I remember I had 20 of those kelloggs reflectors on my bmx when I was a kid. I felt like I was riding around on a Harley with those bad boys. Christ, we were easily pleased back then
It WAS "Tell them about the honey, Mummy". In the original ads Henry McGee of Benny Hill Show fame played "Mummy", and would often say "I'm not his mummy". It changed in the mid-80s to this LESSER CATCHPHRASE. AND THAT IS THE STORY FACTS.
I remember it being "tell them about the honey mummy" when I was a kid in the 90s, so they must have changed back to the superior slogan, possibly following an angry backlash from sugar puffs fans
Benny used to slap the head off that bald fella. I wonder did he ever retaliate and stitch benny one. Just keep loafing him until they had to be separated. Anyway just a thought
oh god it reminds me of way back when McDonalds had FIFA in their Happy Meals. No idea what year it was. 2000, 2001? I think they had some kind of eagle/gryphon mascot at that time. edit because i actually managed to find it. The mascot was from 1998, it was a rooster named Footix and it was the mascot of France. McDonalds had toys themed around it too and after googling it, i recall having a kite. I still have to try and remember that CD. I was only 7 at that time so my memory is foggy.
oh boy you made me think of chex quest, that one doom clone that came with chex cerial in the 90s with a free sequel on their site, and got ANOTHER sequel in 2008 due to the popularity
They may have reissued them later on. I remember getting one and watching Thundercats. I'm sure it was 86. They didn't work like they did on the advert but they were still cool.
I remember getting this dvd in a fruit loops box and playing it many times when I was little. The movie was absolutely insane and trippy, and forr the longest time I only remember it being an LSD fever dream from my childhood. No one had any idea what the hell I was talking about, and I genuinely thought I imagined it when I was high on Pepto bismol or something. I spent YEARS trying to remember ANY bit of it that I could, and tried looking it up. But nothing I could remember was sticking. I'm telling you I was OBSESSED with trying to find this movie. but, a few months ago (about 15-17 years after I watched it) I I finally did it. The theif and the cobbler I genuinely teared up when I popped it into the DVD player and the flood of colours came pouring it. It was proof that I was not insane, and I did not waste FOREVER trying to hunt this damn thing down. The movie is an absolute treasure and I highly encourage anyone to seek out this thing if you don't know about it.
Yeah... The story behind the making of that movie is kind of tragic. The artist ran out of money and support, so the studio just jammed a bunch of pop culture references and Aladdin knock-off stuff to fill the run time and shipped it off to theaters. Originally there was supposed to be ZERO dialogue in the movie. I've been told there's a fan re-cut that follows the original screenplay called "The re-cobbled cut" that's supposed to be about as close to the artist's vision as is possible with what exists, might be worth a watch if you can track it down online.
god this is sooo late but I absolutely recommend checking out the recobbled cut of the Thief and the Cobbler! I've seen it here on youtube and the animation of it is of course, absolutely stunning and a trip at the same time. It really is just a joy to watch even if just for the animation alone!
I remember collecting all of the Horrible Histories audiobook CDs with packs of Kellogg's cereal. Then staying up all night in my room listening to them then being too tired for school the next day. Ahh, good times!...
This is so nostalgic. To be honest, the greatest thing ever to come out of a cereal box though, was Rice Chex once gave out a video game called Chex Quest. It was a doom style shooter. I remember it being my JAM back in the mid 90s. Beyond that, companies in the united states used to have some weird affinity for character themed plastic spoons, often color changing, that you could eat your cereal with. I remember getting plastic character spoons every time a new disney movie came out back in the 90s.
I was SO disappointed that Chex Quest wasn't mentioned in the video, because that's about the most nostalgic toy I've ever gotten in a cereal box. I've also played it recently, and the sequels, and the unofficial sequel made by I think one of the original devs. ... It's late, and I need to go to bed, but I'm going to play it again tomorrow. Today. When I wake up.
The spoons were brilliant. I used to have a Frankenstein's monster one that changed from green to yellow and somehow got slightly stuck eventually so by the end it never quite changed all the way back. It was probably starting to break down chemically and slowly poisoning me. Still cool though.
I remember those yo-yos were a "fad" when I was in high school one year. There was even a guy invited in to perform tricks with them. I had Fanta, Coke and Sprite yo-yos. I remember the gold ones were much sought after.
Those yoyos to those day are huge collectors items I remember having a Sprite one and my brother had a fanta one growing up. It was like the must have thing to have for ages.
"Now with 30% less sugar" I can't remember what cereal it was, but I remember one making that claim. All they did was include 30% less cereal inside the box. Box was the same size and price and everything as before.
Not per serving (unless they reduce serving size too to make servings per container match), but the total sugar content of the package would totally decrease by the amount of product they exclude from the package. Here's an example to simplify the concept. Take a 100 unit package that has 10 units of sugar. That's 1 unit of sugar per 10 units of product. Now you take half that product out so it's just a 50 unit package. How much sugar do you have now? Since you have 1 unit of sugar per 10 of product and now have 50 units of product, you have 5 units of sugar, 50% reduced.
I think I've seen it with a cereal bar. They just made the bar smaller. Also Mr. Kipling's angel slices have a reduced sugar option where they just remove most of the icing.
Me too. We were generally a cornflakes household but clearly must have gone over to the darkside on at least one occasion because those cards gave me the old nostalgic shiver.
16:04 yeah i remember that, every time you ordered something it said "arrives in 4-6 weeks" and by the time it arrived you'd forgotten you even ordered it
Damn man I'd be happy to find those DnD holograms right now I miss back when holograms were on like everything, they're still really neat to me to this day.
The main things I liked back in the 80s cereal era was the 'shrinkies' were everywhere, a plastic thing that you chucked into the oven that crinkles up! We had those flexi-records here in Australia in the mid 1980s too, they usually came free with magazines as demo sample discs, just like CDs did a few years later.
His name ABSOLUTELY is Cornelius! That's the piece of trivia I use to save our team in a pub quiz, I've kept that in my head for about 30 years. Number of pub quizzes won with this information to date: 0
For me, the greatest cereal prize from the late 90's was a proper CD-ROM copy of RollerCoaster Tycoon. I remember spending so many hours trying to make my park pretty, not really messing with the roller coasters at all, and dropping park-goers into bodies of water to drown when they disliked something about my park. :)
No but I remember some photo to 3D avatar software with a shitty football (soccer) game. FaceMask3D. You could make the resultant disembodied headndpeak via TTS, like a discount Max Headroom.
