By basically all measures, 2020 is a doozy. If you’re not paranoid by fear or anxiety or just boatloads of stress, good for you. For the rest of us, there are small things that can make life just a little more fun or delicious. Or in this case, “Magically Delicious”.

Lucky Charms cereal, a frosted oat and marshmallow cereal favorite since the 1960s has just released their first all-marshmallow concoction. A colorful pouch of limited edition ‘Just Magical Marshmallows’, it might be just the absurd treat you need to get you through another news cycle or two.

We love the packaging design, and while eating a bag of sugary, crunchy mini ‘marshmallows’ isn’t exactly healthy, we’d argue that neither is:
• enduring a global pandemic
• listening to the daily rants of a psychopathic, racist president
• seeing whole states being engulfed in wildfire
• hearing about the entire Amazon jungle going up in flames
• witnessing the collapse of civil society by the likes of Facebook and Twitter
• having millions of businesses shut down and people lose they jobs due to a botched Coronavirus response

So, with that said, we say eat up, buttercup.  Via The Dieline:

And just in case you need a primer on the origination of Lucky Charms, Wikipedia has this nugget:

Lucky Charms was created in 1964 by product developer John Holahan. General Mills management challenged a team of product developers to use the available manufacturing capacity from either of General Mills’ two principal cereal products—Wheaties or Cheerios—and do something unique. Holahan came up with the idea after a visit to the grocery store in which he decided to mix Cheerios with bits of Brach’s Circus peanuts.

Subscribe to Moss and Fog!


Discover more from Moss and Fog

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Author

An award winning art, design, nature and travel site, bringing you the best content from around the world. Inspiration, every day. www.mossandfog.com

What do you have to say?

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from Moss and Fog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

×