the naughty
list.
- HOME
- YOUTUBE
- ARTICLES
- VIDEOS
- THEATER
- CLASSIFIEDS
- VHS COVERS
- CEREAL BOXES
- GAME BOX ART
- READ ALONGS
- PODCASTS
- FORUM
- FAQ
- POINTS STORE
Don't mess
with the bull.
JOIN!!!
Pizza Hut Promotions
In the days before retailers and restaurants could just give you a 7 digit code to enter on their website for access to “awesome content”, they actually had to deliver the goods in a physical form on a regular basis. These monthly promotions were most often tied to the hottest movies or TV shows, causing children nationwide to beg their parents for a trip to that store so they could get the plastic representations of their favorite characters. One of the best at pandering to the desires of the couch potato kids of the early 90’s was the Noid’s arch-enemy (or would he technically be considered an ally?), Pizza Hut.
When it came to those delicious discs of sauce, meat and cheese, Pizza Hut was always my go-to source. Though this may have had to do with location as much as the food (Domino’s was on the other end of town, while I could walk to “the Hut” in 5 minutes), they also had the best selection of video games. In fact, it was while waiting for our number to be called for a Bigfoot pizza, that I first laid eyes on the machine that defined a decade, Street Fighter II. A case could be made that the EXTREME nature of Mortal Kombat gives Raiden a leg-up over Ryu as to best representing the attitude of the 90’s, but we’re here to talk about “pizza prizes” so let’s save that debate for another day.
One of the first promos I remember Pizza Hut running to grab
the attention of the younger set was for Don Bluth’s most enduring film
(seriously how many have they made at this point?) The Land Before Time.
Frankly, this movie was not in my wheelhouse, as I was more a fan of An
American Tail and the animated sequence from Xanadu, which I’m sure I stand
alone in my admiration of. But I can’t deny that there was something desirable
about the rubber dino-puppets you could buy along with your delicious cheese
pizza (shout out to Kevin McAllister from Home Alone).
The attention to detail on the sculpting of the puppets is
what was most impressive to me. Not that I cared about Little Foot or Petrie
(though pterodactyls were tops to 7 year old me), but the fact that the toys
looked just like the characters in the movie posters definitely got my
attention. Pizza Hut actually continued this trend of puppets creations for
other kiddie properties such as Nickelodeon’s Eureka’s Castle and the pretty
much forgotten Casper film starring a post Addam’s Family, Cristina Ricci.
Again, none of those really made me pine for pepperoni the way this next promotion
did.
The Rocketeer film suffered the same fate as the comic book,
fondly remembered for its visuals but never gaining a foothold in the world of
mainstream pop culture. I personally thought the movie was awesome and it
regularly found its way into our VCR, but a lot my familiarity with the
character had to do with my friend’s dad making it his personal mission to own
every bit of merchandise. He had helmets filled with candy, those goofy BendEms
figures and of course, the comics. So when Pizza Hut decided to help Disney out
by offering The Rocketeer pizza pack, I was excited to start a collection of my
own.
They didn’t go so far as to give us a hollowed out Timothy Dalton as a Nazi spy puppet or Jennifer Connolly make-up kit, but they did offer a really cool collector’s cup in the shape of Ol’ Cliff’s handy head gear. It was a real sturdy piece of work and way better than the Icee collector’s cups I used to get at K-Mart with baseball players on ‘em (although where else could you get cheap Bravestarr merch back in the day?). You also got a Rocketeer glider with your personal pan pizza, but it was pretty lame as fast food toys go. My rule was always, if you can get it in the 10 ticket bin at Chuck E. Cheese’s, it’s not worth crap. As proof of this, I do remember getting this Kid’s Meal Deal one afternoon and holding onto the cup for many years after, but the glider was instantly discarded due to “some assembly required”.
Sticking in the realm of super heroes and in conjunction with the Fox Kids animated series, the X-Men invasion of Pizza Hut was a major leap forward in pizza adjacent merchandising. The same friend’s dad that had an obsession with The Rocketeer had also recently introduced me to the world of comic books, so although they missed out by not offering x-shaped breadsticks, this promotion was the a case of perfect timing. Not only could you get one of 4 collector’s cups with a mini-comic, for an extra fee you could purchase VHS tapes of the cartoon with a trading card!
Talk about pleasure overload, I remember conning my parent’s into 2 trips and getting a video with comic each time. The coolest part was the bonus round table discussion with comic creators and artists like Stan Lee and Jim Lee (no relation). At this time in my life the X-Men ruled the playground, Saturday mornings and now, my stomach, but if there was one promotion that has had the longest lasting effect on me, it’s was courtesy of 4 teens who were as synonymous with pizza in the early 90’s as Michael Jordan was with Basketball.
