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My girlfriend brought home a bag of Hershey Miniatures yesterday (that alone is reason enough to love her) and as I was digging in (and doing my best to "ruin my dinner" - maybe that belongs in the "Term's Which Have Disappeared" thread), I became nostalgic for the old wrapping they used to come in: where the mini-bar itself was wrapped in a foil that was then slipped into a paper sleeve that identified the type of bar it was. Now, the bars are all wrapped in one piece of some amalgam of paper and foil or something and only designed to look as if there is an inner foil and an outer sleeve (which like all green-eyeshade-driven corporate sleight of hands, comes off worse than if they had just done away with the two-piece wrapper concept altogether - think 1970s faux woody wagons).
I've accepted this insult for years (protesting is one thing, giving up Hershey's chocolate is just crazy talk), but yesterday I noticed that they changed the font and design of the wrapper description from the classic style to what I assume some over-paid consulting firm told them is a "bold," "young," "fresh" look because the word "Krackle," for example, is all-but too big to fit on the wrapper (I felt as if the bar was screaming its name at me). But in a bit of corporate pusillanimity, they left the back side of the package unchanged.
If ever there was an American brand that should be jumping all over the abused "heritage" craze, Hershey is it. But no, instead they've taken away the two piece wrapper (and the ability to put a chocolate bar inside the wrong wrapper - a fun thing to do as a kid in the 70s before kid-life became all video games and iPhones) and, now, have homogenized away their iconic image. We talk about a lot of big ideas and issues in "The Golden Era," but sometimes it's a small thing that makes me really nostalgic.
I've accepted this insult for years (protesting is one thing, giving up Hershey's chocolate is just crazy talk), but yesterday I noticed that they changed the font and design of the wrapper description from the classic style to what I assume some over-paid consulting firm told them is a "bold," "young," "fresh" look because the word "Krackle," for example, is all-but too big to fit on the wrapper (I felt as if the bar was screaming its name at me). But in a bit of corporate pusillanimity, they left the back side of the package unchanged.
If ever there was an American brand that should be jumping all over the abused "heritage" craze, Hershey is it. But no, instead they've taken away the two piece wrapper (and the ability to put a chocolate bar inside the wrong wrapper - a fun thing to do as a kid in the 70s before kid-life became all video games and iPhones) and, now, have homogenized away their iconic image. We talk about a lot of big ideas and issues in "The Golden Era," but sometimes it's a small thing that makes me really nostalgic.