Presumably manufactured entirely from artificial ingredients and sold by MSCHF, this box of cereal contains a single, half pound, 930-calorie Fruit Loop . You can tell it’s not an actual Kellogg’s product because Kellogg’s sells Froot Loops, and this is a Fruit Loop. And the last thing you want to
This is a clip from Unwrapped on the Food Network detailing how Fruity Pebbles are made at a Post Foods factory. They’re made by cooking and dying regular white rice, then flattening it (seen in the photo above after this stage), toasting it to puff it back up and create
In news that shouldn’t surprise anybody who can clearly taste the difference between Apple Jacks and Apple Joes, this is a video from a hotel employee who reveals that the Raisin Bran, Frosted Flakes, and Froot Loops that travelers might try to convince themselves that they’re eating are actually Hospitality
Because learning to set things up and knock them down is an important school lesson, this is a video of New York’s Long Beach Middle School setting the world record for ‘Most Cereal Boxes Toppled in a Domino Fashion’ with a three cereal box wide line toppling 6,391 boxes in
General Mills has just announced for the first time ever it’s offering a limited edition run of Lucky Charms Just Magical Marshmallows for sale to the general public (boxes have only been given away previously in contests). Each 6-ounce bag has a suggested retail price of $3.99 and will be
This is Cinnamon Toast Crunch Cinnadust seasoning blend, a proprietary blend of the Colonel’s eleven secret herbs and spices that’s allegedly the same crack cocaine they top the cereal with, except now you can liberally add the seasoning to your own ice cream and cookies without spending countless nights in
This is a video of Google engineers Lucas and Gotham (I think that’s what he said?) demonstrating the Teachable Sorter they built using Google’s Coral (an on-device AI capable of machine learning without needing access to the cloud) and Teachable Learning (a machine learning model that learns to recognize objects
This is a weird commercial for limited edition green onion flavored Chex, which will be available in South Korea 16 years after it was actually supposed to be, back in 2004. There’s a story here! Everyone help yourself to a big scoop of my homemade Chex Mix and let’s hear