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Spearmint Chews Chewy Mint Sweets 200g Bag

£7.8£15.60Clearance
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After asking both experts about certain ingredients in breath mints that are particularly healthy for teeth, or better for controlling bad breath, both experts instead pointed to an ingredient to avoid. As this example shows, it was marketed chiefly at primary school-aged children, for whom, the song promises, it can serve as a 'treat'. Finally, the punchline arrives: 'But nothing tops Kellogg's Coco Pops' - the messaging being that however much fun all the other things mentioned may be, they are not as pleasurable as the experience of eating Coco Pops. They can cause GI symptoms when consumed in large amounts," says Good Housekeeping Nutrition Director Jaclyn London, MS, RD, CDN, "and mints can add up over the course of your day."

Individually wrapped for freshness, Fox’s Chewy Mints have been developed to fill a gap in the market, as while the gums and chews market grew by 12% vs last year and mint flavoured confectionery saw 5.8% growth vs last year, there still remained limited choice for consumers looking for mint flavour in a chewable, individually wrapped format.

That said, if you're popping sugar-free mints all day and notice some tummy trouble (think bloating and gas) scan the label for sugar alcohols like xylitol, mannitol, maltitol, and other ingredients ending in "—ol."

As a means of enthusing children with a song whose addictive qualities resembled those of the cereal itself, the campaign was highly effective. The Flake bar was introduced in 1920, and has been enduringly popular ever since. To draw attention to its sensuous melt-in-the-mouth qualities, Cadbury began in the late 1950s to advertise it on television using models (invariably female) depicted as slowly savouring the experience of eating it in a relaxed setting. The marketing of Shredded Wheat also underwent a phase of renewal in the early 1990s. In this famous campaign, the late Brian Clough (1935-2004), former England international footballer and long-time manager of the club Nottingham Forest, was portrayed requiring all his footballers to eat Shredded Wheat. The tradition of using female models to advertise Flake was halted temporarily in 2004, perhaps out of a sense that it was sexist and outmoded; however, it was revived only three years later. Perhaps Cadbury realised that however controversial it had become, the long-running campaign was still likely to be more successful than any alternative it could devise? The accompanying song, whose lyrics run 'Only the crumbliest, flakiest chocolate tastes like chocolate never tasted before', served as the effective advertising slogan for the chocolate itself, emphasising its exceptional textural and taste qualities.Despite the banal origins of its name, Roses was nonetheless advertised with the imagery of the flowers of the same name. Just as roses are often traditionally given as thank-you gifts, so too could Roses chocolates be - at least, so Cadbury would have us all think. Shredded Wheat was a notable outlier among traditional commercial breakfast cereals in the UK on account of being made without added sugar and salt. After many years of former owner Nabisco using the tagline 'Bet you Can't Eat Three!' to advertise it, Shredded Wheat was sold to Cereal Partners (owners of the brand Nestlé) in 1990, and began to be sold as Nestlé Shredded Wheat instead of the longstanding Nabisco Shredded Wheat, accordingly.

The advert assumes firstly that the Quality Street selection as a whole is, or at least should be, everybody's favourite. The only valid question is taken as being which individual variety from your favourite selection is your 'favourite favourite'. When biscuit company Jacob's introduced a chocolate bar called Trio in the early 1980s, it invested heavily in a TV advertising campaign centred upon an animated singing girl called Suzy, performing vocals as part of a musical trio playing a song loosely based on ' Day-O (the Banana Boat Song)'. She was depicted through her song and singing style as brash, loud, self-centred and impatient: Secondarily, the messaging was also targeting men who might be excited by such a brave-spirited and sensually indulgent woman as the one portrayed here, tempting them to try out Flake bars for themselves. Part of what made the advertisement so memorable was Clough's brusque, no-nonsense coaching manner towards the players. He was known to be thus in real life, and had been repeatedly overlooked for the job of England manager because of those same qualities. In effect, he had been asked to play a parody of himself. It was light entertainment, but the solid underlying messaging was nonetheless effective.

The song itself, which is sweetly sung by children and accompanied by a delightful flute harmony, tends to suggest that you can feed your children Fudge as a treat but without spoiling them or turning them into little horrors: they will still be good kids! While such a mission could conceivably have been undertaken in a straightforward manner, by purchasing the box in a shop and walking calmly to the lady's house to surprise her with it as a present, that was not enough for the purposes of the glamorous mystique Cadbury wanted to weave around its Milk Tray product. The advertisement depicts schoolchildren variously running into class and enjoying playing with conkers while dressed in their school uniforms. Meanwhile, one mother has stopped by in the street outside to offer her son a bar of Cadbury's Fudge to eat during break time. The implication is that Cadbury's Fudge can give children added energy for getting through the school day. This was reflected in the 'Thank you very much!' TV advertising campaign of the 1980s, which depicted in song a variety of scenarios in which people could thank each other by giving each other boxes of Roses chocolates.

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