It seems most of Ralston's cereals for kids were basically the same sweetened corn meal mush. Remember Freakies? Waffelos? Gremlins? Batman (1989)? Quaker did the same thing with all their Cap'n Crunch variants like Quisp and Quake and whatever latest fad arrived on the scene. I guess these places wondered "what do we do with all this degermed corn meal that has basically no nutritional value?" "I know, let's sugar it up and make it into kids' cereals!" As for adult cereal it's the same with corn flakes. Really nothing in them except for some "added vitamins and minerals".
I don't understand Why Donkey Kong 3 Isn't Even That Famous in Media. Considering That It's Someone other than Mario. It would be nice if They had a Cereal Based On That Game Too
@@deionpehowdy Well they did one Saturday Supercade episode where Mario teams up with Stanley but that was it, Donkey Kong 3 really didn't do well, considering it only had one or two ports while Mario Bros had a ton of ports.
The "Donkey Kong" jingle was sung by Illinois rockabilly pioneer the late Ron Cannon(AKA Big Daddy Sun). These commercials made the downpayment on his first house in Chicago. We were so proud of him when he got this gig.
Fact: we thought Mario 64 from 1996 is the first time we see Mario without his hat, but it's actually the Donkey Kong cereal commercials where his hat goes off briefly. He was originally bald, but the first time we see his full head of hair is in the Saturday Supercade Donkey Kong cartoon in 1983.
1983's Ralston Donkey Kong cereal commercial tells a story about a little girl named Tabitha and her twin brother; a little boy named Travis who are sitting at a table and chairs with a box of Donkey Kong cereal that contains sugary sweet corn and oat barrel shaped cereal pieces which gives them an ability to make crunching sounds which are the only sounds they make in order to help the jump man himself Mario saving his love interest Pauline from Donkey Kong the Nintendo gorilla who tries to defeat him. They also team up with Mario to defeat Donkey Kong.
Strange, this is one of the first times Mario's ever had a voice, and it is strangely not that far off from his modern in-game voice. High pitched, jolly, and i might be hearing some semblance of an accent.
Was anyone aware that there was a Donkey Kong cereal commercial where at the end Pauline actually KISSES Mario? It was probably the last commercial for it........It surely would be great if anyone could post THAT one!
@@danarichman5513 mandela effect is when a lot of people remember the same event that never happened (or happened in a different way), if you already knew that, idk what mandela effect is he talking about
there should be a donkey kong country cereal with frosted red dk barrels and banana marshmallows and also a berry flavor version with frosted barrel cereal and a fruit flavors berries with fruit rings and same bana marshmallows
My idea for a new Donkey Kong cereal: Similar to the recent Super Mario cereal, but with banana-shaped cereal and three marshmallow shapes: Donkey Kong's head, a barrel, and a crocodile. And the box features Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong (the back of the box has a maze game in which you help Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong escape from King K. Rool).
Wow I've never seen any 1980s breakfast cereal ads from the USA 🇺🇸 before in my entire life. They look pretty very interesting. It's too bad they were only available in the USA 🇺🇸 and Canada 🇨🇦 because I live in Dublin, Ireland 🇮🇪 and besides they had been discontinued before I was born.
I often confuse Diddy Kong for Donkey Kong Jr. because of the latter's look on the cereal box. It could also be that Rare intended Diddy Kong to be Donkey Kong Jr.'s replacement.
We first hear Jumpman (Mario) saying "Here we go."
It even Sounds like how Mario Currently Sounds in The Games.
@@deionpehowdyWhat goes around comes around.
Bruh this is the first time mario / jumpman speaks
@@Jonasaurus25 In a commercial, not in the games.
It’s at 1:14
I Can't Believe Mario Had His High Pitched Voice and Near Italian Accent Before The recent Games.
It's pretty close to the one he has now!
at that time jump man already called "mario" and already spoke "here we go"
And had an Italian accent already.
The voice beign so similar to Charles Martinet and even saying "here we go!" makes me wonder if Martinet was inspired by this take
"Kids, I'm-a gonna jump-a, you're-a gonna crunch-a!"
"HERE WE GO!"
Donkey Kong
"MORE CRUNCH~!"
1:14 He said it!! He said the thing before the thing was his thing!!
He did didn't he.
The fact that he even has a higher pitched voice makes it even scarier.
0:55 I love Mario (Jumpman) 's face here
It Somehow Makes Me Laugh When He Smiles Like That.
@@deionpehowdyMario at his Popeye-ish best!
Looks like shopping from peanuts with the art style bro 👌
I remember DK cereal. It was literally just Cap'n Crunch in a different shape. I still ate it. LOL
Omg Eric I was just thinking that today lok
yes!
Yeah, barrel-shaped pieces.
