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A Logo of Love
There is one thing I wish I could find at a book store, and that is a gigantic book featuring logos of some of my favorite items throughout the years. Advertising gets a bad rap from time to time, but every now and then there are some great images forever drilled in my head reminding me that I do indeed need that diet alternative soda in the pink can. After searching through eBay and the Internet for images of my favorites, I gathered five that are the most loved by my retro loving mind.
Pringles
Sure
he looks like the poster child for every hipster sporting a full moustache, but
the Pringle’s guy was very memorable for me. He represented a whole new way of
eating chips. The presentation was so revolutionary! Forget eating chips out
of bags, I could actually eat curved chips out of a can like a sophisticated
human being. He just seemed so happy. I wanted those chips. Some of my favorite
flavors were of course the original, but I also liked Ranch and Sour Cream and
Onion. Those were always a good time, until Pringles got crazy on us and
created a whole assortment of strange flavors including cheeseburger and seven
layer dip. The taste of powder olive is pretty grody.
I have a funny story to mention about the vintage Pringles logo I grew
up with. (Actually this story might reek of desperation.) A couple years ago
Pringles released special edition cans marking the vintage logos from the 80’s.
I had to buy one of course and after polishing off the chips I… kept the can. I
liked having that old logo as a reminder of, I don’t know… happier times? I
still don’t know why I held onto it, but after hauling my belongings back home
following the end of my marriage, my brother found the can and was like, “Why
do you have this?”
Lying
through my teeth, I replied, “Oh, it’s just some chips. I might get hungry.” My
brother may be younger than me, but he is not a dummy. He opened the can, saw
there were no chips and upon smelling the decomposing scent of Pringle chip oil
in the can, shouted, “You’re an effing hoarder! Throw this away!” I did dear
readers. I did. But don’t you see why a publishing company needs to make a book
with images of all the great logos of yesteryear? No one wants to collect old
chip cans. No one.
Kool-Aid
I’m
a very simple person. Slap a face on a pitcher of a sugary mixed drink and I’m
in love. Was there ever anything cooler than the colorful packets of Kool-Aid
drink mixes? I could devote an entire article to all the great images from
various Kool-Aid packets from the 80’s and early 90’s. But I won’t since I’m
afraid I already lost half of you from the Pringles incident. Either way, this
version of Fruit Punch was one of my favorites. All the colors on that packet stood out to me while the Kool-Aid pitcher was more a pitcher before growing into the man we all
know and love.
Dunkin’
Donuts Cereal
Did
anyone else completely geek out over this cereal when it came out? My mom was
not super excited about sugary cereals, but she would buy them and they’d
essentially be treated like a dessert. We rarely had sugary cereals for breakfast;
they’d usually get eaten as a snack after school or after dinner. Dunkin’
Donuts cereal was simply everything a person could want for a sugary cereal.
They came in two flavors (that I recall) which were glazed donut and chocolate
donut. Let’s put aside the greatness that was this cereal and just marvel at
the lovely bubble logo. The pink and orange makes a great combination and now
that a Dunkin’ Donuts has finally opened down the street from me, I will feel
like I’m reuniting with a long lost friend.
Tab
Soda
in a pink can? My goodness Coca Cola really knows how to tug at my heart
strings. Technically a diet drink for aerobic 80’s moms, Tab has been on the
soda scene for a long time. Growing up I was always enamored by the 80’s font
as well as that striking red and pink striped can. I remember begging my mom to
buy a six pack of Tab. I had to know what mystery flavors were inside that can.
She relented for the longest time because she didn’t like the idea of her five
year old daughter drinking a diet drink, but in a bid to shut me up, she bought
a six pack for me. After the first few sips I thought it was the most disgusting
beverage known to the universe. Lesson learned.
However
through the years my tastes changed and I learned how to embrace that
artificial soda. Still to this day I will indulge in a Tab six-pack every now
and then. It tastes weird at first but then becomes strangely addictive. I say
it’s because the can is pink. (See how easy it is for companies to get me?)
Head
and Shoulders
A
quick search on eBay can yield many results. Apparently someone can actually
buy new and unused bottles of Head and Shoulders… from the 80’s. While we all
try to process that, let me tell you all another story. I was essentially a
weird kid. For a few years I found myself attached to bottles with pretty
colors. It was not uncommon to find me clutching an empty bottle of Head and
Shoulders while running errands with my mom. There was something about that
pink and purple wave on the front of the bottle that just sucked me in.
Sure
managers at the grocery store thought I was stealing the bottle of Head and
Shoulders, but after my mom carefully explained to them that the bottle was
empty and that I simply liked carrying bottles of shampoo around,
they left us alone; for the most part. Some people thought my mom was being
irresponsible for letting her child walk around with an empty bottle of hair
care product. My scalp was clean as a whistle though. Actually I was too young to use
Head and Shoulders, never too young though to carry the bottle around like a
protective blanket.
All
right. I’ll leave it at that. I could go on further about some more of my
favorite logos, but my goal is not to strike fear into the hearts of men. I’m
already on the fast track to becoming a true blue Ms. Havisham, which is why
there really needs to be an encyclopedic-sized book that shares every
advertising coup possible.
What
are some of your favorite logos? Does anyone else suffer from these images
overstaying their welcome? I surely can’t be the only one, though I suppose I
am ok if that is the case. Either way, I hope everyone is doing well. Take care
everybody!
MissM Posted on Apr 16, 2014 at 05:38 AM
Oh Benjanime, the Dunkin Donuts cereal was everything. It tasted so good. There was a lot of good food in the 80's. I remember my brother liking the Oreo O's cereal in the late 90's, but I wasn't interested in breakfast at that time. I bet they were really good though.
And Vaporman, every time I do find myself drinking Tab, I feel my insides die just a little. lol It is like soda made with Sweet 'n Low. I know all about Diet Rite though, that stuff was pretty bad, though I love your description. lol Broken down zombie. lol
Vaporman87 Posted on Apr 15, 2014 at 07:20 PM
I miss Oreo's cereal and Dunkin' Donuts! Both were very tasty, if not very healthy. lol.
I always disliked Tab. It tasted just awful. But Diet Rite... that's like tasting a zombie broken down into a soda. It's horrifically bad. My grandma always had it in her fridge, and it was about the ONLY soda/pop she had.
Benjanime Posted on Apr 15, 2014 at 05:07 PM
there was a dunkin' donuts cereal? while i'm glad to be an 80's birthchild i wish i'd been old enough to try out these wacky foods that brand companies had to offer. then again there was the 'oreo o's' cereal from around 1998 that my mom would get at sam's club
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