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Slogans are an essential part of any marketing or advertising campaign. Having a spokesman stand in front of a camera and talk about why a product tastes great is all well and good, but having an ...
Ruth Cleveland, daughter of United States president Grover Cleveland, became the official corporate namesake for the "Baby Ruth" candy bar in 1921, almost 30 years after she was born. Box of Curtiss' Baby Ruth candy bars at a general store in Portsmouth, North Carolina
(Slogans used by Coca-Cola in the United States are typically also the ones used in Canada, Ireland, and the United Kingdom.) 1886 – Drink Coca-Cola; 1905 – Coca-Cola revives and sustains. 1906 – The Great National Temperance Beverage. 1908 – Good til the last drop. 1910 – Whenever you see an Arrow think of Coca-Cola [3] [4]
Butterfinger is a candy bar manufactured by the Ferrara Candy Company, a subsidiary of Ferrero. It is manufactured internationally by Nestlé. [ 1 ] It consists of a layered crisp peanut butter core covered in a "chocolatey" coating (it is not eligible to be referred to as chocolate , as it contains no cocoa butter ).
The candy bar used the "Thicker-er" campaign into the 1980s. [ 4 ] Other Chunky advertising slogans included "Chunky, What a Chunk o' Chocolate", intoned by the nasal voice of Arnold Stang , and "Open Wide for Chunky".
In the 1920s, the Robert H. Putman Candy Co. claimed to be the originator “the world famous Cincinnati candy.” The Papas Candy Co. in Covington was the first to make them in egg shapes rather ...
The famous slogan "Two great tastes that taste great together" originated in a marketing campaign for this candy in the late 1960s and early 1970s. [3] Heart-shaped peanut butter cups. Another brand is Palmer, which specializes in holiday-themed peanut butter cups. There are various forms that the peanut butter cups take for the different seasons.
Maltesers' slogan, as of 2016, is "The lighter way to enjoy chocolate". [1] Earlier slogans have included: "The chocolates with the less fattening centre", "No ordinary chocolate" and "Nothing pleases like Maltesers". In the 1930s, advertisements claimed that the Maltesers malted milk centre is one-seventh as fattening as ordinary chocolate ...