Better yet: do you own one and want to know if you can make some serious cash? Read on to find out. In the ’60s, families would find tiny little whistles in their boxes of Cap’n Crunch. If you or ...
Do you remember racing your siblings to the kitchen to dig through the cereal box for a toy? Those vintage cereal box prizes might be worth a cool mint today. The launch of cereal box prizes excited ...
Children today do not know the joy of opening a cereal box and finding a free gift inside Almost every box used to come with a freebie, from toy cars and figurines to puzzles and even sunglasses We’ve ...
Honey Comb Monster Mitts. Urkel for President campaign buttons. Sugar Smacks Star Trek badges. If you ate cereal between the 1950s and 1990s, you were likely to encounter a cereal box prize—an ...
Kellogg Company and retailer Target Corp have linked up with Ford Motor Company to run a cereal box marketing campaign – giving away thousands of toy cars and a real one. The US campaign, promoting ...
Cereal prizes used to be a big deal. In the 1940s and 1950s, kids didn’t just eat breakfast; they studied the box, filled out mail-in forms, and waited weeks for something exciting to arrive.
In the ’60s, families would find tiny little whistles in their boxes of Cap’n Crunch. If you or someone in your family is holding onto one of those whistles, you could come into some money. The Cap’n ...