Ah, the '80s. The decade that most Generation X kids grew up in. Blockbuster movies packed the theaters. Hit television shows had viewers glued to the small screen at home. Video games invaded the ...
Think back to a typical Saturday morning as a 6 year old. With cartoons on the TV and a spoon in hand, you contentedly crunch away at your sugar-loaded cereal of choice: French Toast Crunch, perhaps, ...
If you were a kid in the ’80s, you probably remember Saturday mornings fueled by neon-colored cereal and cartoons blaring from the TV. While some cereals survived into the present (looking at you, Cap ...
Ralston's Ghostbusters cereal debuted in 1985 and remained on shelves for four years, with the success of the animated show throughout the '80s helping its longevity. What made this cereal special ...
Cereal has had a spot at the breakfast table for decades, but longtime favorites such as Cheerios and Frosted Flakes are the exception, not the rule. So many cereals have come and gone that many ...
Here’s the problem with cereal: it’s not ice cream. In 1965, Kellogg’s tried to sidestep this quandary by introducing Kream Krunch, a breakfast cereal filled with real bits of freeze-dried ice cream.
Ooooohhh, who lives in a cereal box in my kitchen? Spongebob Squarepants! Yes! The lovable sea sponge is back in cereal form from Kellogg's! Just in time for the upcoming Spongebob Movie: Sponge on ...
Unlike most of the fad cereals that had a decent run of popularity in the '80s, Nerds came and went from store shelves in less than two years, leaving the disappointed kids of the day to return to ...
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