The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles had pretty much conquered every part of children’s merchandising by 1990, from toys to games and movies, so I guess the next logical step had to be the world of pop music. In an arena tour actually sponsored by Pizza Hut, live action turtles in rhinestone jean vests danced around to the sounds of their first (and only?) album titled Coming Out of Their Shells. The cassette was available exclusively at Pizza Hut restaurants to the world at large and I had to have it for my Walkman.
At this point, the only albums I owned were by Weird Al
Yankovic and the New Kids on the Block who I took 100% seriously as artists, so
you better believe I was primed to love the TMNT. From the funk-rock of “Walk
Straight” to the surf-rap of “Cowabunga”, I memorized the lyrics to every song
on the album and proudly sang along with my heroes in a half shell. For its
time, the music production wasn’t half-bad, if they switched out a few
turtle-centric lyrics and put them on a Bon Jovi album, they probably could
have gotten some radio airplay. No I never actually saw the live show and did
not purchase the tour book that was also available for purchase at Pizza Hut
locations, but I didn’t really feel the need because for me it was all about
the music.
Although to enhance the experience I did buy the Making of
the Coming Out of Their Shells VHS tape, just to see how the music was made. I
was totally on board with the fantasy that the Turtles were actually sitting
down and writing tunes and in this mockumentary they had interviews featuring the
animatronic turtles talking about their musical inspiration. It’s no wonder I
count This is Spinal Tap among my favorite films, this often revisited video
set the stage perfectly for that style of parody. I still know all the songs by
heart and enjoy them about 95% non-ironically to this day. I actually had to
buy a replacement because I literally broke the cassette from playing it over
and over again.
Pizza Hut really got my attention during this period of time
and certainly sold a few more pizzas thanks to aligning themselves with my
favorite TV personalities. But the best part was having something you could hold
in your hands to remember that moment when it all meant so much to you. I can still
grab my TMNT cassette or X-Men videos and be whisked away to those exhilarating
moments of childhood, try and do that with your Go-Gurt app in 20 years!
DirtyD79 Posted on Feb 01, 2017 at 09:41 AM
Pizza Hut's always been one of my favorite restaurants to eat at. I remember back int he 80s One of the promotional things they had was a pitcher with the Pizza Hut logo on it that you could buy with your order. We ended up getting one and had it for several years. They were white with a red lid and had the pizza hut logo on the side. We'd use it for Kool-Aid and iced tea until one day it just got too grungy and wouldn't come clean anymore.
Hoju Koolander Posted on Jan 02, 2015 at 05:02 PM
@comic_book_fan That's a pretty devoted brother, you have there. VHS tape transfer sounds like quite a procedure. I thought those X-Men video had the coolest cover design with that matte black finish and just the red in the image behind the X.
comic_book_fan Posted on Sep 22, 2014 at 06:11 PM
i had that x-men dvd i still have it some where even after the casing on it broke i complained until my older brother took the tape out of it and put it in a new case.
Vaporman87 Posted on Sep 05, 2014 at 06:06 PM
Yeah Fulton, we have had crane games in our local Pizza Hut as well. Can't say I've had any problems like that with them though. I love the leaving a quarter for a tip story!
Fulton4V Posted on Sep 05, 2014 at 03:26 PM
Our Pizza Hut only ever had those crane games and it was a ripoff. You never one at it and it stole your quarter half of the time. I remember one time the game just stopped working while I was playing it. The crane just stopped moving and I asked for my quarter back and the man at the counter would not give it to me. I think the next time I was in there with my family my dad left that same guy a tip of a quarter! That was funny.
Vaporman87 Posted on Sep 03, 2014 at 03:35 PM
No doubt about it... Pizza Hut has had some really good promotional products to offer in the past. I don't know that they do much of that anymore though.
I was reminded (by the article) that I too once owned a few of the Land Before Time vinyl puppets. They were really well done.
I can't say I ever wore out a copy of the Coming Out Of Their Shells Tour cassette, but I did wear out my cassette of the Turtles movie soundtrack. I can still sing you entire songs from that album that have likely never been played anywhere outside of somebody's boom box. LOL
In 1997, a movie was made for $15 million dollars but managed to pull in just $309 at the box office. The movie starred two of TV’s hottest young st...
My History With the Film: In 1999, American Pie was one of my most anticipated films and it did not disappoint. I was immediately interes...
The year is 2001. The Pok'emon fad had been over a year prior after schools began to confiscate anything to do with the trading cards/video games if s...
I was born in 1983, the same year Return of the Jedi was released in theaters. That meant by the time I was three and began developing an interest in ...
I got a Nintendo Gameboy in the early 90’s for free. At the time, my mom worked at a Tae Kwon Do school and my brother...