T is an accepted abbreviation of International Telephone and Telegraph. T:F True or false: James Garner and Mariette Hartly, who promote Polaroid cameras, are actually husband and wife. T:F True or false: John Wayne never advertised for any product. T:F True or false: Johnson & Johnson are the makers of Q-Tips. T:F True or false: Karl Malden is the spokesperson for Federal Express. T:F True or false: Lamborghini makes a model of car called "Le Car'? T:F True or false: Log Cabin syrup, when first marketed, was sold in tins resembling log cabins. T:F True or false: Louise Lasser did ads for Playtex bras. T:F True or false: Mazola is 98% pure corn oil. T:F True or false: McDonald's sells a fish sandwich called "the Whaler." T:F True or false: Michael Jackson is a spokesperson for Pepsi. T:F True or false: Nationwide Insurance tells you to get a piece of the rock. T:F True or false: Peek Freans are a very serious cookie. T:F True or false: Phillips Milk of Magnesia is "our true blue friend." T:F True or false: Post used to make a cereal called Krispy Kritters. T:F True or false: Raleigh once advertised its cigarettes as being "moisturized." T:F True or false: Robert Blake did a series of ads for Valvoline Motor Oil. T:F True or false: Robert Young was the spokesman for Maxwell House coffee. T:F True or false: Rolaids consumes 57 times its weight in excess acid. T:F True or false: Snap, Crackle, and Pop are sounds that Rice Crispies make when milk is poured over them. T:F True or false: Sony VCRs are Beta format. T:F True or false: Stetson once asked, "Are you true to your type?" T:F True or false: The "O" in the Mobil Oil sign is a different color from the other letters. T:F True or false: Tony the Tiger is the animated spokesperson for Kellogg's Cornflakes. T:F True or false: Victoria Principal is a spokesperson for Jhirmack shampoo. T:F True or false: Wonder Bread ads used to say that it built bodies 10 ways. T:F True or false: Wonder Bread used to feature Howdy Doody stickers on its packages. T:F True or false: a martial arts cry for Hai Karate aftershave was "Sugarplum!" T:F True or false: among admen, Madison Avenue is referred to as "The Great White Way." T:F True or false: ball player Willie Mays does ads for Miller Lite. T:F True or false: baseball player Jim Palmer does ads for BVD brand underwear. T:F True or false: baseball player Yogi Berra did spots for Jockey underwear. T:F True or false: before he died, actor/comedian John Belushi filmed a commercial for American Express. T:F True or false: comedian/entertainer Bob Hope acts as spokesperson for Gulf Oil. T:F True or false: during a live Timex commercial in which the watch was strapped to an outboard motor, the watch was thrown off stage and lost. T:F True or false: hockey superstar Bobby Orr lent his name to a toy hockey game. T:F True or false: one of Toyota's slogans was "We are driven." T:F True or false: self-defense instructions were included in every bottle of Hai Karate aftershave and cologne. T:F True or false: the Jordache logo bears a horse's head. T:F True or false: the TRS 80 is a type of car manufactured by Triumph. T:F True or false: the VIC-20 is a computer manufactured by Commodore. T:F True or false: the first company to freeze-dry its coffee was Yuban. T:F True or false: the image of a mother and child appears on the front of Johnson and Johnson baby powder container. T:F True or false: the names of the Campbell Soup kids are Adolf and Inga? T:F True or false: did George Washington grow hemp? T:F True or false? In the movie E.T., Elliot left a trail of M & Ms for his alien friend.