Advertising of a bygone era has had many campaigns and mascots that would be considered at least politically incorrect, if not downright racist, today. This obscure Faygo Red Pop commercial from 1979 depicts actor Jamie Farr as a Native America chief introducing his tribe to the soda.

The commercial opens with Farr sharing, in the tradition of a Native American creation myth, the story of how Faygo began. "A long time ago" the commercial's story begins, the Great Spirit Faygo drops Red Pop from the sky in The Gods Must Be Crazy-style.

(In that 1980 film, a Coca-Cola bottle is dropped from an airplane and is found by presumably uncontacted people in an African desert where the bottle is seen as a gift from the gods. Today, the film is seen through a lens of controversy.)

Red Pop, the spot goes on, would make a great drink for the Pilgrims at the first Thanksgiving.

Finally Diet Red Pop is touted as a perfect solution for a more portly Native America, called 'Running Pudgy.'

My how times have changed. Here's a look at that never-to-be-seen-again Faygo ad.

Over its history, Faygo has made 48 flavors of soda. Here they all are:

Forty-Eight Flavors of Faygo

Next, take a look inside the Faygo factory in Detroit:

Inside the Faygo Factory, Detroit