Close Search Close

 

  • Comics
  • Theatre
  • Site News

Start to Finish

David Fincher Start to Finish: The Smoking Baby

A comprehensive look at Fincher's music videos starts with his most famous commercial.

Once upon a time, a long, long time ago1, I started a project in the comments of The Dissolve. It was that kind of site, the kind of place where you’d just start writing about something you loved in the comments, just because you wanted to talk about it. When The Dissolve shuttered, I didn’t bring it over to The Solute; I didn’t think I would be writing that much for the site, if at all.

So that was a fucking lie.

So for Media Magpies, I’ve decided to start again on what was called the David Fincher Video Project, and is now Start to Finish: David Fincher’s Music Videos. Fincher was hardly the only filmmaker to make his career in the MTV era, but he’s certainly one of the most prominent and successful, and he’s also the creator of some of my favorite videos from the Golden Age of MTV.

Some of these videos are pretty basic, but Fincher and his creative partners were taking big swings right from the start, and I’m eager to share Fincher’s early successes with everyone. I did some cross-referencing back in the day and I believe my list is more comprehensive than Wikipedia’s, so this is, hopefully, content you won’t find anywhere else. I may rewrite some of the old essays or I may start fresh; I’ll let you know either way.

Fincher’s earliest hit isn’t a music video at all: it’s the smoking baby. People still cite this American Cancer Society PSA from 1985 for its striking imagery and horror movie vibe. The smoking baby is a puppet — CGI wasn’t nearly robust enough to depict something this realistically (Young Sherlock Holmes was the cutting edge at the time). I’m always a fan of puppetry, and the classic effects work well.

In the United States in 1985, when you walked into a restaurant, you might be asked “Smoking or nonsmoking?” The “nonsmoking” section was mostly distinguished by the lack of ashtrays on the tables or booths, but smoke floated across the restaurant anyway. Usually there wasn’t any physical barrier between the sections at all. Smoking ads were everywhere: Virginia Slims still heavily and specifically targeted women, and Joe Camel was about to get more popular than ever. But there were also seeds of the change to come. In 1986, the U.S. Surgeon General released the first official report on the dangers of secondhand smoke. The country’s first smokefree restaurant ordinances were a year away. In 1989, smoking was prohibited on all domestic airlines. The following year, San Luis Obispo, California became the first city in the world to ban smoking in all public places. The mid-nineties led to lawsuits that would eventually result in the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement and the final coffin of a lot of cigarette marketing. (The tobacco companies would then hop on the vaping bandwagon. Don’t get me started.)

I don’t think the smoking baby PSA turned the tide of public opinion about tobacco use, but I do think it was a powerful image shared at the right time. (Several networks refused to air it beause they thought it was “too disturbing.”) This ad could easily have turned into camp — a lot of well-intentioned PSAs are known more for their parodies than their content — but this one stays right on the horrific side of uncomfortable. In 1989, smoking during pregnancy was reported in 19.5% of American women who gave birth. By 2016, it was down to 7.25

Rating: 5/5, would get the heebie-jeebies again.

Next time: Rick Springfield gets dystopian.

  1. More than a decade ago, in fact. Damn. ↩︎
Want to support more great writing like this? Get exclusive member benefits like access to our Discord, early access to Media Magpies content, and more by joining our Patreon!