Acupressure Treatments : Acupressure for Cold Virus Relief

Acupressure is the stimulation of certain points on the body that run along meridians, or energy systems. Find out how to use acupressure points to treat a cold virus with help from a teacher, author and alchemist in this free video on acupressure treatments. Expert: Stasia Bliss Bio: Stasia Bliss has been working and playing in the natural and holistic medicine field since 1997. Filmmaker: Tim Adams Series Description: Acupressure is a medicine technique that involves the application of pressure to acupuncture points on the body. Find out how to use acupressure to treat various ailments in this free video series on alternative medicine.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Commercials vary in years from late 1980′s to 1994 in order: 1. Benadryl Plus Cold Formula 2. Children’s NyQuil 3. Correctol Laxative 4. Plax removes more plaque 5. Aspirin Free Excedrin 6. Aquafresh Extrafresh 7. Contac (funny pill counts) 8. Colgate Plus 9. Preparation H Creme 10. Peppermint Scope Mouth Wash 11. Kaiser Pervanente Good People, Good Medicine 12. Isotoner Comfort Slippers 13. Dimetapp Elixir for colds 14. Isotoner Glovers 15. Band-Aid 16. Tavist-D 12 hours relief 17. Certs 18. TheraFlu 19. Advil Cold & Sinus 20. Triaminic Sore Throat Formula 21. Children’s Tylenol Bubble Gum Suspension 22. Oral B Advantage Toothbrush 23. Efidac/24 24. TheraFlu not just a cold Half of these seem to be for colds, & these names for the medicines I am hardly familiar with. The theme could be summed up as “A Commercial a day keeps the doctor away.” PS Don’t get sick of these. There will be more.
Video Rating: 5 / 5


28 Responses to “Acupressure Treatments : Acupressure for Cold Virus Relief”

  1. NorseCreation says:

    this site is infested with commercials

  2. Prrooshka says:

    Thank you, nice video. I find the points on my right side are more tender than the left – is this normal? What could this mean? Cheers

  3. wiled5 says:

    @IxAMxABU Sorry, I meant what building she was walking from. I didnt mean to bug you. I was just curious what she did after she left the pharmacy at night before it showed her walking down the steps.

  4. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 Not sure what other medicine she was stepping from. Maybe Advil? Watching this specific commercial too much there? Maybe someone else can answer that one.

  5. wiled5 says:

    What did the woman supposedly do (between going into the pharmacy to get tavist, and walking down the steps saying “good morning?”) What steps did she walk from?

  6. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 @wiled5 “Situations like these can happen to anyone.” *Narrator pauses with a sigh* “Your swallowing that medicine without the water? Don’t let it hit any objects on it’s way down.”

  7. wiled5 says:

    Im curious. what would the narrator say instead if it happened?

  8. wiled5 says:

    @IxAMxABU Yes it would. Im sure they would have had the proper technology for it.

  9. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 I thought you said one more earlier. Anyways, if she did end up crashing beforehand, the storyline would change from promoting tavist d to a hospital need or towtruck. If she crashed after leaving & taking tavist d, their product may be a link to added injury. That would make the story dramatic, more climatic.

  10. wiled5 says:

    @IxAMxABU One more, I’m just curious. what do you mean dramatic?

  11. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 Dramatic would be the first word that comes to my mind.

  12. wiled5 says:

    @IxAMxABU Would it be different or funny or wierd if she crashes?

  13. wiled5 says:

    @mst3kanita This is the last one.

  14. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 Headlights from automobiles. Surely they didn’t use spotlights in place of real cars.

  15. wiled5 says:

    One more thing, in the tavist d commercial at the beginning, what is the light in the background supposed to be?

  16. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 I thought that is what you were intending for she had to take the medication before driving back. Right? Oh, at the time, I was thinking about prop 19 question that California has about recreational marijuana.

  17. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 Now I did. She would know better, though, not to overdose.

  18. mst3kanita says:

    wiled5: how many fucking questions are you going to ask?

  19. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 That’s an easy one. She certainly didn’t drive for want, for the rain storm at night, & looked nippy, but for need, the need to get tavist d at her local pharmacy.

  20. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 Sure I did. I do believe I saw these dramatic effects in a vehicle ad as well.

  21. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 What do mean by powerful? The medicine’s effect, or the dramatic effects of the camera used immitating a headache?

  22. IxAMxABU says:

    @wiled5 Well, if it takes more than 1 time to get the scene done the way it was intended, then that’s a redo. I don’t know of any examples from commercials personally, but in movies like Shrek, A Bug’s Life, & Toy Story, at the end in the credits, that’s mimics of redos in a comedy sense.

  23. Sunsetdrivein says:

    I believe the actress in the Correctol commercial is Bianca Geraci who later became a porn actress.

  24. IxAMxABU says:

    As an actress, she would most certainly survive, unless there were many redos, takes.

  25. IxAMxABU says:

    Looking in rear view mirror for answers, I’d say.

  26. IxAMxABU says:

    She has Sinas pain/pressure & uses hand in glove to relieve it.

  27. NdeyThe1172 says:

    One extra reason I am just delighted the didn’t privatize Social Safety

  28. Reva3750rd says:

    Like a web page proprietor I think the data here is truly wonderful

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