I did this hilarious thing whereby I would quickly remove the free gift then tell my mum that it was missing. She would write a letter to the company on how sad her little daughter was, not receiving her free gift. The cereal company would send the full set of free gifts and a gift voucher 😂😂Xx
To this day my favorite cereal box toy was a web-shooter-shaped water squirter from the first Raimi _Spider-Man_ movie. Small, lightweight, and pretty fun; wish I could find it in my attic now.
I have one of those little baking soda boats you used to get in cereal packets - pack the top half with baking soda and put vinegar in the bottom half, then quickly clip the two halves together and the boat powers along by the chemical reaction. It was issued by Honey Smacks, I still have the instructions cut out of the box. I also have a couple of orange Weeto's yoyos, they were pretty crap really, not heavy enough and the center spindle too small. They actually have "MADE IN ENGLAND" on them. Plus also a Weeto's lenticular disc, the same size as Tazo's.
I remember the time period where they were giving away Monster in My pocket toys and mini-Boglins. I think I'll have a dig in the loft and see if I've still got any.
I remember some of these, but my favourite ever cereal-things WERE actually cardboard circles.. POGs! Chex did a line of POGs which ran alongside the officially released series ('94-ish?) but in unique colours/designs! Loved me a good cardboard circle, I did.
We had square flexible records in our Happy Meals in the states. I had one for ET and one for Gremlins. They weren't glued to cardboard, they were in the back of a story book and perforated so you could tear them out and play them.
i think i actually still have the mcdonalds contest song record they gave away around somewhere in a box, it was one of the little flexible records like those that was handed out at some point as part of a promotion.
@@EmilyStell Ir's like funny shaped CDs you could sometimes get. The actual grooves are still circular (or close enough to it not to throw off the needle) and the outer parts of the shape have no grooves on them.
I had a Ghostbusters promo flexi from a cereal box here in US. It was just an ad with some announcer and one of the voice actors from the cartoon. Very dissappointing.
My dad gave me that exact D&D skeleton card when he found it in my granddads house when I was about 7; I wasn't around at the time of their release but still lots of nostalgia in this video!
I never knew or even thought that those reflectors had keyring holes in them...think im gonna have to go up the loft and have a dig around in my boxes of toys.
I believe that was so you could also put them on your schoolbag or coat - so you'd be less likely to get run over while walking to/from school in the winter. It tied in with the government's "Be Seen, Be Safe" campaign.
This makes me want to see a video on the old fast food toys and items. Remember being able to get Batman glasses from Mcdonalds? Maybe you remember the Mcdonald's toys that looked like food but were actually transformers?
Remember those squares with the holes punched in them and the plastic tubes that connected them together? The tubes were all pleated like the bendy part of a drinking straw. Damn, I had loads of those.
I have the whole set. Wish Mc.Donalds would release a new set of em. Possibly based on an anime of some kind or an Adult Swim show for a change of pace. Not that often do we get those in the fast food restaurants stateside let alone having ones sell proper premium glassware. Etched glass rules.
I had those reflectors, and I also had an entire set of colour-changing spoons, which would change colour when exposed to cold, so they'd turn purple when you put them in your cereal milk.
I like how draconian copyright has become to where you can't even show 1/10th of a second of a physical recording to present the sound quality of something. What's that protecting? What is this ensuring? How is this protecting the seemingly God given rights that music labels have?
Yeah, in a logical world using a snippet of a song or video for demonstrative purposes would very obviously fall under fair use, but UA-cam fired their Logic Department a long time ago. What's worse is that shitty companies can easily abuse this copy"right" in several ways. If someone posts a negative review of a song/film/TV show they own the rights to and the UA-camr includes pieces of the media in question, the company can retaliate by having it removed or at least inconvenience the UA-camr with lawsuit threats, demonetization etc. And that's another thing, shitty companies can and will try to extort money out of UA-camrs for "misusing" their copyrighted content. I actually saw this happen to a UA-cam channel a while back, because get this, some online company had bought the rights to a lot of viral videos. So basically, some random ordinary people posts a video on their Facebook or whatever that gets very popular, and this company reaches out to them and says "Hey, what if we were to purchase the rights to your cool video about the thing? You get a nice payment from us, _and_ we'll help you share it with news outlets and such." And the innocent (and clueless) average Joes says "Sure, that sounds like a win-win." So they buy the rights to these videos, and then they have their -slaves- staff go through channels that review viral content to search for content that "belongs" to the company, so that Shit Inc can claim compensation for "stolen content". I know this because the channel they were targeting showed the emails/letters it had gotten. Shit Inc had found 4 "violations" and were asking for... (dramatic pause) *1500 dollars* for each of them, $6000 in total. Shit Inc provided enough information to prove that they "owned" some videos, but conveniently left out the part of what clips belonged to them and what videos from the YT channel the clips were in, making it practically impossible for a channel with a "staff" of 2 people to just find and remove those teeny tiny clips from their videos and reupload. Luckily the fans of the channel came to their rescue, they harassed Shit Inc on all their online platforms, got in touch with lawyers, notified larger and louder UA-cam channels, and the shitshow was rather promptly resolved. *TL:DR* - Shitty companies have the ability to use the copyright strike as a tactical nuke on UA-cam channels and content creators, using it to silence problematic voices and extort (sometimes vulnerable) UA-cam people for money.
Stuart was doing this before even UA-cam became that strict about copyrights. I think it started as kind of a joke but the whole thing became reality a few years later.
@@MegaVikingen Keep in mind, Ashens is in the UK and Fair Use is a US copyright thing. And while UA-cam generously applies US copyright to all of the content, that doesn't have to go for the individual rights holders.
@@MontieMongoose I played the Freddy fish game 😂 I adored that damn old game. One of the games was when you could decorate your own fish making a mug shot for them.
I remember those too. We got an Operation game from some Cheerios once. And I think a veterinarian-like game for kids, Chutes and Ladders, and a demo for Monkey Island III.
I had a bunch of flexi-disks from the late 60s and the entire 70s here in the US, some came on/in cereal boxes, magazines, etc. (one of my favorites came in _National Geographic_ of Whale Songs)
I remember the things you could get in a box or send away for back in the day. I was born in 1962, and even during the 60s you could get weird stuff in a box of cereal. I remember collecting a few box tops and maybe a nickel or dime, then some six weeks later receiving a Green Bay Packers...tiny...plastic...helmet. Suppose it would be a perfect fit for Barbie's eunuch boyfriend Ken. Recall I also got a plastic football (American football, that is) back then too. And speaking of flexi-discs, you could also get those on the back of, I recall, Sugar Crisps (featuring Sugar Bear) that had popular songs of the time. One of my elder sisters got one with her then-favorite singer Bobby Sherman. I have one around here with The Archies and their hit "Sugar, Sugar" (how appropriate). Actually a guy named Ron Dante; saw him at a "Happy Together Tour" last year with a bunch of 60-and 70-somethings in the crowd. Here in the US, Flexi-discs made a brief comeback in the mid-80s, bound in comics and some advertising schemes; I have an issue of Critters (#23) that has Alan Moore's old band The Sinister Ducks on it, playing (wait for it) "March of the Sinister Ducks". Lovely, really :)
I remember Kellogg’s gave away small plastic submarines or battleships that split in half and you added some baking soda and it would whizz about the bath.
