Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops? (11 page)

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Authors: Gael Fashingbauer Cooper

BOOK: Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops?
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The Globetrotters have been around since 1926, blending basketball with goofy shenanigans, acrobatics, and trick shots. But sweet Georgia Brown, it was in the 1970s when they really slam-dunked their way into our childhood memory books. Kids turned out in droves when the Globetrotters mopped the court with the incompetent Washington Generals, showing off their high-flying moves and messing with the half-blind refs.
The Globetrotters starred in multiple TV shows, but none was weirder than 1979's
Super Globetrotters
cartoon. Curly Neal turned into a freak with a giant basketball for a head, Twiggy Sanders transformed into Spaghetti Man, and Sweet Lou Dunbar was able to pull a bomb, a net, or even a couple of chickens from his massive Afro—all to fight a giant gorilla, a mummy, or a super-villain who stole people's faces. Let's see you do that, Larry Bird.
Then, in 1981, the team cemented its pop-culture cred in the made-for-TV movie
The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan's Island
. It's awesome enough that the Globetrotters and Gilligan met at all, but once the Trotters took on a team of hoops-playing robots, you had yourself the makings of a TV classic that was terribly entertaining—and also just plain terrible.
X-TINCTION RATING:
Still going strong.
FUN FACT:
NBA legend Wilt Chamberlain was a Globetrotter back in 1958.
Hawaiian Punch Commercials
H
ERE'S yet another lesson TV taught us: If someone asks you, “Hey, how about a nice Hawaiian Punch?” it's a trap. You're very likely not going to get a fruity drink, and in fact, you may get a trip to the hospital thanks to a feisty beverage mascot named Punchy.
Punchy wore a striped shirt, no pants, and a grass hat that looked like he found it in a city dump. The first clue that he had a few anger-management issues? His hand was permanently clenched into a fist. He'd approach a doltish tourist who looked a little like a cartoon Mr. Howell, ask that fateful question, then deliver a fruit-flavored knuckle sandwich to the face. The tourist never learned, and the joke never grew old to kids who had already been long schooled in the Hertz Donut and Slug Bug school of punch-out punch lines.
What the commercials never showed was what happened next. Our guess is that Punchy was eventually booked for battery and sent to mascot prison, along with other commercial troublemakers, like the Cavity Creeps, the Frito Bandito, and the Noid.
X-TINCTION RATING:
Revised and revived.
REPLACED BY:
Hawaiian Punch added Donny and Marie Osmond as their commercial spokespeople in 1978 (“Go Hawaiian!”), and then Punchy took an extended leave—to serve time?—while the commercials favored shots of bikinied women on sailboats. Today, Punchy's back, and although he hasn't hit anyone in a while, his hand is still clenched into a fist.
FUN FACT:
Punchy ran for president in 1992 with the slogan “No one else has the punch.” He didn't win.
Honeycomb Hideout
T
HE world of retro cereal commercials was a strange, often dangerous place. Lucky the leprechaun, the Trix rabbit, and Sonny the Cocoa Puffs cuckoo bird could all starve to death for all the kids in the ads cared. No one was parting with even one teeny marshmallow. It was a world that bordered on breakfast apocalypse.
Perhaps most terrifying were the commercials for Honeycomb. A group of kids met in the Honeycomb Hideout, a simple wooden shack that was sometimes on the ground, sometimes in a tree. Also, they somehow had a robot. But their supposedly pleasant suburb must have bordered Charles Manson's Spahn Ranch. Circus strongmen, Viking berserkers on motorcycles, and, once, Andre the Giant just burst into the Hideout demanding cereal. But they never slaughtered and skinned the kids; instead, they all shared breakfast and everyone was happy. Hopefully one of the kids' dads later came by and fixed the smashed-down door. And moved their family to some safer place, like Beirut.
X-TINCTION RATING:
Gone for good.
REPLACED BY:
Honeycomb really needs to bring back the Hideout. They crossed into even weirder territory in 1995 with a mascot, Crazy Craving, who appeared to be a big-eyed ball of hair.
