Who invented sugar puffs




















Brecks has even created a video to celebrate the shuffling off of old Honey Monster into a dark corner where he shall remain forever more.

Every 30g serving of the cereal now contains 6. Of course, no human in the history of mankind has ever eaten a paltry serving of 30g, because that would be utterly ridiculous, so take those numbers with a pinch of salt not sugar, because these are no longer Sugar Puffs, duh? Of course, the transformation of Honey Monster to a 2D character might not be such a bad thing.

Here he is in , creeping the hell out of every child with eyes and ears. By he was busy upstaging Boyzone. Not as creepy, but still weirdly gangsta for a cereal mascot. Then comes Honey Monster of , who is just, plain terrifying. Goodbye Sugar Puffs. Goodbye live-action Honey Monster.

We hope you make it through the gates of advertising heaven. Want up-to-the-minute entertainment news and features? Type keyword s to search. This content is imported from YouTube. Another of the adverts showed him winning a football match.

In , an advert which depicted him as "Puff" Daddy aired. In , an advert called "Monster Men vs Breakin' Boyz" aired. A modern style remake of the original advert aired in In March , a new campaign was launched with a television advertisement. The spot featured Honey Monster and his housemate sitting at their breakfast table, singing a nonsense song about Sugar Puffs, in the scat style. The advert was criticised by Julian Barratt and Noel Fielding of the comedy duo The Mighty Boosh , who considered it to be a plagiarisation of the " crimping " songs in their television series.

Another new advert was broadcast for the Honey Waffles cereal variant, returning the Honey Monster to his true self along with his undying love for honey. The ad ends with the tagline as said by the Honey Monster "Don't tell 'em about the honey, mummy", a reference to the Sugar Puffs endline from the s. The Honey Monster was used as part of a recurring gag in the film Four Lions when one of the main characters uses an outfit of the character as a disguise in the final act.

Paul Calf is frequently seen eating Honey Monster Puffs. As the punchline Honey Monster silences his colleagues by singing a song in falsetto not his trademark deep voice exhorting people not to buy advertised products but to give their money to Comic Relief instead. The cereal features in the Interactive film Black Mirror: Bandersnatch. Honey Monster Puffs Honey Monster Puffs previously known as Sugar Puffs are a honey -flavoured breakfast cereal made from sugar -coated wheat sold in the United Kingdom.

For the oldest living horse until , see Sugar Puff. Stone, Jon 17 October The Independent.



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