Ashens, home of nostalgia. I am often shocked that you don't get toys in cereal anymore. That was the greatest thing about my childhood... I had a weird childhood :p This stuff is trash now, I mean, they were amazing toys when I was a kid, but now they just look like junk someone pulled out their loft..
These are quite nostalgic. I remember having the old Nabisco Dinosaurs given to me by older family members, and I loved the Jurassic Park Lost World badges.
When I was young, I remember eating breakfast at the table: Eggo Legos with my surrogate aunt Jemima and the box of cereal with Ricky Bob Potato Man on the front. The memories.....
You should see the prizes we got in the 1970s in the states! Records on cereal boxes? Yes! Cool monster figures? Yes! Little metal license plates? Yes, but don’t expect to get the state you live in. Even glow in the dark posters of famous movie monsters, what a time it was!
Lucky. Wish I could stay home. Really surprised they're letting the food places stay open. It's crazy how many people will risk their lives just so they don't have to cook for themselves.
It's 2020, and people still feel the need to act like you can't spend a couple of weeks in your own home without getting insanely bored. Like, do none of you people have phones? Or laptops? Or game consoles? Or books? Or work to do? Or literally anything else? IDK I just find that most people who're bringing up their "boring self-isolation" arbitrarily on videos are doing it as an announcement for no real reason Like, "hey guys, look at me, I'm in self-isolation! Ain't I being all pandemic-y!". If you're in self-isolation you're supposed to be doing your usual routine, but from home, anyway, particularly getting work done. I thought that was kinda the point? So why's everyone doing the "boring quarantine shtick"?
@@alanira2971 True. I'm just sick of seeing arbitrary comments about the pandemic & quarantine on literally every damn video I click on. Like, yeah okay, a viral outbreak is going on and normality's gone out of the window for at least a month or so, I get it. I don't feel like being reminded of the fact that coronavirus exists and that the world is on lock down when I'm just trying to enjoy myself on youtube, everywhere I go, thanks.
@@Nytephyre lmao you're not "risking your life" by going out and buying food, as long as you act sensible about it. The way that people are acting like the world outside their front door step is full of toxic air is ludicrous. The coronavirus is not airborne, you know, and you're incredibly safe from contracting it on a trip to get necessities as long as you don't act like a total moron and ignore all safety precautions while doing it. In all honesty, people being overly melodramatic (and generally misinformed) is becoming the biggest problem with this entire pandemic. It's scaring me more than the actual virus is at this stage. If anything is going to ultimately lead to a collapse of civilisation as a whole, it's going to to be from the entire world going through self-inflicted hysteria, more so a result of the actual outbreak.
I ain't gonna lie I'm only here to get away from the Corona virus and to bring back my childhood and take away my worries just for the next 15 minutes 😁😁😁
I can remember when the first Superman movie was released in the 70's, the back of the the cereal packet was background scenery, and you got a selection of cardboard figures of certain characters inside the box..... God, I feel old.....
my dad worked at Kellogs for 27 years, we used to get to go around the factory before the days of major health and safty, we could take as much as we wanted, got all the toys early and even had a warm cornflake from the conveyor :) happy days
Got a pc game in a cereal box when I was a kid once, I remember it was amazon trail, like the Oregon trail well you get the idea, it did nothing for me but I remember my mother staying up all night once on a weekend just to beat it
I had a deck of playing cards with Tony the Tiger on, also a water game where you had to press the button to get the two boxes of Frosties into Tony’s shopping trolley. The stuff you got in Weetos was always the best, pull string spinning tops, puzzle cubes, troll pencil toppers.
I think you're correct with the rooster reflector! In the US, the USDA put the cabosh on toys in cereal, especially sweet sugary cereal because it wasn't promoting healthier eating. Kids would gravitate towards those types of cereals just because of the toy! We had them in the record in the US!
I think my favorite cereal box prize of all time was the Lucky Charms 4-leaf clover charm keychain. It was a flat, clear plastic box with a real four-leaf clover preserved inside. You had to collect a few proofs of purchases, but this was the one time I found it to be worthwhile, because the keychain could be personalized with your name. Having a name that I NEVER could find on bike licence plates because of its unusual spelling and the fact that it wasn't common, I was thrilled to finally have something with my name on it. I'm sure I still have that little charm somewhere.
Wow! I forgot I had that one too. That game was so much fun, but I got to say I sunk my hours into a lego builder. Had the Amazon trail and Oregan trail 3rd edtion as well.
Wow, this was a great blast from the past! I had the skeleton hologram and the first pull-out picture. That hologram was amazing! Best video for a while
It was hilarious! But i only live about an hour and a half from the big Kellogg factory it used to be a big school feild trip to see them make corn flakes.
FINALLY, a UA-cam video I understand! As soon as I spotted the Holograms I was FAR TOO excited for a 48 year old man without feeling ashamed!! This video is biscuit-worthy so hang on, I am going to put the kettle on. But I have a question cereal-boy. In the 70's my friend brought a tiny fully-articulated plastic astronaut to primary-school. I asked him where it was from and he said it was free with his cereals. But I have never found which cereals, and I have never seen another astronaut. I seem to remember he had articulated knees. This thing truly lit up my world and is perhaps one of the reasons why I now make miniature articulated knees for a living. But PLEASE... does anyone know what this was... please tell me I wasn't hallucinating and all of this was simply because the school boiler was leaking! Cheers... Right, kettle is whistling, so here goes. 🚀
I know I’m 3 years late, but I looked it up and I found one thing that (maybe) might be it. 1968 corn flakes “space age” series, but I may be wrong; i can’t tell if it has articulated knees. Where are you from? That might help me narrow it down a bit.
I think one cereal had beads that clipped to the spokes. There were also things that flapped off the spokes. Honey nut loops had a musical badge. Rice crispies had a digital watch. Other things I remember: - Dime bar Jukebox. - LoSalt keyring.
I remember I had 20 of those kelloggs reflectors on my bmx when I was a kid. I felt like I was riding around on a Harley with those bad boys. Christ, we were easily pleased back then
Too true too true...