Hoopskirts and Camisoles
L
OOKING at photos from a 1980s high-school prom, you can't help but wonder: Is this the 1980s or the 1880s? All we know is: Girls' gowns stuck out so far that schools needed bigger gyms. It's like there was a meeting in which Gen X females all came together, burned their older sisters' polyester doubleknit leisure suits, and then settled in for an inspirational double-feature of
Cinderella
and Princess Diana's wedding.
Jessica McClintock and Laura Ashley were among the popular dress brands, but whatever the designer, it was cool to poof the skirt out so far that it had to pay taxes in a neighboring state. Hoopskirts were the choice in the early 1980s, but once a girl experienced the airy thrill of sitting down and having her hoop hula its way up around her eyebrows, she learned of the magic of crinolines. Like hoops, crinolines gave the desired fluff; unlike hoops, when the wearers sat down, they didn't offer up so much of I See London, France, and the North Paris Suburbs.
X-TINCTION RATING:
Gone for good.
REPLACED BY:
Sexy, sleeveless dresses that reveal more skin than South Beach on a summer Saturday. But the only sure thing in fashion is that each generation will reach back to whatever its parents dismissed as hideously uncool. Like the South, the giant skirt will rise again.
FUN FACT:
The best TV scene ever to involve a giant gown was Carol Burnett's “Went with the Wind” sketch. Dressed in Tara's green velvet curtains, with the curtain rod still inside, she drawls to Harvey Korman's Rhett Butler, “I saw it in the window and I just couldn't resist it.”
Hostess Choco-Diles and Choco-Bliss
H
OSTESS still rules the junk-food galaxy, but some of its lesser-known lights have twinkled out.
What's a Hostess Choco-Dile? They solved the one problem that was preventing Twinkies from reaching perfection—the lack of chocolate. Think Twinkies that were driven through a chocolate-spewing car wash, emerging securely enrobed in a waxy choco coating. Grown-up kids with sugariffic Choco-Dile memories still email and call Hostess, sobbing Choco-Dile tears and begging for their fix. And some are lucky—Choco-Diles still exist, but they're made in only a few West Coast factories.
Sadly, Hostess Choco-Bliss met a sadder fate. It's a shame it's gone because it was a chocoholic's dream. We can only imagine it was introduced at a time when Hostess mistakenly ordered a kajillion tons of extra chocolate and had no idea what to do with it. The resulting treat was a tiny chocolate cake with chocolate frosting on top and layered with fluffy chocolate cream. Even the guy in the commercial went stark raving nutters, shrieking that the treat was “chocolatey, on top of chocolatey, with chocolatey in between!”
But all the repeat use of “chocolatey” in the world couldn't save the Choco-Bliss. Too bad. For chocoholics, even licking Augustus Gloop after his chocolate-river bath couldn't have tasted this good.
X-TINCTION RATING (CHOCO-DILES):
Still going strong, but only in some stores on the West Coast. You can also order some from
FreshChocodiles.com
.
X-TINCTION RATING (CHOCO-BLISS):
Gone for good.
REPLACED BY:
Recent years have seen the introduction of such limited-edition treats as devil's food Twinkies, banana-filled Twinkies,
Shrek
Twinkies (with scary ogre-green filling), and “purplicious” Wonka Cakes. Thankfully, someone at Hostess is still letting Crazy Cousin Cletus play with the recipe book.
Hugo, Man of a Thousand Faces
P
ART Billy Barty, part Lon Chaney Jr., and all creepy, Hugo, Man of a Thousand Faces, has to be one of the single most terrifying toys ever created. Not only was he hairless and wee, but he was literally half a man, with his body ending at the cuff of his oddly dainty blue blouse.
Still, the freaky, follicularly challenged Hugo was good for hours of fun, the male equivalent to the equally unsettling Barbie Styling Head.You could affix any combination of disguises with the provided glue stick—either on Hugo or on yourself. Hugo's arsenal of prosthetics included everything from a nylon wig and glasses to a goatee and fake nose. But they all made him look like a bald, angry puppet wearing a nylon wig, glasses, goatee, and fake nose—and also exactly like James Lipton from
Inside the Actors Studio
.
