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Post by MCDemuth on Aug 7, 2022 4:28:25 GMT
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Post by msdemos on Aug 9, 2022 5:54:48 GMT
Oakland Tribune Montgomery Ward Ad - August 21, 1965SAVE FERRIS
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Post by ShadowSouL: Padawan of Yoda on Aug 22, 2022 4:54:32 GMT
This one's really fascinating.......Jerry Lewis trying to sell people on the idea of investing in a cinema chain with his name on it......and hey, by the way, while I'm here trying to sell you on this, I'll also throw in a quick promotion for my own film ( Which Way To The Front (1970)).......kind of an ad inside an ad !! 1969From Wikipedia:In 1969, he [Lewis] agreed to lend his name to "Jerry Lewis Cinemas", offered by National Cinema Corporation as a franchise business opportunity for those interested in theatrical movie exhibition. Jerry Lewis Cinemas stated that their theaters could be operated by a staff of as few as two with the aid of automation and support provided by the franchiser in booking film and other aspects of film exhibition. A forerunner of the smaller rooms typical of later multi-screen complexes, a Jerry Lewis Cinema was billed in franchising ads as a "mini-theatre" with a seating capacity of between 200 and 350.
In addition to Lewis's name, each Jerry Lewis Cinema bore a sign with a cartoon logo of Lewis in profile. Initially 158 territories were franchised, with a buy-in fee of $10,000 or $15,000 depending on the territory, for what was called an "individual exhibitor". For $50,000, Jerry Lewis Cinemas offered an opportunity known as an "area directorship", in which investors controlled franchising opportunities in a territory as well as their own cinemas. The success of the chain was hampered by a policy of only booking second-run, family-friendly films. Eventually the policy was changed, and the Jerry Lewis Cinemas were allowed to show more competitive movies. But after a decade the chain failed and both Lewis and National Cinema Corporation declared bankruptcy in 1980. greenbriarpictureshows.blogspot.com/2014/11/would-you-do-business-with-j-lewis.htmlSAVE FERRIS And that, ladies and gentlemen, is what inspired the classic 1980 Jerry Lewis comedy, Hardly Working.
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