This comment just makes me realise how easily pleased I still am as an adult.
Im sorry but if you had TWENTY you were NOT easily pleased 😭😭😭
You think buying 20 boxes of cereal is an insane number over a year or two?
@@rafacatitoYeah, kids eat cereal
It WAS "Tell them about the honey, Mummy". In the original ads Henry McGee of Benny Hill Show fame played "Mummy", and would often say "I'm not his mummy". It changed in the mid-80s to this LESSER CATCHPHRASE.
AND THAT IS THE STORY FACTS.
Spot on, thank you! Yeah the Benny Hill sidekick with the frankly strange facial expressions...
I remember it being "tell them about the honey mummy" when I was a kid in the 90s, so they must have changed back to the superior slogan, possibly following an angry backlash from sugar puffs fans
Benny used to slap the head off that bald fella. I wonder did he ever retaliate and stitch benny one. Just keep loafing him until they had to be separated. Anyway just a thought
hey its actual Mentski and not subliminal message image Mentski! Hey Mentsk thanks for info !
And there was I thinking it was " proof" of the (cue spooky music) 🎼Mandela Effect🎵
His name is Cornelius. Ricky Bob Potato Man is from shredded wheat.
Oddly, the potato-shaped mascot for Tayto chips is named Bryce Dallas Howard (no relation)
@@Electroporcupine both tayto north and south have the same name, and both copy righted it.
So they're unable to trade across the border.
Cornelius the Cock
Galactic Gamer oh god
Kind of mediocre CD games in cereal boxes was the best thing ever for ten year old me.
oh god it reminds me of way back when McDonalds had FIFA in their Happy Meals. No idea what year it was. 2000, 2001?
I think they had some kind of eagle/gryphon mascot at that time.
edit because i actually managed to find it.
The mascot was from 1998, it was a rooster named Footix and it was the mascot of France.
McDonalds had toys themed around it too and after googling it, i recall having a kite.
I still have to try and remember that CD. I was only 7 at that time so my memory is foggy.
oh boy you made me think of chex quest, that one doom clone that came with chex cerial in the 90s with a free sequel on their site, and got ANOTHER sequel in 2008 due to the popularity
omg same! getting a free putt putt saves the zoo and spy fox CD games made my day back then lol
I got Amazon Trail like this. It crashed a lot but I loved it
I played every hard mode on that game and its the easiest thing ever
In the 70s, the baking powder powered diving submarine was the most sought after premium.
I got a little submarine like that around 1991 it was my favorite
Had them in the 80s they didn't do shit
@@theamertureradioenthusiast3368 i had the diver and sub would have been around 1985
They may have reissued them later on. I remember getting one and watching Thundercats. I'm sure it was 86. They didn't work like they did on the advert but they were still cool.
Had those in the 50's too = clever stuff !
Took me far too long to realize Honey Monster was wearing an Aviator's Jacket and not a little girl with long pigtails.
Oh man, I'm so glad it wasn't just me that saw that.
Once you see it , you can’t unsee it
Oh god I did too! I also always thought it was “mummy” not “yummy” 🤯
We he said "he" I was like, he? I as well thought it was a girl with pony tails. It wasn't until his pronoun that got me looking again lol.
Same here
It took me a long time to see that Honey monster card as something with huge shoulders under a bomber jacket and not a girl monster with pigtails.
yo me too wow
I thought I was getting a little too drunk
Yes me too!!! Is it wrong that it was my brains go-to image and not the bomber jacket monster?
I can’t see what you’re seeing
I think I was expecting the bird girl from McDonald's because of the jacket
I remember getting this dvd in a fruit loops box and playing it many times when I was little. The movie was absolutely insane and trippy, and forr the longest time I only remember it being an LSD fever dream from my childhood. No one had any idea what the hell I was talking about, and I genuinely thought I imagined it when I was high on Pepto bismol or something. I spent YEARS trying to remember ANY bit of it that I could, and tried looking it up. But nothing I could remember was sticking. I'm telling you I was OBSESSED with trying to find this movie.
but, a few months ago (about 15-17 years after I watched it) I I finally did it.
The theif and the cobbler
I genuinely teared up when I popped it into the DVD player and the flood of colours came pouring it. It was proof that I was not insane, and I did not waste FOREVER trying to hunt this damn thing down.
The movie is an absolute treasure and I highly encourage anyone to seek out this thing if you don't know about it.
Yeah... The story behind the making of that movie is kind of tragic. The artist ran out of money and support, so the studio just jammed a bunch of pop culture references and Aladdin knock-off stuff to fill the run time and shipped it off to theaters. Originally there was supposed to be ZERO dialogue in the movie. I've been told there's a fan re-cut that follows the original screenplay called "The re-cobbled cut" that's supposed to be about as close to the artist's vision as is possible with what exists, might be worth a watch if you can track it down online.
god this is sooo late but I absolutely recommend checking out the recobbled cut of the Thief and the Cobbler! I've seen it here on youtube and the animation of it is of course, absolutely stunning and a trip at the same time. It really is just a joy to watch even if just for the animation alone!
I remember collecting all of the Horrible Histories audiobook CDs with packs of Kellogg's cereal. Then staying up all night in my room listening to them then being too tired for school the next day. Ahh, good times!...
Lying for attention aren't you. Didn't work did it
This is so nostalgic. To be honest, the greatest thing ever to come out of a cereal box though, was Rice Chex once gave out a video game called Chex Quest. It was a doom style shooter. I remember it being my JAM back in the mid 90s. Beyond that, companies in the united states used to have some weird affinity for character themed plastic spoons, often color changing, that you could eat your cereal with. I remember getting plastic character spoons every time a new disney movie came out back in the 90s.
Chex Quest!
chex quest is the shit. mom wouldn't let me play doom cause it was "too violent" but chex quest was totally fine.
Chex Quest literally used the Doom engine; it wasn't just a copycat.
I was SO disappointed that Chex Quest wasn't mentioned in the video, because that's about the most nostalgic toy I've ever gotten in a cereal box. I've also played it recently, and the sequels, and the unofficial sequel made by I think one of the original devs.
... It's late, and I need to go to bed, but I'm going to play it again tomorrow. Today. When I wake up.
Never going to forget Chex Quest
Back in my day, cereals had...
Color-changing spoons.
Actually, once I got a PC CD Rom game for like mini golf, I think.
I loved them, the color spoons.
and some of those were genuinely good, like chex quest.
The spoons were some of my favourite prizes ever in ceeal boxes.
The spoons were brilliant. I used to have a Frankenstein's monster one that changed from green to yellow and somehow got slightly stuck eventually so by the end it never quite changed all the way back. It was probably starting to break down chemically and slowly poisoning me.
