h a l f b a k e r y"My only concern is that it wouldn't work, which I see as a problem."
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Heh Gieger Grahams, no Chernobyl'O's. Radioactively delicious. |
|
|
I'm pretty sure they are non toxic
and not radioactive in order to be
edible. |
|
|
Because Radios are radiant, I think
the name works. |
|
|
I like the name phosphoreos as
cookies go and I didn't like
gloweos as much as I liked radios. |
|
|
Thinking about it more, I would
like a few phosphoreos. That
would be an awesome cookie. You
could halfbake that. |
|
|
my vote goes to CurieO's...assuming you know who Curie is |
|
|
Marie? Yeah I heard of her, but
that
name for a radioactive cereal is
taken by the capital steps. |
|
|
Thus, when I found the edible
body paints I realized that I didn't
have to make them radioactive. |
|
|
When I saw roswell super
crunchies I was afraid I took your
idea, luckily your cereal doesn't
glow. Phew. |
|
|
In japan the name would be much easier to choose - it might translate to "Happy happy munchy wheat rings success shiny". |
|
|
I like dobtabulous's suggestion |
|
|
It's Perfectly Harmless and Less than One Hundredth of a Percent of Natural Background Radiation Levels Now Can We Get On With Our Friggin Science If It's Okay With You O's? |
|
|
Ready Brek - in the eighties, it had the slogan, "Get up and glow", and had adverts in which it imbued children with a powerful orange glow, which as I recall, kept them nice and warm. Presumably, this was a ploy to make these children, raised in the height of the Cold War, comfortable with the spectre of Nuclear Annihilation hanging over their little heads. |
|
| |