• tjarod11@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Ah, the old folks home of America is finally getting hip for the youngsters by putting their hard candy on sticks.

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    10 months ago

    A while back, I looked at a list of the most-widely-sold candy bars in the US, and it blew my mind how old they were.

    Like, yes, they’ve seen formulas revised, and they aren’t quite the same thing, but I’d have thought that the advent of technology would let people come up with new and interesting bars. Very few consumer products are as elderly as a lot of these and still selling widely.

    I did a table with a list a while back – the majority of popular bars are at least 70 years old. I don’t want to do up a whole table right now, but let me pick a random one: Snickers.

    Now, I’ve got nothing against Snickers. I like it. But Snickers hit the market in 1930. It’s 93 years old. That means that in 93 years, we haven’t been able to come up with anything sufficiently-better to displace it. That amazes me. In that period, we’ve seen radical changes to our diet and to technology. The refrigerator became widely deployed in the US, the freezer, the microwave. Automats came and went. Vending machines showed up. Year-round availability of many foods became the norm in grocery stores as transportation and storage capability improved. But the candy bar has remained surprisingly unchanging.

    • ouRKaoS@lemmy.today
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      10 months ago

      That’s kind of how evolution works. Once you get something dialed in, it just kind of sticks around forever. Happens in other instances as well, like the fashion industry and Blue Jeans. Or Radio. When something works well, we just keep it as is.

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      10 months ago

      I’d prefer it to licorice, which is on there in the form of Twizzlers and Red Vines.

  • grue@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Georgia is my wife’s fault for singlehandedly skewing the average.

    • ickplant@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      I mean this very sincerely and not as a joke. Just a friendly suggestion. You may want to get your eyes checked.

        • ickplant@lemmy.worldOP
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          10 months ago

          Good for you! I totally used to confuse “i” with “l” before getting my glasses. I was also shocked by how you can see individual leaves in a tree’s foliage with glasses. Before that they just looked like one uniform green thing to me.

          • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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            10 months ago

            I found out that I needed glasses while I was looking for a street.

            Me: “Everyone keep an eye out for Willow Ave.”

            Friend: “It’s right there. Next left.”

            Me: “You can read that sign already?”

            Friend 2: “You can’t? Why the fuck are you the one driving?”

            I got glasses the next week.

  • Assdddffff@lemmynsfw.com
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    10 months ago

    Op, you should add “uniquely” to the post title. That word in the title on the infographic is important. This is not showing the most popular Halloween candy, it’s showing candy that is much more popular there than the national average.

    As an example, let’s say tootsie rolls are the 30th most popular candy in the us. But in the state of Stateland, it’s the 10th most popular, which makes it Stateland’s biggest deviation from the national popularity. This makes it Stateland’s most uniquely popular candy because it is much more popular there relative to the overall us. Snickers is actually the most popular in Stateland, but tootsie rolls show up on the chart as the state’s most uniquely popular Halloween candy.

  • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Now, I do like candy corn, but if that’s the favorite candy in your whole state, there’s something wrong with your state