Still cool though.
2002 Kellogs Frenzy Football anyone?
The Bike Reflectors were currency in my school for a while. I think they got replaced by the Coke Yoyos.
I remember those yo-yos were a "fad" when I was in high school one year. There was even a guy invited in to perform tricks with them. I had Fanta, Coke and Sprite yo-yos. I remember the gold ones were much sought after.
Yep coke yoyos where a thing in my school to
It might just be my mind but a Coke yoyo sounds like some sort of strange drug paraphernalia.
Those yoyos to those day are huge collectors items I remember having a Sprite one and my brother had a fanta one growing up. It was like the must have thing to have for ages.
Amazing! Nowadays they won't sell to kids, and you just get a baggie of cocaine.
"Now with 30% less sugar"
I can't remember what cereal it was, but I remember one making that claim. All they did was include 30% less cereal inside the box. Box was the same size and price and everything as before.
@@MinaF99 if the total volume of something falls by 30%, so do the individual components of it.
@@MinaF99 haha, yes it would...
Not per serving (unless they reduce serving size too to make servings per container match), but the total sugar content of the package would totally decrease by the amount of product they exclude from the package.
Here's an example to simplify the concept. Take a 100 unit package that has 10 units of sugar. That's 1 unit of sugar per 10 units of product. Now you take half that product out so it's just a 50 unit package. How much sugar do you have now? Since you have 1 unit of sugar per 10 of product and now have 50 units of product, you have 5 units of sugar, 50% reduced.
Stonks!
I think I've seen it with a cereal bar. They just made the bar smaller.
Also Mr. Kipling's angel slices have a reduced sugar option where they just remove most of the icing.
The aggressive "DO YOU SEE" nearly sent me into flashbacks from the last time.
damn it i thought that was a dream
aha aw i was hoping it was red dragon
Those reflectors are so nostalgic I remember having loads of them as a child they seemed to breed in the draw when it was closed
Same, ended up with dozens
We had drawers at our house.
When you pulled out that D&D hologram you unearthed deep memories that I had forgotten about for about 30 years. Thank you.
Me too. We were generally a cornflakes household but clearly must have gone over to the darkside on at least one occasion because those cards gave me the old nostalgic shiver.
@toomanycables996 when you replied to my post here you unearthed deep memories that I had forgotten about for about 3 years. Thank you. ;)
Ashens perfectly scratches the itch i have for watching videos about random and obscure-to-me things, I love this so much.
"Emoji Movie Prize Draw" Ummm Kelloggs, that's a punishment, not a prize.
1:20 Emjoi movie is bad...but 30% less sugar? Can kids even eat that with so little sugar? bleech...
@@kruleworld Probably because of the Sugar Tax the UK Gov. introduced a couple years ago.
@@enragedlemon3115 it's why they were founded.
My question is, why are they having a drawing for a prize associated with a 4 year old box office bomb?
@@OtakuUnitedStudio this video was probably filmed a whole ass long time ago.
16:04 yeah i remember that, every time you ordered something it said "arrives in 4-6 weeks" and by the time it arrived you'd forgotten you even ordered it
nostalgia
I wouldn’t know
Damn man I'd be happy to find those DnD holograms right now
I miss back when holograms were on like everything, they're still really neat to me to this day.
Ashens: Hoo boy, this one's gonna be a nostalgia-fest
Me: Yes, it is an Ashens video.
Cornelius "Corny" Rooster indeed is the name of the Corn Flakes mascot!
Pretty sure that they actually say that on the boxes
I remember the name Cornelius from the movie Planet of the Apes.
The main things I liked back in the 80s cereal era was the 'shrinkies' were everywhere, a plastic thing that you chucked into the oven that crinkles up! We had those flexi-records here in Australia in the mid 1980s too, they usually came free with magazines as demo sample discs, just like CDs did a few years later.
"don't quote me on that"
-Ashens, 2020
iamdb1990
R/MadLads
Funny
laddest mad lad mad
no that's a madness song
I got a lightsaber spoon for the prequel trilogy in a box.
I got a lightsaber spoon in a box once as well. It was awesome.
Me too!
Hoooooooly fuck. I did too. I thought it was a yogurt thing, though. I definitely remember eating Jar Jar flavoured yogurt.
Deep parts of my memory has been accessed
AND THEY LIT UP. DO NOT FORGET THE BEST PART LOL. I wonder if i still have them in like the back of the silverware drawer
"If you have an awful lot of time on your hands." I think, at this point, we ALL have an awful lot of time on our hands...
His name ABSOLUTELY is Cornelius! That's the piece of trivia I use to save our team in a pub quiz, I've kept that in my head for about 30 years.
Number of pub quizzes won with this information to date: 0
For me, the greatest cereal prize from the late 90's was a proper CD-ROM copy of RollerCoaster Tycoon. I remember spending so many hours trying to make my park pretty, not really messing with the roller coasters at all, and dropping park-goers into bodies of water to drown when they disliked something about my park. :)
Ashes finding a crumb on his counter and saying, "Eh, what's this? Eugh!" just reminded me why I love this series.
It's exactly an example of why I love him so much. That could have been cut out so easily, but he just left it, and it's the funniest thing.
"Maybe you can work that out if you have an awful lot of time..." Good thing we're all going to have nothing but time soon, if not already.
Being someone who already never has to leave my home. Not having time is a concept I've never delt with.
in the late 90s, i got 'humungous entertainment' game CDs in my cereal box, ''pajama sam'', ''putt putt'', ''spy fox''.... they'd never do that now!
Because clients like Steam, GoG, Epic Games Store, etc. have eliminated the need for physical media to distribute games.
The most I remember is those Kidz Bop CDs from McDonalds long ago.
@@damian9303 Lol same
2:24 Best synopsis of the origins of Corn Flakes I've heard. Perfect deadpan. :D
Mild shame he did add the weirder bits in, like the use of metal rods.
Yooo anyone remember when nutri-grain in Australia gave out a copy of AGE OF EMPIRES in the cereal?! Early 2000s im pretty sure. Was the best!
No but I remember some photo to 3D avatar software with a shitty football (soccer) game. FaceMask3D. You could make the resultant disembodied headndpeak via TTS, like a discount Max Headroom.
I did this hilarious thing whereby I would quickly remove the free gift then tell my mum that it was missing. She would write a letter to the company on how sad her little daughter was, not receiving her free gift. The cereal company would send the full set of free gifts and a gift voucher 😂😂Xx
Do you work for an investment bank now?
You should try insurance fraud
I was a smart kid 🤣🤣
Genius!!
