During the campaign's long run in the media, many criticized the slogan as grammatically incorrect, asserting that it should say, "Winston tastes good
as a cigarette should."
Ogden Nash, in
The New Yorker, published a poem that ran "
Like goes Madison Avenue,
like so goes the nation."
Walter Cronkite, then hosting
The Morning Show, refused to say the line as written, and an announcer was used instead. Canadian journalist
Malcolm Gladwell, in
The Tipping Point, says that this "ungrammatical and somehow provocative use of 'like' instead of 'as' created a minor sensation" in 1954 and implies that the phrase itself was responsible for vaulting the brand to second place in the U.S. market. Winston overtook
Pall Mall cigarettes as the #1 cigarette in the United States in 1966, while the advertising campaign continued to make an impression on the mass media. In the fall of 1961, a small furor enveloped the literary and journalistic communities in the
United States when
Merriam-Webster published its
Third New International Dictionary. In the dictionary, the editors refused to condemn the use of "like" as a
conjunction, and cited "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should" as an example of popular colloquial use. After publication of ''Webster's Third
, The New York Times called the edition "bolshevik," and the Chicago Daily News'' wrote that the transgression signified "a general decay in values." When the players in
The Beverly Hillbillies spoke the line, they stretched the grammatical boundaries further: : Jed: Winston tastes good... : Granny: Like a cigarette had ought-a! In 1970 and 1971, Winston sought to revamp its image and chose to respond to many grammarians' qualms with the slogan, "What do you want, good grammar or good taste?"
Mad magazine published a parody of this on the back cover of its January 1971 issue; set in a cemetery, it featured four tombstones with epitaphs written in the past tense ("Winsom tasted good like a cigarette should've" "You mean '
as a cigarette should've'" "What did you want, good grammar or good taste?" "I wanted to live a lot longer than this!"). With the new slogan in wide use, "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should" was retired permanently in 1972. In 1981, actor
James Garner claimed responsibility for the wording of the slogan during an interview with
Playboy magazine. Garner, who narrated the original commercial, stated that his first action ever to be captured on film was to misread the line that had been provided to him. However the advertisements appeared in print before their debut on television, which casts doubt on Garner's claim. == Parodies ==