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After a particularly frustrating day, Connie writes a complaint letter to General Mills about the Wheaties she ate being stale, and soon, she receives a coupon for a free box of cereal. Greg Garcia, a cashier at her local A&G Family Marts store, explains to her that companies habitually respond to complaint letters by sending coupons for free ...
Cocoa Puffs, one of the most popular breakfast cereals for children, is accused of having dangerously high levels of lead in a pair of class-action lawsuits. The pair of suits, filed in Minnesota ...
The Environmental Working Group has found 21 oat-based cereals marketed to children to have "troubling levels" of the chemical. Study: 21 popular cereals found to have cancer-linked Roundup ingredient
Consumers allege Lucky Charms cereal is making them sick. There has been no official recall of the cereal. General Mills insists it has not found any evidence that the complaints are attributed to ...
This list is not all-inclusive, and athletes may have been shown together with teams and groups, or on the sides, back, or front of the box. Most athletes appeared on the standard Wheaties box, while others appeared on the Honey Frosted Wheaties (HFW), Crispy Wheaties 'n' Raisins (CWR), Wheaties Energy Crunch (WEC), or Wheaties Fuel (WF) boxes.
The Box Tops for Education ( BTFE) program is an American school fundraising program sponsored by General Mills. [1] [2] Schools can earn 10 cents for every qualifying product purchased by parents and turned in to the school. The program began in California in 1996 as a way for schools to earn money through collecting coupons, known as boxtops ...
Malt-O-Meal Golden Puffs. Malt-O-Meal Golden Puffs. Per 1 cup: 150 calories, 0.5 g fat (0 g saturated fat), 85 mg sodium, 34 g carbs (0 g fiber, 21 g sugar), 2 g protein. These caramel-flavored ...
In 1966, the duo appeared between show segments in ads for General Mills' Frosty O's cereal [62] and Kendall "Curad Comic Strips" plastic bandages [63] In the mid-1960s, the show promoted the "Rocky and Bullwinkle Saving Stamp Club" (at the time, the U.S. Post Office was directly under control of the federal government).