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Rice Honeys. Rice Honeys only became Rice Honeys in the mid-'50s.Before then, this Nabisco cereal was known as Ranger Joe Rice Honnies. In the '70s, there were two more name changes: first to ...
Radical Eats. Snack foods, insta-meals, cereals, and drinks tend to come and go, but the ones we remember from childhood seem to stick with us. Children of the 1970s and 1980s had a veritable ...
Quaker Oats’ Life has been a pantry staple for decades. The cereal exploded with popularity during the ‘70s amidst an ad campaign featuring a difficult-to-please young boy named “Little ...
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
The commercial would not only turn Marky Maypo into a household name, but would also produce phenomenal increases in sales of Maypo cereal. Sponsor Magazine reported that the new advertising campaign led to sales increases, "an average of 78 percent . . . and as high as 186 percent in some markets."
Maypo is an American brand of hot cereals. The original product was maple flavored oatmeal but there are now a variety of flavors sold under the Maypo brand name. It was originally manufactured by Maltex Co. and is now owned by Homestat Farm, Ltd. [1] It was best known for its television commercials with the catchphrase, "I Want My Maypo" by ...
The 1970s and '80s were filled with memorable but not-so-healthy foods. From Danish Rings and Swanson TV dinners to Nintendo Cereal and Hubba Bubba Gum, revisit these childhood classics.
The Klondike Pete character was also used in the 1970s to market the US version of the cereal, Klondike Pete's Crunchy Nuggets. [3] [4] The box also sometimes features puzzles suited to the 7–12-year-old range. [citation needed] The cereal is marketed with the slogan "They taste Yeee-Haa!" [5] (Previously "They're honey-crunchin' good!").