That's a brilliant and also very evil scheme.
To this day my favorite cereal box toy was a web-shooter-shaped water squirter from the first Raimi _Spider-Man_ movie. Small, lightweight, and pretty fun; wish I could find it in my attic now.
"Eugh, what's this, eugh"
-Stuart Ashens 2020.
Why did that cut make me laugh so much. I will never know.
Same here man.
I have one of those little baking soda boats you used to get in cereal packets - pack the top half with baking soda and put vinegar in the bottom half, then quickly clip the two halves together and the boat powers along by the chemical reaction. It was issued by Honey Smacks, I still have the instructions cut out of the box.
I also have a couple of orange Weeto's yoyos, they were pretty crap really, not heavy enough and the center spindle too small. They actually have "MADE IN ENGLAND" on them. Plus also a Weeto's lenticular disc, the same size as Tazo's.
I remember the time period where they were giving away Monster in My pocket toys and mini-Boglins.
I think I'll have a dig in the loft and see if I've still got any.
Mini boglins tho 😎
I remember some of these, but my favourite ever cereal-things WERE actually cardboard circles..
POGs! Chex did a line of POGs which ran alongside the officially released series ('94-ish?) but in unique colours/designs!
Loved me a good cardboard circle, I did.
The Mario oddessy cereal came with an amiibo RF chip for the game
Mine didn't work
@@OtakuUnitedStudio 😢
What did that do again? I know I used it
Was is like a $25 box of cereal?
We had square flexible records in our Happy Meals in the states. I had one for ET and one for Gremlins. They weren't glued to cardboard, they were in the back of a story book and perforated so you could tear them out and play them.
In Germany the flexi-discs came mostly with magazines- I recently found a christmas themed one
i think i actually still have the mcdonalds contest song record they gave away around somewhere in a box, it was one of the little flexible records like those that was handed out at some point as part of a promotion.
how do you.... play a square record
@@EmilyStell Ir's like funny shaped CDs you could sometimes get. The actual grooves are still circular (or close enough to it not to throw off the needle) and the outer parts of the shape have no grooves on them.
I had a Ghostbusters promo flexi from a cereal box here in US. It was just an ad with some announcer and one of the voice actors from the cartoon. Very dissappointing.
Waiting for my free 100 hours of America Online.
Free coasters in the mail lmao
The redpill behind those is that 99% of those hours were spent waiting for websites to load
AOL really was horrible back in its day
@@Esdeath_0001 i stuck a sticker over the hole and formatted and reused them on my amiga....
Lmao 56k at it's best
I stocked up with the virus going around, I wouldn't want to run out of internet
I never had Kellogs Cornflakes as a kid but I do remember finding one of those reflectors in the park and putting it on my Raleigh Boxer.
My dad gave me that exact D&D skeleton card when he found it in my granddads house when I was about 7; I wasn't around at the time of their release but still lots of nostalgia in this video!
I never knew or even thought that those reflectors had keyring holes in them...think im gonna have to go up the loft and have a dig around in my boxes of toys.
I believe that was so you could also put them on your schoolbag or coat - so you'd be less likely to get run over while walking to/from school in the winter. It tied in with the government's "Be Seen, Be Safe" campaign.
This makes me want to see a video on the old fast food toys and items. Remember being able to get Batman glasses from Mcdonalds? Maybe you remember the Mcdonald's toys that looked like food but were actually transformers?
Remember those squares with the holes punched in them and the plastic tubes that connected them together? The tubes were all pleated like the bendy part of a drinking straw. Damn, I had loads of those.
I remember one toy from Mc D's was a cassette tape of some Halloween themed related things on it. I believe there was a number of them.
I have the whole set. Wish Mc.Donalds would release a new set of em. Possibly based on an anime of some kind or an Adult Swim show for a change of pace. Not that often do we get those in the fast food restaurants stateside let alone having ones sell proper premium glassware. Etched glass rules.
My favorite McDonald's toys were the Inspector Gadget ones. Those were so damn cool, way better than the film abomination they were promoting.
Yeah, the gestalt Happy Meal toys were utterly baller.
Honeycomb cereal had a Chitty Chitty Bang Bang car, probably my favorite cereal box prize. This would have to have been around 1970-ish.
I had those reflectors, and I also had an entire set of colour-changing spoons, which would change colour when exposed to cold, so they'd turn purple when you put them in your cereal milk.
I remember getting stickers in Frosties that said really 90's things like RAD! and COOL! They made the whole box have that plastic-y smell. Awesome!
Yep. I totally remember toys in cereal when I was a kid in the late 60’s/early 70’s.
I like how draconian copyright has become to where you can't even show 1/10th of a second of a physical recording to present the sound quality of something. What's that protecting? What is this ensuring? How is this protecting the seemingly God given rights that music labels have?
Yeah, in a logical world using a snippet of a song or video for demonstrative purposes would very obviously fall under fair use, but UA-cam fired their Logic Department a long time ago. What's worse is that shitty companies can easily abuse this copy"right" in several ways. If someone posts a negative review of a song/film/TV show they own the rights to and the UA-camr includes pieces of the media in question, the company can retaliate by having it removed or at least inconvenience the UA-camr with lawsuit threats, demonetization etc.
And that's another thing, shitty companies can and will try to extort money out of UA-camrs for "misusing" their copyrighted content. I actually saw this happen to a UA-cam channel a while back, because get this, some online company had bought the rights to a lot of viral videos. So basically, some random ordinary people posts a video on their Facebook or whatever that gets very popular, and this company reaches out to them and says "Hey, what if we were to purchase the rights to your cool video about the thing? You get a nice payment from us, _and_ we'll help you share it with news outlets and such." And the innocent (and clueless) average Joes says "Sure, that sounds like a win-win."
So they buy the rights to these videos, and then they have their -slaves- staff go through channels that review viral content to search for content that "belongs" to the company, so that Shit Inc can claim compensation for "stolen content". I know this because the channel they were targeting showed the emails/letters it had gotten. Shit Inc had found 4 "violations" and were asking for... (dramatic pause)
*1500 dollars* for each of them, $6000 in total. Shit Inc provided enough information to prove that they "owned" some videos, but conveniently left out the part of what clips belonged to them and what videos from the YT channel the clips were in, making it practically impossible for a channel with a "staff" of 2 people to just find and remove those teeny tiny clips from their videos and reupload.
Luckily the fans of the channel came to their rescue, they harassed Shit Inc on all their online platforms, got in touch with lawyers, notified larger and louder UA-cam channels, and the shitshow was rather promptly resolved.
*TL:DR* - Shitty companies have the ability to use the copyright strike as a tactical nuke on UA-cam channels and content creators, using it to silence problematic voices and extort (sometimes vulnerable) UA-cam people for money.
