The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/all/20060426001944/http://www.cigoutlet.net:80/news/_thank_you_for_smoking_pokes_fun_at_tobacco_industry.html
cheap cigarettes online cheap cigarettes online
cheap cigarettes
   
    Marlboro     Camel
    Winston     Parliament
    L&M     Virginia Slims
    Dunhill     Davidoff
    Pall Mall     Chesterfield
    Lucky Strike     Vogue
    Rothmans     More
    Salem     Kent
    Gauloises     Bond
    Monte Carlo     Mild Seven
    West     Magna
    555     Dallas
    R1     Sobranie
    Karelia     Epique



cheap cigars
cheap cigars

Original Cuban Cigars


cheap cigarettes

We are happy to welcome you to

Cigars and Cigarettes Forum

We invite people from all over the world to exchange news, discuss tobacco related topics, online cigarettes sales and especially all questions related to our site CigOutlet.Net


cheap cigarettes

Marlboro
Do you know that Marlboro is the most popular cigarette brand, created by Philip Morris. Marlboro brand became famous mostly through their billboard and TV advertisements of the Marlboro Man. Nowadays, Marlboro is known as the best selling ciga
more>>01/20/06

Camel
Camel is a popular sigarets brand which was introduced by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco (RJR) in 1913. Camel cigarettes contain a blend of Turkish and American tobacco. Camel cigarettes were blended in a way that made them easier to smoke, in comparison to ot
more>>01/19/06

Kentucky gets $100 million in tobacco payments
Kentucky has received an annual payment of about $100 million in tobacco settlement money, as required under the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement.
more>>04/20/06

Reynolds to blast tobacco
SOMERVILLE -- Patrick Reynolds, the grandson of tobacco company founder R.J. Reynolds, who is now an anti-smoking advocate, will present "Tobacco Wars! The Battle for a Smoke-free Society" 7 p.m. April 26 in Somerset Medical Center's Fuld Auditorium.
more>>04/20/06



'Thank You For Smoking' pokes fun at tobacco industry

04/13/06
Thank You for Smoking, Christopher Buckley's 1994 satirical novel about the tobacco industry and the government's ham-handed attempts to rein it in, is hilarious.
But it's more than that. It spares no targets and is unflinching in exposing the hypocrisy of Big Tobacco's efforts to solve its major industry dilemma -- its product kills its customers. (No scientific proof, as any good tobacco employee will tell you. Please ignore the legal settlements.) Buckley skewers everyone. The book is a fun read, but it's also brilliant and pretty close to important. The movie version of Thank You for Smoking settles for just being fun. But it's a lot of fun. Director and screenwriter Jason Reitman (Ivan Reitman's son) doesn't dumb things down in his first feature so much as he speeds things up. No one expects a movie to supply the layer of details a novel can, and Reitman wisely doesn't try. Instead, he relies on an excellent cast to deliver on a can't-miss premise; when real life is so absurd, the satire's easy. Aaron Eckhart stars as Nick Naylor, the chief spokesman for the fictional Academy of Tobacco Studies. Nick's job, as he explains to his son, Joey (Cameron Bright), requires a certain moral flexibility. Nick's not stupid, far from it. But he has justified his job to himself, and he's exceedingly good at it -- his expert performance on a talk show hosted by Joan Lunden, besting anti-tobacco crusaders and even winning over a 15-year-old former smoker brutally known as "Cancer Boy" before a television audience, is proof of that. Particularly miffed is Sen. Ortolan Finistirre (William H. Macy, reliably solid). He berates an underling for choosing the boy -- not because he was sick. Because he wasn't sick enough. That's a pretty good indication of where this movie is coming from. All the characters navigate through a thick fog of cynicism. A funny fog, which helps. Nick's career is going great. He hopes to testify before Finistirre's committee, and his idea to win back young smokers by bribing Hollywood to have actors smoke on-screen again (the good guys, that is) is a hit with his psycho boss, BR (J.K. Simmons, nuts and loving it), and The Captain (Robert Duvall), the old-school Southern gentleman who runs the company. Nick enjoys his MOD -- Merchants of Death -- lunches with fellow lobbyists Polly Bailey (Maria Bello), who represents the alcohol industry, and Bobby Jay Bliss (David Koechner), who shills for guns. Nothing to improve the appetite like a little good-natured one-upmanship about how many people your product kills. Nick's going to be the subject of a profile by a Washington reporter (Katie Holmes), and he's heading to California to meet with super agent Jeff Megall (an out-and-out hilarious, deadpan Rob Lowe). Can anything derail this happy life? What do you think? Thank You for Smoking is often laugh-out-loud funny, though, like The Daily Show With Jon Stewart, the number of jokes you laugh at will probably depend upon your level of familiarity with the duplicity that government, Hollywood and huge corporations employ as they go about their business. The flaw is that the movie doesn't amount to much in the end. More than in most films, the supporting cast here exists as a backdrop against which Nick's development is measured; you don't expect a lot of growth there. But Nick is stagnant as well. He has an epiphany, but in the end he's left much as we found him. At least we're still laughing.
Source: Yahoo News By BILL GOODYKOONTZ , Gannett News Service
Cigarettes News Home < Back
Discuss this tobacco/cigarettes news on the forum

Contact us| Terms & conditions| Tell a friend| About us| Directory | Link| Marlboro Miles | Site Map

All registered trademarks are the properties of their respective owners. CIGoutlet.net
Marlboro Cigarettes XML Feed Marlboro Cigarettes RSS Feed  yahoo Subscribe Via My MSN Add to Google

© 2002 All rights reserved by:  Tobacco Online store