What is "Doctor Good?" (Gypsys, Tramps and Thieves.)

Pretty self explanatory.

In the Cher song, Daddy would “sell a couple bottles of Doctor Good.”

What is Doctor Good? Was that some brand of medicine or alcohol that was popular back then? Is it a slang term for bootlegged alcohol or some kind of drug?

I’ve always thought it was Mountebank charlatan-type medicine.

I’d always asumed it was a shortened form of “Doctor Feelgood” - Snake-oil, quack-juice, nostrum or patent medicine
No evidence, just an asumption

Same here. He ran a medicine show, peddling quack nostrums.

These often had a high alcohol content and were a way to sell liquor in “dry” areas that didn’t allow legal alcohol sales. These buyers were usually in on the gag, but most sincerely believed in the possible efficacy of the “cure.”

Notice how many different slang terms we’ve already used. That’s an indication of how ubiquitous these shows and medicines used to be.

Until I clicked on your link, I thought “snake oil” was a pejorative for all the phony nostrums sold by medical charlatans. But people really bought crap so named. Blows my mind. :smiley: :smiley: :smiley:

There was an 80s music video that had a pretty amusing rendition of a mountebank:

say say

How is snake oil any different from the herbal crap sold all over the internet today?

No one’s claiming it is any different, especially around here.

Nah, snake-oil had a chance of being some use - if you used Chinese snakes

Wiki again, sorry
I suppose you could claim there is so little of the active ingredient in the American snake-oil that it counts as a homeopathic medicine - and therefore is more effective

There are a lot of ingredients they used back then that are illegal now in over-the-counter products.

Also, even when the juice is the same, the claims are different. Today, the claims are vague and ambiguous. Back then, they were very specific

I can’t tell if this is a joke, but it’s certainly not true except for a very unusual sense of “specific.”

Patent medicines made claim to cure many, even dozens of different (and today known to be unrelated) diseases. They essentially would cure whatever ailed ya.

Here is an 1881 ad for Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. That’s a short and mild list of ailments compared to the claims the snake oil salesmen made.

Herbal medicines today probably are far more focused on particular diseases.

There are also modern snake oil variants that purport to be scientific, hexagonal water being one of my favorites. Its claims are oddly similar to Lydia’s:

There is no difference between then and now except for the packaging.

There was a Popeye cartoon from the 1960s King Features series that in retrospect seems rather odd: Popeye was running a medicine show, and Brutus was a regular doctor trying to discredit him. So what exactly was the moral of that supposed to be- that modern scientific medicine is a sham and we should trust good old-fashioned home remedies?!?

Where are they still playing that song on the radio? I did a parody on it about my old high school weightlifting days.

Hmm…I wonder if Lydia Pinkham was the inspiration for the song “Lily the Pink”, it seems I’m not the only one that has occurred to.

Thanks a lot. I will have that song in my head for the next several hours. It would help if I knew a few more of the words so I didn’t have to keep doing the same ones over and over. Oh well maybe later I can switch to Linda Ronstadt (It’s So Easy!)

Here you go.

This made me think of the doctor in “Mummers plays” whose origins go back into the mists of time in England (and in other forms in the rest of Europe) – there are hundreds of these plays and they vary from place to place and with time as people update them
I Googled and this came up:-

The Quack character must have been recognisable to every generation since the Middle Ages and probably long before
[

](http://www.folkplay.info/Texts/92nz42pn.htm)
The modern Internet Quack differs only in that there’s no longer any need to travel, there is still “one born every minute” but now the Quack can stay home and wait for the tubes to bring them to him

Not a joke at all. In the “snake oil” days, they could claim that a drink did something very specific, like cure cancer. Now, they can’t say that, so they’ll claim something untestable or vague instead, as in your examples.

Yep, ‘Lily the Pink’ (or at least the version we’re familiar with) is a sanitised version.

But this is still not at all true. Snake oil salesmen were notorious for claiming that literally dozens of ailments could be cured, and as the Lydia Pinkham ad showed they could be either specific or general complaints. When one says that a dozen totally unrelated problems can be cured by one magic elixir, that’s not “specific” except in the oddest of meanings.

Herbal cures today make claims in exactly the same way, some extremely specific, as in homeopathy, and some broadly general, and many both at once.

If you can somehow manage to believe that they can’t say something specific today, you’ve never typed herbal cancer cures into Google.

Do a bit of research into your claims before you make them.