I doubt youtube would recognize it let alone flag it.
Stuart was doing this before even UA-cam became that strict about copyrights. I think it started as kind of a joke but the whole thing became reality a few years later.
I mean, I was really hoping to pirate this song by downloading this video and ripping the audio off a cereal box record.
Crap.
@@MegaVikingen Keep in mind, Ashens is in the UK and Fair Use is a US copyright thing. And while UA-cam generously applies US copyright to all of the content, that doesn't have to go for the individual rights holders.
I'm a bit young, we got CDs for games in my cereal boxes. I still have tons of them kicking around in my basement.
ChexQuest? That game was awesome.
@@MontieMongoose I played the Freddy fish game 😂 I adored that damn old game. One of the games was when you could decorate your own fish making a mug shot for them.
I remember those too. We got an Operation game from some Cheerios once. And I think a veterinarian-like game for kids, Chutes and Ladders, and a demo for Monkey Island III.
@@Silver_wind_1987_ My little sister adored that one and played it many times over. We also got it from a cereal box!
@@22kaybee22 it was enjoyable heck I still have the disk 😂 the game is alot of fun and good for learning minds.
I had a bunch of flexi-disks from the late 60s and the entire 70s here in the US, some came on/in cereal boxes, magazines, etc. (one of my favorites came in _National Geographic_ of Whale Songs)
I remember the things you could get in a box or send away for back in the day. I was born in 1962, and even during the 60s you could get weird stuff in a box of cereal. I remember collecting a few box tops and maybe a nickel or dime, then some six weeks later receiving a Green Bay Packers...tiny...plastic...helmet. Suppose it would be a perfect fit for Barbie's eunuch boyfriend Ken.
Recall I also got a plastic football (American football, that is) back then too. And speaking of flexi-discs, you could also get those on the back of, I recall, Sugar Crisps (featuring Sugar Bear) that had popular songs of the time. One of my elder sisters got one with her then-favorite singer Bobby Sherman. I have one around here with The Archies and their hit "Sugar, Sugar" (how appropriate). Actually a guy named Ron Dante; saw him at a "Happy Together Tour" last year with a bunch of 60-and 70-somethings in the crowd.
Here in the US, Flexi-discs made a brief comeback in the mid-80s, bound in comics and some advertising schemes; I have an issue of Critters (#23) that has Alan Moore's old band The Sinister Ducks on it, playing (wait for it) "March of the Sinister Ducks". Lovely, really :)
No one knew at the time that the Honey Monster would eventually become Prime Minister Of The UK.
"Tell 'em about the Brexit agenda, transgender."
So that’s why you don’t see sugar puff adverts on tv anymore!
@@chefexcellence322 So it's like with Pooh and the president of China?
@@chefexcellence322 An excellent theory.
That's really insulting. Poor honey monster, comparing him to that ugly oaf.
The Cornelius reflector reminded me of the reflectors in the shape of Garfield they had in the 80s.
I remember Kellogg’s gave away small plastic submarines or battleships that split in half and you added some baking soda and it would whizz about the bath.
Ashens, home of nostalgia.
I am often shocked that you don't get toys in cereal anymore. That was the greatest thing about my childhood... I had a weird childhood :p
This stuff is trash now, I mean, they were amazing toys when I was a kid, but now they just look like junk someone pulled out their loft..
I'm 38 and this was SO nostalgic. I had most of this crap. The sugar puff sticker books were the BOMB. We need Part 2!!!!!
These are quite nostalgic. I remember having the old Nabisco Dinosaurs given to me by older family members, and I loved the Jurassic Park Lost World badges.
When I was young, I remember eating breakfast at the table: Eggo Legos with my surrogate aunt Jemima and the box of cereal with Ricky Bob Potato Man on the front. The memories.....
Dark cauldron figures in cornflakes . I ate a lifetime worth of cereals in about a month to get them.
You dipstick.
Rodney you plonkaaaa
What a 42 carot plonker you really are rodney!
Those Figures base size was perfect to use with the Hero Quest Boardgame.
Just the best era ever. Late 80’s early 90’s. Miss those days. And these were special to breakfasts back then
You should see the prizes we got in the 1970s in the states! Records on cereal boxes? Yes! Cool monster figures? Yes! Little metal license plates? Yes, but don’t expect to get the state you live in. Even glow in the dark posters of famous movie monsters, what a time it was!
Felt ripped off when I got those bike wheel reflectors. My favourites were the little figurines of Snap, Crackle and Pop, etc.
Finally an ashens video that I can watch during the quarantine
Lucky. Wish I could stay home. Really surprised they're letting the food places stay open. It's crazy how many people will risk their lives just so they don't have to cook for themselves.
It's 2020, and people still feel the need to act like you can't spend a couple of weeks in your own home without getting insanely bored. Like, do none of you people have phones? Or laptops? Or game consoles? Or books? Or work to do? Or literally anything else? IDK I just find that most people who're bringing up their "boring self-isolation" arbitrarily on videos are doing it as an announcement for no real reason Like, "hey guys, look at me, I'm in self-isolation! Ain't I being all pandemic-y!". If you're in self-isolation you're supposed to be doing your usual routine, but from home, anyway, particularly getting work done. I thought that was kinda the point? So why's everyone doing the "boring quarantine shtick"?
@@alanira2971 True. I'm just sick of seeing arbitrary comments about the pandemic & quarantine on literally every damn video I click on. Like, yeah okay, a viral outbreak is going on and normality's gone out of the window for at least a month or so, I get it. I don't feel like being reminded of the fact that coronavirus exists and that the world is on lock down when I'm just trying to enjoy myself on youtube, everywhere I go, thanks.
@man0z we don't need people spreading this virus so its best to stay home and be as safe as possible
@@Nytephyre lmao you're not "risking your life" by going out and buying food, as long as you act sensible about it. The way that people are acting like the world outside their front door step is full of toxic air is ludicrous. The coronavirus is not airborne, you know, and you're incredibly safe from contracting it on a trip to get necessities as long as you don't act like a total moron and ignore all safety precautions while doing it. In all honesty, people being overly melodramatic (and generally misinformed) is becoming the biggest problem with this entire pandemic. It's scaring me more than the actual virus is at this stage. If anything is going to ultimately lead to a collapse of civilisation as a whole, it's going to to be from the entire world going through self-inflicted hysteria, more so a result of the actual outbreak.
The miniature lightsabers with ball bearing mazes in side them was my weapon of choice for the playground battle royale
Yes!! I still have a couple of these, the Obi-Wan Kenobi one is sitting on my bookcase 😆
Those Magic Window on the Seashore things are incredibly soothing and I need all of them
How I wish I grew up in the days of cereal box records!!
