As we enjoy a new, hyperbolic political season, generously funded by large amounts of Super Political Action Committee money, I thought it might be a good time to take a look at some earlier types of Super Pac.
Not surprisingly, the name was previously associated with packaging.
SuperPac, Inc., whose logo appears at top, offers “A Tradition of Excellence in Flexographic Printing.”
SuperPAC™ (logo: above center) is a trademark of Thomasville Furniture:
Thomasville’s promise to provide our customers with the best overall kitchen, bath, and other room solutions initiated our development of SuperPAC, our patent pending packaging technique.
And SuperPac is also the name of a British company that makes a car stereo accessory. (Logo by Frankman Design)
Superpac is the new way to hold your detachable car stereo front. Designed to replace the dull black plastic case supplied with most car stereos, the Superpac offers you a stylish way to protect your cherished face-off style car stereo.
Mastey de Paris carries a SuperPac “Intensive Reconstructor Conditioner for Stressed, Damaged Hair” (above, right)
Superpac reconstructs damaged hair, rebuilding and reinforcing the hair’s protein chains. Superpac enables hair to retain its elasticity and structural integrity with newfound bounce and resilience.
There was also a Timberland Super Pac boot. (via: Gwar Izm)
Nowadays, a candidate whose political campaign benefits from Super PAC money is not supposed to “coordinate directly” with his or her Super PAC benefactor. In practice, however, a candidate’s Super PAC is often run by a close ally—a Super PAC man. (e.g., Jon Stewart is Steven Colbert’s “Super PAC man”)
Not to be confused with an earlier “Super Pac-Man.”
Top & center: Commodore 64 “Super Pac-Man” packaging from Moby Games; bottom photo: a General Mills Pac-Man cereal with “Super Pac-Man Marshmallows” from Jason Liebig’s flickr Photostream
Now, if we were willing to be more liberal about the spelling of the term—accepting say “PAK” as a reasonable variant (as in Political Action Kommittee?)—then there’s even more to think about.
(More, after the fold...)
Printer’s proof of a vintage Hot Wheels “Hot Strip Track Super Pak” carton by Mattel, illustration by Otto Kuhni (via: RedLineProntos); the thoroughly example of the same box, sold on eBay for $5.00
Randy Ludacer
Beach Packaging Design



























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