I think it's pretty simple. Most groups of families these days are concerned about 2 things: health and money. Healthwise these cereals are awful for you, with high amounts of sugar and low amounts of anything good for you. Moneywise, prices for cereal boxes have skyrocketed. 1 box is almost $10 which is absurd, especially when it's finished in just a few days for a family.
that's strange as I can get my favorite Post cereal flavours from 2.99 to 3.99 a box. Kellogg is dead to me with their poor labour relations and the fact its all US made.
@@ericacruz8261 Maybe not exactly $10. But some family sizes of some brands go for about $8 or there abouts, especially in those small rural food stores.
1. Cereal is prohibitively *expensive* these days and the boxes keep getting smaller and smaller. 2. Cereal is *not* healthy. No matter how much its manufacturer claims it to be “enriched”, it’s still a sugar laden processed food. This holds true whether it’s sweetened or not. 3. Cereal doesn’t satiate my hunger, nor fill me up. 4. Like any other sugary food, cereal is addictive. I can’t eat just one bowl, I can destroy a whole box of it within two days. I haven’t bought cereal for years and don’t miss it.
These are all excellent points. Number three especially I need a protein and fat with breakfast or its like i just ate a bowl of potato chips or cookies Honestly, these days if i eat cereal it’s as a dessert. Sometimes ill reach for the Oreos, but maybe once in a blue moon I’ll reach for cereal
$7-8 dollars? Unless it's a specialized private brand it is not $7-8 per box. At least not with Kellogs, General Mills, or Post. At most you will pay about $4.00 per standard sized box from those major labels.
@@exoressdelivers70 Let’s be real. The price honestly depends on where you live. I have NOT seen a box of cereal for 4 dollars where I live in a LONG time. But if it is where you are, good for you!
It's $7.02 after taxes ($6.72 at Walmart) for the big 40oz boxes/bags where I live in Houston for Cap n Crunch. But I don't eat cereal so it's something I don't worry about to much. However, being that I'm near 40, I can certainly remember back in the day how much cheaper and affordable it used to be.
Once upon a time, cereal served a purpose. It changed the world with a fast and simple paced way of getting a good nutritious product with energy that got you going in the morning. No longer did you have to cook meat, bake bread, or simmer porridge for hours before work or school. But then, it became unhealthy. And, if you are diabetic, they tell you that it is one of the worse things you can eat. And the people that were selling it, reinforced this notion that it is the most important meal of the day. Well, the new news is, its not.
Couldn't agree more. I used to eat cereal all the time. But as I got older I realized that there was way too much sugar in it so I stopped eating it. Not to mention it just got expensive too
I can't even eat bread or baked white potatoes. The glucose level in my blood will get too high. Demographics means less younger people healthy enough to continue buying this sort of crap.
Yup. Even cereals that you don't think are high in sugar, still have a lot of sugar and are quite high in carbs. Even if you are not diabetic, cutting carbs is a good idea. Drop the bread and fruit juices/sugary drinks and sweets, eat more quality proteins, non-starchy vegetables and quality natural fats. Watch the pounds drop off and your cholesterol will plummet.
@@zachariahsmith9130you don’t have to add sugar to your oatmeal. I don’t. I add fruit, which does add “sugar” but is balanced by fiber and contains vitamins and other micronutrients. I know there is a lot of debate about how fructose behaves in the body but I won’t pretend fruit is unhealthy lol
I remember my mom decades ago pointing out brand name serials were a horrible value, when you consider what you are paying for like 18 ounces worth of sugar with some rice, corn, or wheat. Today, I suspect a lot of people can no longer absorb inflation without cutting spending. Generics, or pancake mix or a bag of potatoes are just a better value.
people rather spend $7-$12 on eating out for one singular meal rather than spending $4-$6 dollars on a box of cereal that will last about a week and complain that its the prices of cereal.
