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Early 1980s breakfast cereal Dinky Donuts started advertising by playing into the decade's weird business fetish, featuring kids in suits giving "expert" opinions about Ralston's cereal made of ...
Early 1980s breakfast cereal Dinky Donuts started advertising by playing into the decade's weird business fetish, featuring kids in suits giving "expert" opinions about Ralston's cereal made of ...
This is a list of defunct (mainly American) consumer brands which are no longer made and usually no longer mass-marketed to consumers. Brands in this list may still be made, but are only made in modest quantities and/or limited runs as a nostalgic or retro style item. A set of signs promoting Burma-Shave, on U.S. Route 66
Cookie Crisp is a breakfast cereal that is manufactured to look like chocolate chip cookies.It is produced by General Mills in the United States [1] [2] [3] and Cereal Partners under the Nestlé brand in other countries.
Quisp is a sugar-sweetened breakfast cereal from the Quaker Oats Company.It was introduced in 1965 and continued as a mass-market grocery item until the late 1970s. . Subsequently, the Quaker Oats Company marketed Quisp sporadically, and with the advent of the Internet, began selling it primar
In the '80s, Pac-Man was everywhere — arcades, cereal boxes, even your underwear if your mom had a thing for themed multipacks. Naturally, Chef Boyardee jumped on the bandwagon and turned it ...