I ain't gonna lie I'm only here to get away from the Corona virus and to bring back my childhood and take away my worries just for the next 15 minutes 😁😁😁
The most recent coco pops "toy" I remember was a bag clip in the shape of a crocodile head.
I can remember when the first Superman movie was released in the 70's, the back of the the cereal packet was background scenery, and you got a selection of cardboard figures of certain characters inside the box..... God, I feel old.....
Dr Who too :)
Ho boy, I think I'd outgrown cereal box toys by then!
I had one of those records, technotronic pump up the jam! I played that thing to death! I think I still have it somewhere too!
my dad worked at Kellogs for 27 years, we used to get to go around the factory before the days of major health and safty, we could take as much as we wanted, got all the toys early and even had a warm cornflake from the conveyor :) happy days
I remember getting a flexi-disc of The Ghostbusters theme from inside of a cereal box as a kid in the 80s
Got a pc game in a cereal box when I was a kid once, I remember it was amazon trail, like the Oregon trail well you get the idea, it did nothing for me but I remember my mother staying up all night once on a weekend just to beat it
"if you have time on your hands" THE WORLD IS ENDING STUART. Time on our hands is all we have. My skirting boards are so clean now.
My dad worked at Kellogg’s when I was a kid...that was in the 60’s and 70’s....he would bring home all kind of cereal toys and stickers..it was great!
I had a deck of playing cards with Tony the Tiger on, also a water game where you had to press the button to get the two boxes of Frosties into Tony’s shopping trolley. The stuff you got in Weetos was always the best, pull string spinning tops, puzzle cubes, troll pencil toppers.
Yes, yes, yes! Don’t forget Monsters in my Pocket too And they often gave you 2 toys as standard.
I remember getting "The A-Team" mini comics with Weetabix.
omg id forgot all about them , thanks for the memory refresh
"Casting our minds back to the 80's and 90's" Yes, good, sir.
“Do you see” all I’m imagining now is an Event Horizon remake with the Honey Monster
I think you're correct with the rooster reflector! In the US, the USDA put the cabosh on toys in cereal, especially sweet sugary cereal because it wasn't promoting healthier eating. Kids would gravitate towards those types of cereals just because of the toy! We had them in the record in the US!
Man,cereal and Happy Meal toys where awesome back in the day. There is a couple times I emptied the bag,got the prize,and put the cereal back in.
Someone remind me, what is the music Ashens uses around 1:15? I was born in 94 but I know I recognise it from like a 70's or 80's thing...
Ah yes, reminds me of that old bionicle game for pc. Got that little disc in a cereal box.
Ashen's subtle hand movements portrays more emotion than my ex wife did on our wedding.
Add the word "night" behind wedding for extra realism.
that's why i gave mine a wedding ring i bought out of a vending machine. still paid too much for it.
I think my favorite cereal box prize of all time was the Lucky Charms 4-leaf clover charm keychain. It was a flat, clear plastic box with a real four-leaf clover preserved inside. You had to collect a few proofs of purchases, but this was the one time I found it to be worthwhile, because the keychain could be personalized with your name. Having a name that I NEVER could find on bike licence plates because of its unusual spelling and the fact that it wasn't common, I was thrilled to finally have something with my name on it. I'm sure I still have that little charm somewhere.
I got a CD with the game Backyard Baseball in a box of cereal back in the day. Put so so many hours into that game.
Wow! I forgot I had that one too. That game was so much fun, but I got to say I sunk my hours into a lego builder. Had the Amazon trail and Oregan trail 3rd edtion as well.
I remember when they did the "Beyblades" and the fights those stupid spinning tops caused.
A friend was telling me recently how he still has a pair of Tony's Slippers which he had to send off for by saving coupons from Frosties.
Who remembers the submarine you'd load with baking soda?
I just posted the same thing! Lol had them in several colors.
Yep! I had a couple of them. I remember getting them to sorta kinda work, slightly but that was about it.
I had one of those subs and a diver that did that too. Had a lump of lead in it to keep it down and bubbles came from it. ... lead! Unthinkable now 😁
@@natgrant1364 Yeah, I had the boats with baking soda. Barely worked.
Our chemistry teacher used one of those submarines to demonstrate the properties of caesium. The submarine caught fire and melted.
Wow, this was a great blast from the past! I had the skeleton hologram and the first pull-out picture. That hologram was amazing! Best video for a while
I HAD that corn flakes reflector!
As an American, it was very strange hearing “Frosties” rather than “Frosted Flakes.” I had no idea that there was a regional difference.
Frosted Flakes sounds like something a supermarket makes up for their rip off.
@@MuchWhittering oh, it is. Since it’s just two normal (and descriptive) words, store brands basically just copy the name and it’s totally fine.
Yeah it was called “road to wellville”. Came out in 1995 I think. It wasn’t a particularly good film.
It was hilarious! But i only live about an hour and a half from the big Kellogg factory it used to be a big school feild trip to see them make corn flakes.
I thank that movie for making me buy a box of Corn Flakes, trying it completely open-minded, and becoming a client for life
FIXTREME Cornflakes are the best damn cereal ever made!
The greatest quote from that film is “Dr Kellogg, it’s you son. He’s throwing boxes of shit at the guests!”
FINALLY, a UA-cam video I understand! As soon as I spotted the Holograms I was FAR TOO excited for a 48 year old man without feeling ashamed!! This video is biscuit-worthy so hang on, I am going to put the kettle on. But I have a question cereal-boy. In the 70's my friend brought a tiny fully-articulated plastic astronaut to primary-school. I asked him where it was from and he said it was free with his cereals. But I have never found which cereals, and I have never seen another astronaut. I seem to remember he had articulated knees. This thing truly lit up my world and is perhaps one of the reasons why I now make miniature articulated knees for a living. But PLEASE... does anyone know what this was... please tell me I wasn't hallucinating and all of this was simply because the school boiler was leaking! Cheers... Right, kettle is whistling, so here goes. 🚀
I know I’m 3 years late, but I looked it up and I found one thing that (maybe) might be it. 1968 corn flakes “space age” series, but I may be wrong; i can’t tell if it has articulated knees. Where are you from? That might help me narrow it down a bit.
That ending was gold. "Worth precisely fuck all" - Ashens 2020
I think one cereal had beads that clipped to the spokes.
There were also things that flapped off the spokes.
Honey nut loops had a musical badge.
Rice crispies had a digital watch.
Other things I remember:
- Dime bar Jukebox.
- LoSalt keyring.