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Most parents with children in the 4-13 age range know that
kids love the cereals with the toys inside. Most of the time
these cost a whole lot and have far too much sugar. Not to
mention the fact that the toys tend to suck, and, often
aren't
worth more than a penny or two. Thrifty parents buy
the
generic cereals that come in bags, but what fun is that for
you little ones. Give them the prizes they crave without
compromising nutrition or your budget.
Picture a refillable plastic cereal box and a set of stickers
and
prizes. Hide one or two of the "code rings" or "x-ray glasses"
in
the box and put the sticker on the outside touting how
neat
the prize is (or possibly containing a small game that the
prize
works with.
The wold kit would be priced reasonably and contain
something like 50 prizes (various sets would be available for
various ages)
Now the bargain cereal is just as fun as the expensive stuff!
Whois for CerealGiver.com
http://www.whois.ne...2?d=cerealgiver.com Maybe somebody should register it? Only $20 for 2 years...think of all the happy parents.. [flicken, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
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Annotation:
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Nice sentiment. Any help for us weary parents gratefully received. Sugar frosted croissant for you. |
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Another, more easily bakeable solution would be to spend the few pennies saved by using cheapo cereal (hey, new cereal - Cheapos, hoops formed by shaping the dust left at the bottom of other packets of cereal) on party favour type toys. These often cost less than a pound (UK) and IME are better received than toys costing many times more. Kids love the little ping-pong ball shooters, bubble tubs, spy glasses etc. If you're almost at your wit's end, go really mad and buy them a packet of party poppers. |
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Or just eat the cereal and give the kids the box to play with. |
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For the really spoiled kids: a box of toys with a small parcel of cereal at the bottom. |
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Be funny to do this for a birthday present - imagine little Johnny's surprise when he finds a GameBoy floating in his cereal. |
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[In a related context, this was how we eventually solved the lure of MacDonald's Happy Meals - we'd buy our son the Happy Meal toy - 50¢ at the time - and get him something altogether healthier.] |
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Recycle! I'll bet there are plenty of people who have bought the cereal with toys, but have no need to use the toys (i.e. an elderly lady, the local geek, teen-agers, etc). Why not start a website for people to "donate" these toys to a good cause? Looks like CerealGiver.com is still free... |
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Go for it, flicken. Hope you got some money to burn. |
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[snarfyguy] Naah...i'm not going to do the website: i don't even *like* sugar! |
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