This started off with me reminiscing in an
email to Old John about the cut-out masks you used to get on the back of Puffed
Wheat packets when I was a kid. So this is straightforward, aimless nostalgia,
purely for its own sake.
I’m not an expert or a collector, but I suppose I must have spent many weeks of my life at breakfast times over the years, staring at cereal packets – maybe months. Nowadays my attention tends to wander a bit, but this is partly
due to the messages on the packet being mostly dedicated to telling me why I
should buy this stuff, disregarding completely the fact that I have obviously
already bought it.
There was a long period when all cereal
packets had to be themed into some popular TV character, or some cartoon
personality they had generated for their own advertising – which at the time I
thought was a bit limp, and probably is a useful guide to the point in history
when kids were no longer expected to have an imagination. There was also a
pseudo-health period – where else could I have learned that the cereal I was
eating contained traces of Niacin, which (of course) is the anti-Pellagra
vitamin? Just out of interest, did anyone ever have Pellagra? – I’ve always
assumed it was very nasty, but I never knew.
No – I’m talking of the fifties [sinister, echoing sound effect]. Out of complete idleness, I spent
a little time yesterday looking online for some evidence of some of those
memories – naturally, the world of Google is swamped in US examples, probably
because Americans are better than we are at nostalgia and because it rarely
occurs to them that anywhere else ever existed. I found a marvellous UK site,
which is worth a look, here. I borrowed a couple of examples from there, but
only to show what a great place to visit it is.
Well I remember the Puffed Wheat “Hi-Hats”,
which promised so much yet delivered so little. My first one was the Saturn Space Spy, which was unusual in
that it was a full face – most of them were upper face only. I munched my way
impatiently through a big pack of PW, gazing longingly at the thing (though I
had some misgivings about the fact that it said Space Spy in big letters on the forehead). This is the stuff of
fantasy – at no additional cost (as they pointed out), the mighty Quaker
company – whose technology was such that every single Puff was fired from big
cannons, apparently – had presented me with the opportunity to actually look
like a real Space Spy. Fantastic. If you got your mum to give a hand with
cutting out the eye holes, and around the sticky-out nose flap – oh yes, and
punch the holes for the elastic, and then actually find some elastic – then, at
a stroke, your imagination would do the rest and you would instantly - magically - be changed
from a kid into a kid with a piece of cereal packet attached to the front
of his head.
I believe that I actually cried a bit when
I saw the reality of my mask. Even if it had worked, which it didn’t, it would
only have worked from the front – although, of course, that is exactly the view
I presented in the mirror. The worst of the lot was the cowboy hat. Let’s put
this into context…
Cowboy hats were a problem. In fact cowboy
outfits were a problem generally. You could buy any number of toy guns, you
could play at wiping out the entire aboriginal population of Northern America
every day (God forgive us - no wonder we grew up weird), but if you wanted to
dress the part you were in for a let-down. Cowboy outfits that you bought from
toyshops didn’t look like the proper cowboys in the Tim Holt movies on Saturday
mornings – they looked, at best, like Hopalong Flaming Cassidy. I had a stupid
black, Baden-Powell shaped hat with a lime green fringe around the brim – lime green? - what
was that about? My cousin’s was even worse – it was the same shape, but a festive
sort of royal blue, with a cut out tin-foil star on the front – and his
cowpoke’s protective “chaps” actually had pictures of cowboys printed on them.
Even at 5 or 6, we realized this was a poor show.
You get the idea. Into this authenticity vacuum,
Puffed Wheat produced a very convincing looking 2-dimensional cowboy hat that
Tim Holt and his chums would have been proud of, and the drawing of the happy
boy wearing it, terrorizing his astonished mother and sister, showed that he
looked – even from the side – just like the real deal. Although I had cooled on
the idea of Hi-Hats after my Space Spy fiasco, I got quite worked up about this
one. One Saturday, stuffed with Puffed Wheat, I cut it out, fitted it up, recycled the
elastic from the binned Space Spy, took one look in the mirror and it was ditched within 20 seconds. Not only did it look rubbish, but it actually
wrapped around the sides of your head like a sweatband – not at all like the
illustration. More tears.
These were valuable life lessons, of course
– about marketing and about the fact that – in the long run – no amount of
imagination will cover up for complete junk!
