Honeycomb

December 31, 2008 by Poppy  
Filed under Cereal Wednesday, Honeycomb, Podcast, Post Cereal, Three Bowls

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Post Shredded Wheat with Real Strawberries


Cereal Wednesday: Post Shredded Wheat with Real Strawberries
from Cereal Wednesday on Vimeo.

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Golden Crisp


Cereal Wednesday: Golden Crisp from Cereal Wednesday on Vimeo.

    If the embedded video above doesn’t work, you can also see it at these video sites: Yahoo, MySpace, Viddler


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Honey Bunches of Oats with Cinnamon Clusters

Hi all, it’s Poppy again. Yes, you’re right, NYCWD reviewed Honey Bunches of Oats with Almonds in January, 2007. But this is HBoO with Cinnamon. Yummy!!!


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Post Cereal The First Corporate Victim?

August 16, 2007 by NYC Watchdog  
Filed under News, Post Cereal

RTT News has reported that Kraft may be seeking a buyer for their Post Cereal brands. The article states:

Despite strong brands, Kraft’s cereal business is still struggling to cope with rising commodity costs, and strong competition. A decision to stop advertising sugary cereal to young children has also weighed on the business.

Post Cereal may be the first cereal victim of the Campaign For A Commercial Free Childhood. Not surprisingly, this affects not just the sugary cereal these fascist tyrants are so opposed to but ALL the brands. Post Cereal brands include Fruity Pebbles, Grape Nuts, and Honey Bunches of Oats.

Wait. Grape Nuts may be in danger? Maybe this isn’t such a bad thing afterall…

General Mills Bows To Cereal Tyrants

General Mills joined Kelloggs, Kraft Foods (Post Cereal) and eight other companies in pledging changes in their products approved by The Council of Better Business Bureaus under their Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative program. The pledges were announced at a forum entitled “Weighing In: A Check-Up on Marketing, Self-Regulation, and Childhood Obesity” on Wednesday June 18, 2007.

Not surprisingly some of the tyrants behind this movement, the Campaign for a Commercial Free Childhood, have determined that this is already a failure. In their statement about the pledges they conclude that “It’s the role of government, not corporations bound by law to maximize profits, to safeguard public health.

To this I have three words…
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