{"id":8517,"date":"2016-01-25T16:00:44","date_gmt":"2016-01-25T16:00:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.factstoryhub.com\/?p=8517"},"modified":"2025-02-16T21:21:01","modified_gmt":"2025-02-16T21:21:01","slug":"skittles-history-and-facts","status":"publish","type":[],"link":"https:\/\/www.factstoryhub.com\/skittles-history-and-facts\/","title":{"rendered":"A Brief History of Skittles"},"content":{"rendered":"
The chewy candy that we are so familiar with today first came into existence in 1974.\n
Skittles spent the first five years of their lives solely in Britain since it wasn’t until 1979 that North America got a chance to “taste the rainbow”.\n
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There is much speculation surrounding the creator of Skittles, as nobody really knows exactly who first made them.\n
One story suggests that a British man named Mr. Skittles looked at a rainbow one day and wondered how it would taste.\n Other sources state that the Wrigley Company, founded in 1891, created the candy along with other confectionery, including Extra chewing gum.\n Although Wrigley produces Skittles today, it is widely accepted that an unknown British company was the original manufacturer.\n After three years of being imported to North America from the UK, Skittles started being manufactured in the US as well as in Britain.\n There were very few flavors compared to the varieties available today.\n Consumers enjoyed grape, orange, strawberry, lemon, and lime flavors.\n The famous slogan “Taste the Rainbow” came about in 1994 and is one of the longest-running advertising campaigns ever.\n D’Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles was a New York advertising agency that had been up and running since 1985.\n They created the whole theme for the Skittles advertising campaign.\n The similarities between M&Ms and Skittles have been noted through the years.\n The appearance and colors of the candy are very similar, but while M&Ms have a chocolate center, Skittles have a fruity one.\n A colorful array of small candy pieces can be found from both varieties of confectionery, and where M&Ms have a small \u2018M\u2019 printed onto each piece, Skittles have a small \u2018S\u2019.\n More than 65 countries today experience the joys of eating Skittles.\n It is the second most popular candy in the whole of the United States, and the most popular among children in North America.\n American footballer Marshawn Lynch was made a spokesman for Skittles after he claimed that the candy had helped him to get where he is today in the world of sport.\n The beginning of the 21st Century saw some new products in the Skittles range, and Sour Skittles were introduced in 2000.\nTaste The Rainbow\n
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Skittles Vs M&M’s\n
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Skittles Around The World\n
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Modern Day Skittles\n
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