When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Dubble Bubble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubble_Bubble

    The gum was priced at one penny apiece and sold out in one day. Before long, the Fleer Chewing Gum Company began making bubble gum using Diemer's recipe, and the gum was marketed as “Dubble Bubblegum. [8] Diemer's bubble gum was the first-ever commercially sold bubble gum, and its sales surpassed 1.5 million dollars in the first year. [8]

  3. Walter Diemer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Diemer

    Priced at one penny a piece, the gum sold out in one day. Fleer began marketing the new gum as "Dubble Bubble" and Diemer himself taught salesmen how to blow bubbles as a selling point for the gum, helping them to demonstrate how Dubble Bubble differed from all other chewing gums. Sold at the price of one cent a piece, sales of Dubble Bubble ...

  4. Donald J. Newman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_J._Newman

    When he was 14 he worked with Dubble Bubble Gum to help solve the statistical question of how often a gum purchaser would receive the same joke for their gum wrapper. [4] He was an avid problem-solver, and as an undergraduate was a Putnam Fellow all three years he took part in the Putnam math competition; only the third person to attain that ...

  5. Fleer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleer

    While this gum could be blown into bubbles, in other respects it was vastly inferior to regular chewing gum, and Blibber-Blubber was never marketed to the public. In 1928, Fleer employee Walter Diemer improved the Blibber-Blubber formulation to produce the first commercially successful bubble gum, Dubble Bubble. Its pink color set a tradition ...

  6. 18 Things You Didn't Know About Chewing Gum - AOL

    www.aol.com/18-things-didnt-know-chewing...

    Another early gum innovator, Frank Fleer, was the first to try to develop a gum you could blow into a bubble. Developed around 1906, Blibber-Blubber proved too sticky for most people's liking.

  7. Bubble gum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubble_gum

    This gum became highly successful and was eventually named by the president of Fleer as Dubble Bubble because of its stretchy texture. This remained the dominant brand of bubble gum until after WWII, when Bazooka bubble gum entered the market. [5] Until the 1970s, bubble gum still tended to stick to one's face as a bubble popped.

  8. The 2-Ingredient Bars I Make Every Christmas - AOL

    www.aol.com/2-ingredient-bars-every-christmas...

    2/3 cup jam or preserves. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly spray an 8x8 pan with cooking spray or line with parchment paper. Crumble about 2/3 of the cookie dough into the pan and press into an ...

  9. Blibber-Blubber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blibber-Blubber

    Blibber-Blubber was the first bubble gum formulation, developed in 1906 by American confectioner Frank H. Fleer. [1] The gum was brittle and sticky, with it containing little cohesion; for these reasons, the gum was never marketed. [2] [3] It also required vigorous rubbing with a solvent to remove from the face after the bubble had burst.