I remember the multiple series of cut-out
vehicles of all types on the back of the Weetabix packets – I’m sure some
genius must have designed them, and they were fun, but – again – they were
fiddly to make and looked dreadful. One after the other, they were cut out,
glued together and binned, I didn’t get upset about them any more, but I was
aware that I only liked the process, rather than the end deliverable. The flat
wheels, printed on one side only, were an obvious weakness, but in fact the
square edges were unrealistic too – in both respects, the veteran car series
were better, but the finished product was never worth the effort. It must have
served as a good apprenticeship for all these botched toy soldiers in later life,
though! I recall that the first couple of series of Weetabix Workshop had a sketch of a boy and his mum looking suitably enthusiastic, but the later ones were more obviously macho and engineering-focused, and mum was dropped - the psychologists were busy, even then.
I also remember something called Mornflake
Oats, which I assume was porridge – my cousin collected a most impressive
looking village and farm which you could cut out and assemble – on good quality
art card, as I recall, but we never had the courage to try to build them. There
was a slight risk that if they didn’t turn out well it might be down to us.
So much other stuff – freebies which have
become little icons of childhood – red plastic British Foot Guards bandsmen – I
started collecting them, but gave up after I got five tuba players on the trot.
Of course, if I’d had any mates, I could have swapped them.
I recall little plastic submarines which
worked with baking soda, a series of small one-piece plastic racing cars, which
must have come with Sugar Puffs (later?), since I can recall that they were
always sticky and had to be washed.
I tried to find some pictures of proper Hi-Hats,
but failed – I found some American Kellogg’s equivalents, but not the real thing from my own history.
Anyway, if you never saw them, they were rubbish. Take my word for it.
What??!! There's some other place of consequence besides the U.S.? You're kidding me, right? Kidding of course. I enjoyed a bowl of Kellogg's Applejacks just now with my coffee, but sadly there seems to be no prize in the packet and only a word puzzle of some kind on the rear of it. And I was never much good at those. You know. Having to think, actually use my brain, and all of that. Don't you think Baden Powell and his hat get a bad rap these days though?
ReplyDeleteBest Regards,
Stokes
I believe the worlds of politics and religious evangelism have missed a big opportunity over the years - the total amount of gawping at the writing on cereal boxes by half-awake kids with their opinions still to be shaped must be staggering.
DeleteOr is it possible that I read this very idea on a cereal packet at some time - in fact all my view on everything come from this source, but it was done so cleverly that I never noticed?
Really worried now.
Yes, there are places outside the US - there's Utah, for a start.
Ray must have had supermarket own brand stuff. The grief I used to give my mum to buy the more expensive brand just to get some crap "free" gift.
ReplyDelete[3rd attempt at this - if my iMac continues to replace my typing with Americanised versions of what it thinks I meant I shall replace it with a tub of ice cream]
DeleteOwn brand cereals were a bit after my time (most things have been) - I think the British Co-op did corn flakes and similar, but you're right - the own brand packets were decidedly light on giveaways and counter-culture.
The sinister message that came with all this was "collect the whole set", which became even more sinister when the giveaway was hidden inside the pack. I'm pretty sure that Old Mr Cullen, our grocer when I was about 5, who used to deliver the groceries in a cardboard box each week, used to look kindly on the possibility of selecting a particular Hi-Hat or Weetabix Workshop example if one was required, but he stopped well short of checking which bandsman was buried in the cereal.
An even more sinister version was "be the only kid in your gang with the whole set" - you can see the pressures and inadequacies that seeded for life.
Louis has reminded me that Weetabix (we think) for a while ran a series of cut-out guns, complete with cut-out (flat) ammunition. You folded the gun in a sort of M-section, and fitted it with a rubber band, and the bullet-thing sat in the central groove, and the cunning trigger-thing released the rubber band, and you could strike down someone on the other side of the room. Louis reckons these failed on about 7 counts, most of which I forget, but the fact that the bullet would not fly was one, and the fact that the rubber band folded the thing like a banana was another. I think I collected the "whole set" of them, right enough. A monument to pointlessness. What's the Paul Simon song that says, "and we keep our place with book markers, to measure what we've lost"?