It’s the best buffet in town. So I agree.
That was me, too. No sodas, no sweetened cereals at home.
But the Boy Scouts had a national olympics, and we were housed on a college campus…
…where they had the twelve-spigot soda fountain. And a wall of cereal dispensers. I still remember the joy of being away from home for the first time, and then seeing all those choices… felt SO great!
The dispensers looked something like these.
Suicide cereal, anyone?
…Wow. Did they have any cereals that weren’t sugar bombs?
Oh, yeah, but don’t forget, these were for students, and Early '70s students at that. The high fiber/low taste stuff was down at the Faculty end of the wall.
I wonder what the geographic distribution is for these various terms? I remember how much I enjoyed that series of maps I once came across that will tell you where one says “pop” versus “soda” versus “soft drink,” or where you’d say “sub” versus “hoagie” versus “grinder,” and so on. Growing up in Kentucky, for instance, “suicide” was the only term I ever heard for said drinks.
Pretty much the same here in Minnesota in the late 60s, early 70s at least. I wonder how this mix got its name and how that name spread so far.
I thought of everyone in this thread when I went to the movies today. The new high-tech machine there let me mix over a dozen sodas… and add additional flavors (Vanilla, Cherry, Lemon, Berry, even Peach).
How was it?
Seems suicidal ![]()
Not bad, but I skipped the “Blue Sports Drink” spigot.
It was mostly Diet Dr.Pepper; I went heavy on the caffeine, because I’d gotten the “Hey, let’s go to a movie, right NOW” call from a friend before I’d had my coffee.