I haven’t purchased cereal for my kids in 2 years. They’re full of sugar. Cereals are no longer a staple in my families breakfast. We prefer fresh homemade food. We don’t get persuaded by marketing . We know the health dangers of processed foods.
To me the amount of sugar in cereal is way too high and the prices for cereal has gotten too expensive. The Boxes/Bags have gotten smaller and slimmer and yet the prices just continued to go up, even before the past 2 years. My favorite cereals are $8-$9 a regular size box and a regular suggested serving for most cereals are less than 1 cup with an average of 16-18 grams of sugar. That amount of sugar is definitely a lot for the amount you'r suggested.
Aɢʀᴇᴇᴅ... imo they need to do better ᖇ&ᗪ on cereal as an ingredient. Kinda like a Chex Mix snack or something like Special K Loaf (which surprisingly my kids like as a supplement for dinner) They might have exhausted the life of buying cereal for breakfast 𝙤𝙣𝙡𝙮 but if you buy the majority as an ingredient and eat the "extra" as a mixed snack or cereal it might bring life to the brand again. This is specifically why the stock jumped when they successfully split the overall company. If they figure out a way to get useful for uses other than 𝙟𝙪𝙨𝙩 breakfast I think they can sustain it for a bit longer until the new trend. 😉
Agreed, I don't even know who should be eating cereal these days. You're overpaying for something that is very detrimental to your health and can give you diabetes later on.
@@omgcrisbreezy What really tells you the cost is not total but how much per pound or oz So places like Costco have huge boxes but in double boxes. Grocery store usually have family size or lower
Yep, and all the sugars make you feel so awful. I remember how hard I used to crash way back in high school after eating cereal or toaster strudels in the morning. The sugar just isn't good. For like half the price, I can get some oatmeal and frozen blueberries, and just make my own in the morning. Doesn't take that much more time, doesn't have nearly the same sugar. Or I can make cornbread (I like sweet so its not necessarily better for you) and mix it with milk or pinto beans in the morning. Or there's yogurt with granola and fruit, etc. There's just so many good quick options out there better and cheaper than cereal.
I replaced sugary breakfast with 3 scrambled eggs and veggies. Follow that with plain Greek yogurt, I put a little bit of fruit, almonds, tiny bit of organic granola, flax seeds, coconut, and collagen peptides powder in it. So good 😋 try it.
@@Weaver_Games honestly it’s not. It’s just half of cup of yogurt with a bit of toppings and the eggs for breakfast. I also work in construction and go to the gym 5 times a week. I eat 5 meals a day. I’m definitely burning through all that.
It declined way before that. After 80s kids stopped eating cereal in the late 90s, the subsequent generation never picked up the torch. They're just not interested. Cereal was still cheap as anything in the late 90s but the market was in free fall. Us 80s kids were literally the entire cereal market. The industry completely failed to convince the next round of kids to eat the stuff, and the market became a shadow of its former self. Sure, us elder millenials would still buy a box of froot loops for a laugh once a year, but now, to come back to your point, we're done with that too because I am not paying $9 for a box of fruity pebbles. Nostalgia isn't worth that much.
All Kellogg’s has to do is read these comments to find out why people aren’t buying. Prices are too high and it’s basically junk food. But to lower the price and start making real food again would seriously cut into margins lol
Cereal boxes used to have little games in the back of the back and even came with a little toy at times. That’s what pulled me in to certain cereals as a kid. Now as an adult, I see the insane price hike while the box keeps shrinking.
Just 2 days ago I went inside the store and the small boxes of cereal are $6 if you have a family that’s practically gone in one sitting. The larger ones were 7 and 8 respectively. It is completely ridiculous. I’m glad I’m a college student and I eat cereal only occasionally.
@@shanecasey8365 I live in South Carolina and shop at Publix because the pandemic ruined the quality of Walmart and Kroger in my area to the point the vegetables on the shelves will be moldy. The small standard cereal box is 5.94$ for GM cereal brand. The large box is 6.94 and the family size is 7.94. Respectively they are 6,7,8 dollars. You can say oh yeah it’s because I’m shopping at a Publix but Walmarts prices are just as high these days and Walmart keeps claiming they are raising prices because of theft.
