Showing posts with label Cereal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cereal. Show all posts

Cinnamon Toast Crunch Amazing Fantasy 15 (General Mills)


Cinnamon Toast Crunch Amazing Fantasy 15
General Mills
2022

On October 20, 2022, Wal-Mart launched an online exclusive box of Cinnamon Toast Crunch Cereal. Featured on the box was a fabulous rendering of the original 1962 cover of Amazing Fantasy 15, the first appearance of Spider-Man in Marvel Comics. Limited to just 1,962 boxes, and despite being priced at $10.00 per box, the cereal sold out fast - Mainly to scalpers, of course.


The main treasure within this collectable box was on the back. Flipping it over, it would open up, like a book, and featured an abridged reprint of Amazing Fantasy. Yes, that's right. A fantastic and iconic comic right there on the back of your cereal box!

Back in 2024, when I wrote this post, sealed boxes were still relatively easy to come by, on secondary markets, of course. Typically, they sell for between $20.00 and $25.00, with free shipping, which I suppose isn't terrible. I mean, it was decent enough for me to grab one, and by the time you read this, I may have opted to grab more. It's a unique collectible for comic fans, and a fun way to read the origin of Marvel's web spinning super hero.

Based on the label, the cereal expired as of April 20, 2023. While I suppose that's not too long a period between then and now, I still wouldn't recommend eating any of it. But, hey, to each their own if you opt to get a box or two.

For those of you who've never taken a moment to read this iconic story, I took the liberty of posting the book in its entirety below, ads and all. Personally, I'm not a fan of the "B" and "C" stories, but that Spider-Man debut makes up for it in spades. It's a classic read! Enjoy!




































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Birthday Gifts From My Girl And The Cake


Wrapping up my birthday was some really nice gifts my girl gave me, as well as the cake.

What we've found is that ever since Christmas last year, when there's a gift around, the dog thinks its his, and therefore, he wants to open it. As such, we've had to start wrapping toys for him during birthdays, and ensure he has something to keep him occupied. Otherwise, he pouts.

We ended up having to stagger three different packages to him to keep him happy while I opened my gifts. These gifts!


I couldn't believe after spending what we did on DVD's earlier in the day that my girl would then have wrapped gifts. It was generous, and totally awesome of her. Did she win the lottery and not tell me?


I dug this Super Mario Bros. wrapping paper. That's just cool!


It didn't go unnoticed that I was opening up packages. This was despite him shredding through not only the paper of one of his already, but the toy itself, ala all the fuzz all around him. Messy!

As if I needed it, I got all the more DVD's! Ha! This time cartoons for my ever growing cartoon collection, a collection which I keep very separate from our movies. She also got me a really cool color changing Spider-Man coffee mug, and a sealed box of 1989 Batman cereal, complete with the shrink wrapped premium coin bank! That's good stuff!


I'm by no means a cereal box collector, and no, I'm not going down that rabbit hole...yet. But, if I did, I have long since looked at this particular one as a "must have' for that type of collection. For now, the intended purpose for this will be to sit on my very limited Batman 89 shelf. I just need to re-arrange some things to fit it in there.

As I noted in my post yesterday, I'm reaching the tail end of my eights cartoon collection. There are only a handful more that were released in the USA, and having the Adventures of Raggedy Ann and Andy now, checks one of those off. Of course, also as I said, that now opens the flood gates for shows from the 70's and prior, as well as 90's and beyond, which my girl has given me a bit of a kick start on. Oh, those pesky rabbit holes.

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Kellogg's Star Wars Obi-Wan Kenobi Frosted Flakes

 

It's Saturday morning, which means it's time for cereal and cartoons!

Today, I'm cracking open a box of Obi-Wan Kenobi tie in Frosted Flakes from Kellogg's. I found this cereal while passing along through the breakfast isle of a local grocery store, and decided I would go ahead and give it a try.


Flipping the box over, I noted that the back was the exact same as the front, and had to laugh. The first thought that came to my mind was, "Yep. That's Disney Star Wars. Copy and paste what has already been done."

Filling the bowl, I quickly noted the very uneven ratio of regular pieces to chocolate ones. Clearly Kellogg's doesn't know anything about bringing balance to the force.

