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Maxwell Masher. Pac-Man. Professor Waldo Wigglesworth. Rocky and Bullwinkle. Sonny the Cuckoo Bird. Strawberry Shortcake. Trix Rabbit. Yummy Mummy. Carmella Creeper.
The monster cereals are a line of breakfast cereals produced by General Mills Corporation in North America. The line was introduced in 1971 and, at various times, has included six brands, each featuring a cartoon version of a classic movie monster: Count Chocula, Franken Berry, and Boo Berry (all produced seasonally from September 1 to October ...
Trix is an American brand of breakfast cereal made by General Mills in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the North American market and by Cereal Partners (using the Nestlé brand) elsewhere in the world. The cereal consists of fruit-flavored, sweetened, ground- corn pieces. The Trix trademark is also used by Yoplait (a yogurt company, mostly owned by ...
Lucky Charms is a brand of breakfast cereal produced by General Mills since 1964. [1] The cereal consists of multi-colored marshmallows and pieces of shaped pulverized oat, each resembling one of several objects or symbols associated with good luck. The packaging and marketing features a leprechaun mascot, Lucky.
Cereal makers have relied on endearing mascots, from Tony the Tiger to Toucan Sam, for decades to attract consumers. And it works. Americans spent $8.5 billion on cold cereals over the past year.
Cap'n Crunch is a corn and oat breakfast cereal manufactured since 1963 by Quaker Oats Company, a subsidiary of PepsiCo since 2001. Since the original product introduction, marketed simply as Cap'n Crunch, Quaker Oats has since introduced numerous flavors and seasonal variations, some for a limited time—and currently offers a Cap'n Crunch product line.
General Mills’ Cocoa Puffs made waves with the rich, decadent breakfast option, made with real Hershey’s chocolate. The cereal has also featured the same legendary mascot since 1960: Sonny the ...
Snap is the oldest and is known as a problem solver, Crackle is an unsure "middle child" and known as a jokester, and Pop is a mischievous yet also clumsy youngster and the center of attention. [2] [3] There was briefly a fourth gnome in the 1950s named Pow who represented the claimed explosive nutritional value of Rice Krispies.