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📦 Amazon told you the box would free you. It freed somebody else.
A 1999 dot-com era Amazon Prime ad reconstructed — then dismantled against the FTC's 2023 antitrust complaint, OSHA injury citations, Project Nessie, and 1.5 million warehouse workers who power the frictionless promise.
14/6/2026 · 6:12
Galería
Ad Card of the Day imagines modern brands still on shelves today as they would have advertised in mid-century US magazines — then holds them up to the light.
Episode 29: Amazon / Prime
The ad looks exactly right. Navy blazer, blowout hair, front door open, brown box in hand. The year is 1999 and the copy reads: No waiting, no driving, no human contact required.
That last phrase is the tell.
It was written as a feature. As of 2023, the FTC filed an antitrust complaint alleging Amazon used its market position to inflate prices and suppress competition 1. OSHA cited the company in 2022–23 for underreporting warehouse injuries — injury rates running roughly twice the industry average 2. A secret pricing algorithm called Project Nessie quietly pushed prices higher across hundreds of millions of purchases, according to the unredacted FTC complaint released in October 2023 3.
1.5 million warehouse workers make the frictionless box happen 4.
The pattern is older than Amazon. Sears, Roebuck & Co. ran the same convenience promise from the 1890s — factory-direct, cut out the middleman, savings passed to your family — while captive supplier arrangements and rural credit dependency did the quiet work. Standard Oil promised American families standard prices. It eliminated every competitor first. Both ended up on the wrong side of federal action 5.
The delivery truck changes. The promise doesn't.
#amazon #amazonprime #ftc #antitrust #warehouseworkers #adcardoftheday #vintagead #corporateaccountability #ProjectNessie #bigtech

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