I wasn't anticipating much, in the sense that this would be anything "new". It was, after all, just a bowl of Frosted Flakes. However, at a minimum, I was expecting to be able to at least taste the different cereals. Sadly, this was not the case. The dark chocolate pieces didn't come through at all. Had I not seen them in the bowl, I wouldn't have even known they were there. This did indeed just taste like a regular bowl of Frosted Flakes.

I even tried a chocolate flake separately, only to find that in general, it had no flavor. Certainly not one of cocoa.

Would I buy this cereal again? No. I don't tend to buy Frosted Flakes as it is, and I don't see the point of paying the up charge for a licensed version. Perhaps my mindset would have been different if there were a distinct flavor between the two cereals mixed together. 

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Batman Forever Corn Pops (Kellogg's)

 

Batman Forever Corn Pops
Kellogg's
1995

People like to look back on Batman Forever, and think how badly it flopped. However, the reality of this is that their perspective may simply be skewed by the damage that Batman & Robin did. The truth of the matter about the film is that it took in three hundred thirty-six million dollars at the box office on a one hundred million dollar budget. No, it wasn't the Tim Burton sequel that fans may have wanted, but the campy look and feel was the return to the lighthearted Batman franchise that Warner Bros., McDonald's, and parent activist groups were looking for.

Many know the story already. How when Tim Burton sat down to discuss his third installment that Warner Bros. did everything they could to talk him out of it. He was a smart director, and he saw the writing on the wall in that meeting. He knew very well what they were trying to make clear. The studio didn't want him to do another Batman movie. Warner Bros. had received major backlash from McDonald's resulting from outraged parents who panned the family friendly restaurant for promoting a kids based Happy Meal on a film they deemed too dark, violent and scary for children. That film, of course, was Burton's 1992 Batman Returns.

Though it wasn't immediate, with the exit of Tim Burton, Warner Bros. also lost their star, Michael Keaton. However, this didn't sway them. Batman forever had the likes of Val Kilmer, Nicole Kidman, Tommy Lee Jones, Chris O'Donnell, and up and comer comedic genius, Jim Carrey. All engines were full speed ahead. Under the guise of Joel Schumacher, Warner Bros. presented a family friendly Batman film that left critics raving, and families happy. For all intents and purposes, the film was successful. So successful that Batman & Robin was rushed into production.

It was with the fourth installment flopping that in retrospect people started to look back on the third film through hazy glasses. What was once deemed a great movie that Jim Carrey stole the show from, was now seen as a blemish. The beginning of the end. That movie where Joel Schumacher ruined the Batman franchise by taking the reigns from Tim Burton. Since then, it honestly hasn't gotten a fair shake among critics. People want to hate it because it's not Tim Burton and Michael Keaton. Yet at the time, the box office shows they loved it.

With its success not only came more Happy Meal toys, but also a tie in promotion with cereal giants, Kellogg's, who offered a black, all cotton adjustable baseball cap featuring the film's question mark logo in green and blue. Sadly, this was no different than the very same cap that was already available in most clothing and retail shops. Because I wasn't, and still am not, a baseball hat wearer, I don't know if the $4.99 price for the cap through Kellogg's was a deal or not.

Though the baseball cap would remain available throughout the promotion, Kellogg's would follow this release of Corn Pops with all new boxes which featured the two heroes, Batman and Robin, as well as the two villains, Two-Face and Riddler. In overseas markets, they also offered a "special edition" double size box, which featured the film's iteration of the Batmobile on the box. This particular package also included a promotion for film related tattoos. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to get my hands on the foreign box, but here are samples of the four character boxes.




Despite which box you purchased, they all had the same backing on the box for the hat promotion. If you flip the box on its side, you can also read short blurbs about each character, as well as the actor's name who plays them.

And to wrap this post up, here is an image of the actual hat.

It's a shame that time hasn't been more friendly to the film. People's opinions changed fast when Batman & Robin crashed and burned so hard. We are after all talking about a film so bad that both Schumacher and Clooney have apologized for making it. But in retrospect, that doesn't make Forever a bad film by default. No, much like Superman III, it's a decent sequel, it's just not the sequel we expected based on the groundwork of the first two films. I think we can all agree that the fourth installment for Batman (and Superman for that matter) was disastrous.

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