This is a re-run. A post that originally “aired” 1-29-08. It is the post that is most often hit by random Googlers searching for cereal answers.


Over the last few years I have developed a more strained relationship with General Mills. The American mommy public has been at its mercy its biggest demographic for 62 years.

At first, I delighted in setting out little piles of cheerios on the highchair tray for baby to wrangle into his mouth. I laughed hysterically when my 1 year old “helped himself” to breakfast spilling 3/4 of the cheerio box onto the floor and then sat in the middle while stuffing his face. I even bought one of those cheerio dispensers for easy diaper bag packing.

But I have been noticing that even though my children are getting older, I am still dealing with this:

I totally understand the messy baby throwing cheerios onto the floor and the mess that creates, but this is different.

This is cheerio black magic.

This is a serious cheerios problem.

I calculate that we have a cheerio bowl loss of in excess of 20%. That makes the ratio of cheerios to tummy vs. cheerios to floor a staggering 5:1.

Wow! 1/5 of the cheerios I buy don’t build a stronger child body.

This is a crisis that must be far reaching. So I checked out Cheerios.com for a loss prevention guide. I figured with a problem this big there would be committees meeting at GM at multiple levels on the mommy’s behalf.

Imagine my surprise when I found that there is no mention of this crisis. This must be the secret that must remained hushed. The information that could bring the company down if recognized. I fear for my safety in exposing this dirty truth.

I then look for motivation, could there be some sort of cheerio conspiracy?

Could it be that General Mills have majority stockholder interest in brooms

or fancy vacuums?



Could the secret behind the loss be to fuel these other investments?

Could there be some sort of secret formula inside of the wholesome goodness of cheerios that causes them to jump spontaneously from the bowl?

It could be magnetic.

It could be a Mexican jumping bean titration.

It could be tiny suction cups that time release.


I don’t know, but it makes you wonder.

And wonder.

And wonder.

Then I wonder about the “kid-tested, mother-approved” General Mills product KIX. I would like to get my hands on the mothers who approved it…

It certainly was not me.

I would have sent the product back to the drawing board until it came back square in shape. The spherical shape flies effortlessly through the air or rolls with ease.

This is a picture of 3 rouge KIX that were found yesterday in my living room approximately 35 feet from the closest table.

That is a serious distance for a cereal to travel



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30 Comments

  1. Y’all don’t play the “Find and Go Eat” game at your house? (Dust bunnies and UFOs – Unidentified Fuzzy Objects — count as extra fiber.) If not, maybe you can get a dog. Best little vacuums ever. 😉

  2. Sorry for another comment! I just thought I needed a couple more exclamation points!

    Good Lord – where’s the edit button for comments?(!)

    Em

  3. Buy the cereal with all the sugar and forego the healthy ones. The sugar weighs them down and they are less likely to travel long distances. Plus, the kids eat them faster because they know they aren’t as good for them. Just FYI.

  4. Now, picture having a kid with a metabolic disorder so that you have to chase all those little boogers down in order to weigh/count/measure to make sure you know the precise amount of what he ate. Good aerobic activity!

    I’m totally with you on the square KIX – sign me up!

    LOL funny – per usual!

    Em

  5. ya know? What if you started using one of those horse feeders? Just strap it on filled with Cheerios. I bet that would significantly cut down on the loss of Cheerios.