Now-grown kids are still fretting about running into Hugo. Which would be more horrific: waking up in the middle of the night to find the bullet-headed Mini-Me perched on your chest like a cat, or the nightmarish image of Hugo dragging himself across your bedroom floor with his puppet elbows, on his way to the nest he built under your bed? There's no real winner in either of those scenarios, so let's just call it a tie. A horrible, horrible tie.
X-TINCTION RATING:
Gone for good.Thank God.
REPLACED BY:
Ding dong, he's finally dead. But there is an online “Virtual Hugo,” where you can paste electronic wigs and whatnot on the freaky puppet without worrying about him trying to grab your throat with his little vinyl hands.
Ice Capades
O
NCE figure-skating Olympians have posed for a Wheaties box and put their gold medals on ice, what happens to their careers? From 1940 to 1996, there was the Ice Capades, a glorious and often completely insane bit of frozen kitsch that gave some skaters' careers a second life and gave some kids Technicolor nightmares.
Awe-inducing gold medalists and random community-theater types mixed in a live spectacle that was like a goony 1970s variety show on ice. Skating Ewoks! Clowns riding bikes! The Pink Panther and Snow White on blades! “Hey Kids, Meet the Snorks!” No, thank you.We've met the Snorks, and they don't usually skate. Plus, they're terrible.
The arenas were so arctic, kids would shove the glossy, overpriced programs under their butts so they wouldn't freeze to the bleachers. Millions endured the vaudeville-meets-frozen-water action, all the while hoping a hockey fight would break out between the ice dancers.
The concept hit a new low with a 1989 Ice Capades ABC special hosted by Alyssa Milano and a
Hogan Family
–era Jason Bateman that imagined what would happen if the characters from Nintendo's Super Mario Brothers came to life—and skated. Mr. Belvedere played King Koopa.
Dear You Tube, thank you. Love, everybody—except Jason Bateman and Alyssa Milano.
X-TINCTION RATING:
Gone for good.
REPLACED BY:
Less lavish and more serious skating exhibitions, like Stars on Ice. Ironically, the growing respectability of ice skating as a sport was more than a little responsible for Ice Capades' demise. People wanted to see Olympians like Scott Hamilton and Dorothy Hamill (a onetime Ice Capades owner) strutting their stuff, but without the guy wearing a Teddy Ruxpin costume.
“I'm a Pepper”
T
HERE are forgettable commercial jingles, and then there are those that force their way into your brain and sign a thirty-year lease. Few took up residence faster than “I'm a Pepper,” the catchy, repetitive, and altogether maddening tune that ran in Dr Pepper commercials from 1977 to '85.
In the ads, actor David Naughton—wearing a white shirt and sweet vest—suddenly broke into song and led a crowd in a musical tribute to the only soda we're aware of that has a medical degree. They may have been Peppers, but they were also nuts. The characters would dive into a choreographed number on the street, on a boat, on a farm, at a wedding, on a mountaintop. An animated Popeye even showed up in one commercial.
“I'm a Pepper, he's a Pepper, she's a Pepper, we're a Pepper. Wouldn't you like to be a Pepper, too?” Definitely. But, for the love of God, only if you stop singing.
X-TINCTION RATING:
Revised and revived.
REPLACED BY:
In later years, Dr Pepper abandoned the tune for ads featuring Dr. Dre, Dr. J., and “Dr. Love” himself, Gene Simmons of KISS.
FUN FACT:
To celebrate the brand's 125th anniversary in 2010, Dr Pepper rolled out original pitchman Naughton to lead a song-and-dance revival of the tune on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
In the News
C
HOCKA-CHOCKA-BLIPPITY-BLOOPITY-
THWACK!
That's a decent approximation of the futuristic, kinda spooky synthesizer sound that accompanied the spinning
In the News
globe as it announced another of the made-for-kids news segments.

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