It seems most of Ralston's cereals for kids were basically the same sweetened corn meal mush. Remember Freakies? Waffelos? Gremlins? Batman (1989)? Quaker did the same thing with all their Cap'n Crunch variants like Quisp and Quake and whatever latest fad arrived on the scene. I guess these places wondered "what do we do with all this degermed corn meal that has basically no nutritional value?" "I know, let's sugar it up and make it into kids' cereals!" As for adult cereal it's the same with corn flakes. Really nothing in them except for some "added vitamins and minerals".
Yeah, but if you wanna go that route, C3POs were just conjoined Cheerios. We were all easy to please back then.
No Donkey Kong 3 cereal? Eat it before the hornets sting you!
The potential for the honey flavor would've sold me alone.
I don't understand Why Donkey Kong 3 Isn't Even That Famous in Media. Considering That It's Someone other than Mario. It would be nice if They had a Cereal Based On That Game Too
@@deionpehowdy Well they did one Saturday Supercade episode where Mario teams up with Stanley but that was it, Donkey Kong 3 really didn't do well, considering it only had one or two ports while Mario Bros had a ton of ports.
@@ClassicSonicSatAm Oh.
I miss watching these.
The "Donkey Kong" jingle was sung by Illinois rockabilly pioneer the late Ron Cannon(AKA Big Daddy Sun). These commercials made the downpayment on his first house in Chicago. We were so proud of him when he got this gig.
I see no one mentioning that the narrator is Blacula.
Fact: we thought Mario 64 from 1996 is the first time we see Mario without his hat, but it's actually the Donkey Kong cereal commercials where his hat goes off briefly.
He was originally bald, but the first time we see his full head of hair is in the Saturday Supercade Donkey Kong cartoon in 1983.
"It's wild with fruit flavor"
_~ Donkey Kong Jr._
Was that Arnold Stang I heard?
1983's Ralston Donkey Kong cereal commercial tells a story about a little girl named Tabitha and her twin brother; a little boy named Travis who are sitting at a table and chairs with a box of Donkey Kong cereal that contains sugary sweet corn and oat barrel shaped cereal pieces which gives them an ability to make crunching sounds which are the only sounds they make in order to help the jump man himself Mario saving his love interest Pauline from Donkey Kong the Nintendo gorilla who tries to defeat him.
They also team up with Mario to defeat Donkey Kong.
0:33 Well, this cereal immediately seems unhygienic.
I think they predicted Mario's characterization in later games.
I loved this cereal as a kid! It was like Cap' Crunch but it was barrel shaped.
Did taste exactly like Cap'n Crunch? Cause I wasn't alive when the Donkey Kong cereal was still a thing.
@@SolarFarle Yes,the cereal did taste just like Cap' Crunch.
@@mikeburkhart8336 I see and as someone born in 2000 I envy the people that were able to try certain food products before my time.
1:22 Mario: Happy landings, Donkey Kong!
Wow this reminds me of how much my mom loves Donkey Kong
HERE WE GO!
Strange, this is one of the first times Mario's ever had a voice, and it is strangely not that far off from his modern in-game voice. High pitched, jolly, and i might be hearing some semblance of an accent.
He Even Says "Here We Go."
@@deionpehowdyNot to mention is named "Mario" already.
@@MrBlueSkyof1607 Oh, Right. Instead of Jumpman.
Because charles wasnt working there until 1991
This is the first time Mario actually talks!
AND HE SAID "HERE WE GO"
@@NothingisaroundhereIn his Italian accent, too.
Before optimus prime mario voice in that donkey kong cartoon (that isn't dk country).
Even years and years before we got our god charles martinet
Why does Mario's voice sounds like Charles Martinet in the third commercial?
Excellent question. 😏
That looks soooooo good. I wish I could try it 😋
Ate it as a kid. It was capt crunch. That is pretty much what it was. Still ate it however!
@@saturdaymorningfan3123That's what I remember.
1:14
Before he said here we go, Mario (or Jumpman) sounds like Shaggy Rogers. You're welcome! (You won't unhear it.)
Was anyone aware that there was a Donkey Kong cereal commercial where at the end Pauline actually KISSES Mario? It was probably the last commercial for it........It surely would be great if anyone could post THAT one!
I think you’re a victim of the Mandela Effect
@@Guru123 What are you talking about?
@@danarichman5513 mandela effect is when a lot of people remember the same event that never happened (or happened in a different way), if you already knew that, idk what mandela effect is he talking about
@@BrickmanZero **SIGH** Never mind
@Brickman Wow, you literally beat me to answering his question.
The narrator in the first commercial sounds suspiciously like James Earl Jones...
Or Christopher Lee.
Or Thurl Ravenscroft
I think it's William Marshall.
