Cereal Mugs
Description: KiX breakfast Cereal box from the 1970s. Kix (stylized as KiX) is a brand of breakfast cereal introduced in 1937 by the General Mills company of Golden Valley, Minnesota. The product is an extruded, expanded puffed-grain cereal made with cornmeal. The slogan "Kid Tested. Mother Approved." was introduced in 1978. During the 1980s, television commercials included the jingle "Kids love Kix for what Kix has got. Moms love Kix for what Kix has not," the latter a reference to its claims of no added food coloring or flavors. In 2018, the slogan was updated to "Kid-tested. Parent-approved".
Description: In March 1971, the first two cereals in the line were introduced, the chocolate-flavored Count Chocula and the strawberry-flavored Franken Berry. In the commercials, the two monsters, Count Alfred Chocula and Franken Berry, would engage in comic bickering over which cereal was better, when something or someone else interfered in their verbal sparring and scared them out of their wits.
Description: Fruit Brute was a Monster Cereal that debuted in 1974 and discontinued in 198, "The Howling Good Taste of Fruit." Director Quentin Tarantino brought it back to prominence when Eric Stoltz's character was seen eating it in PULP FICTION, and General Mills briefly brought it back in 2013. Distressed for an authentic vintage look.
Description: The monster cereals are a line of breakfast cereals produced by General Mills Corporation in North America. The line was introduced in 1971, and at various times has included five brands, each featuring a cartoon version of a classic movie monster: Count Chocula, Franken Berry, and Boo Berry