Serutan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Serutan was an early fiber-type laxative product which was widely promoted on U.S. television in the 1950s and 1960s. It was manufactured by the J. B. Williams Co., which was founded in 1885 and bought out by Nabisco in 1971.
The origin of the brand name was straightforward. The makers merely decided to spell "natures" backwards; in fact "Read it backwards" was the product's advertising slogan. This was to differentiate it as being a "natural" product as opposed to laxative brands which stimulated the colon by chemical action rather than sheer bulk of contents.
The product was almost uniformly promoted on programs whose core audience as shown by demographics was known to be considerably older than that of the typical television viewer. Serutan is especially associated with The Lawrence Welk Show, which was also sponosored by J. B. Williams products Sominex, a sleeping pill, and Geritol, a vitamin supplement.
'Serutan Approach' is also a trend within the positivist definition of Science.