The boy in the 3rd commercial is Mark Paul Gosselaar
ZACHHHHH!!!!
there should be a donkey kong country cereal with frosted red dk barrels and banana marshmallows and also a berry flavor version with frosted barrel cereal and a fruit flavors berries with fruit rings and same bana marshmallows
You Played The Arcade, Now Have Some Cereal With Nintendo's Donkey Kong Cereal, A Barrel Jumping Part Of Your Complete Breakfast!
My idea for a new Donkey Kong cereal:
Similar to the recent Super Mario cereal, but with banana-shaped cereal and three marshmallow shapes: Donkey Kong's head, a barrel, and a crocodile. And the box features Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong (the back of the box has a maze game in which you help Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong escape from King K. Rool).
0:52 you can see mario is bald
Mario lookin like popeye here
Almost like Mario was partially inspired by Popeye, given how Nintendo wanted to make a Popeye game but didn't have the rights.
@@Krakenborn654 I know the history of Mario
I wish that I had this!
Nintendo should bring these back one day.
That or Nintendo Cereal System.
"Faith"
Performed by Stevie Wonder feat. Ariana Grande
I'm Still Surprised Donkey Kong Had Cereal. And So Did Donkey Kong Junior.
Wow I've never seen any 1980s breakfast cereal ads from the USA 🇺🇸 before in my entire life. They look pretty very interesting. It's too bad they were only available in the USA 🇺🇸 and Canada 🇨🇦 because I live in Dublin, Ireland 🇮🇪 and besides they had been discontinued before I was born.
Listen to Blackula sell some cereal, I just knew that was William Marshall
Mario looks more like Popeye
Well he was made to replace popeye when nintendo could not get the rights to make a popeye game. (they would make one later!)
Seems like the audio can't pick its favorite side of my headphones lmao
Unforgettable
Cute commercial
I often confuse Diddy Kong for Donkey Kong Jr. because of the latter's look on the cereal box. It could also be that Rare intended Diddy Kong to be Donkey Kong Jr.'s replacement.
The Donkey Kong in the Rareware games till present IS Donkey Kong Jr. Cranky Kong is the original Donkey Kong.
Wow I never knew The Terminator did Donkey Kong cereal commercials
“Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard”
Written by Paul Simon
Performed by Bleachers
Courtesy of RCA Records
("Don't Stop Me Now" by Queen playing)
I always wanted to try that cereal alongside the Pac-Man one.
(BTW, I hate the way that kid was looking at me in the thumbnail. 😐)
Donkey Kooong!
Donkey Kong _CEREAL!_
("Roll, Stop, Roll" by Can't Stop, Won't Stop playing)
It's funny mario has a little Italian accent and he say here we go 😂
0:58 You look at that kid's grimace and tell me he's enjoying that shit.
Awesome.
“Revolution”
Performed by Pierre Coffin
“Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard “
Was it basically captain crunch in the shape of barrels.
The 👧 says “Told you”, but the 👦 👎 said he didn’t believe her.
I hate those crunch sounds and who ever tout that those companies behind those breakfast meals would saw bread in this,woow just unbelievible.
“Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard “
Written by Paul Simon
Performed by Bleachers
Unforgettable, nforgettable
(“Revolution” in Minionese playing)
("All Fired Up" by The Lazys playing)
("Speed Me Up" by Wiz Khalifa, Ty Dolla Sign, Lil Yachty, and Sueco The Child playing)
("Good Mood" by Adam Levine playing)
Unforgettable, nforgettabie
“Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard”
Written by Paul Simon
:52 mario’s hat comes off and he’s bald
Why do people keep putting song titles?
Maybe they're autistic and it's their tic.
1:16
(DONKEY KOOOOOOOOONG)
*MORE C R U N C H !*
Speed me up, yeah!
("Good Mood" by Adam
Levine playing
(“Revolution” in Minionese)
Made On August 31, 2023
"Good Mood"
Performed by Adam Levine
In a battle Donkey kong cereal vs pac man cereal ¿who is best?
Pac-man! Don't get me, the DK cereal was okay but compared to the marshmellow ghosts, DK Cereal is a wack rip-off of Capt. Crunch.
“The Simpsons Theme”
Performed by Green Day
👍🏻
It's from Purina
Ooh, speed me up!
Gacebook!!!
0:20 0:28 0:53 0:59 1:20 1:29
Man I wish this was here. But the Mario oddesey cereal is much better. Becuase the donkey Kong is a copy of peanut butter Cap’n Crunch.
("Friends" by Hyper Potions playing)
DK jr doesn’t sound like himself in this lol😊 1:57
🙄
Paw Patrol: The Movie - Adam Levine - 06 - Good Mood
It was awful cereal
("Good Mood" by Adam Levine
playing)
("Good Mood" by Adam
Levine playing)