1 usually buy it at cvs store. It like the other guy said it usually around $ 5 - 8 a box is probably 20+ oz. Unless, you buy a small pouch of cereal that cost a little over $ 1.00 but have like 3.5 oz. Majority if the times I might buy cereal if it like 2 boxes of cereal for $6 - 7 that on sale price. Usually at cvs ( long drug ). The milk is kind expensive too it like $ 6 - 7 a gallon . It almost the same price as gasoline for the car. I live hawaii on oahu.
that is still at leasttt $2 for a meal. is $2 a meal too expensive ? also this is just not true, if your talking about these cheap unhealthy cereals. I've never seen even a big box go for more than $4. I buy Kashi cereal which is quite expensive if you compare it to the normal cereal and the past, but it's a great deal for a quick morning meal that taste delicious and besides it containing a lot of carbs (not sugar) it is quite healthy
@@jakeboynton the point is that it is expensive for larger families (Husband-Wife w/2+ kids). It doesn’t make a huge difference for single, partnered or families with one child. But yes when things like cereal in a family fly out the cabinets. Paying 20-25 for a few boxes of cereal every week is a lot. That’s just one aspect of their shopping haul. No it’s not crazy expensive by itself but it adds up, for larger families. When you calculate all the living expenses for a larger family, it’s easy to say are these groceries going up really that serious or big of a deal? When in reality it is because you still have tons of other things you need to buy and pay for. Like your regular bills, other good for you family etc. Of course there are ways to cut costs and things nowadays but when things just a few years ago used to be a lot cheaper it’s hard for families to not notice.
I grew up on cereal, I still like it, and yes late night instead of a snack too. But it's gotten too expensive & the box size keeps shrinking. I'm much more discerning with regards to which to buy or not to buy, and Im well off enough that price isn't the primary issue, the idea of being hustled is.
I love cereal and milk; but I can only use lactaid milk which is ridiculously expensive as is the cereal! The knockoffs are way cheaper (my favorites are rice crispies and cinnamon toast crunch)!😳
Yup shrinkflation hit the cereal market hard, smaller and smaller packages with the same or higher price, plus the options for sugarless or zero added sugar is very small since people have been realizing giving a spoon of sugar to a kid is not healthy
@@ladymacbethofmtensk896 oh.,.lol. you misunderstood. They stated no one's buying cereal or eating that much cereal...I wasn't concerned with whatever else...I just said have you seen the price of cereal and how small the box's are getting. That was my theory. Cereal is a luxury depending on who you ask and not many in today's economy afford it for their children. It's not that serious...lol! Blame? Too much...SMH. just I can understand if the sales has went down. Who wants to pay 6 bucks for a pop tart sized box off sugar?
@@DREAM-lv4cj I understand perfectly well what is happening. The trouble is that some people keep insisting that government give them more free stuff. The money has to come from somewhere. What if we just print more money? Higher prices for smaller quantities of product is what happens when the Government prints more money to give away.
Look, let me decide what I like. If you don't want or believe the product is healthy or whatever for you then don't buy it and let the people who enjoy the product, enjoy it as is! No tweeking the product ingredients because then it's not the original flavor for those who've come to know and love it the way it was originally made.
"It's nice to know that the pressure for change is people getting more health conscious." Yes, many people are starting realizing that eating meat & animal fat only (carnivore diet) is what really is healthy and not that that plant BS pushed by the seventh day adventists (like the founder of Kellog's - William Kellog)...
I think one large elephant in the room that you missed here was that in recent years Kellogs has changed the way/formula on their cereals. Corn Flakes, Special K, frosted flakes, and so on, ALL taste so different and have a MUCH different texture. My entire family has been put off by this and many others I know feel the same.
Yeah I feel like a lot of foods from our childhood have changed their formulas (probably to make them more cost efficient) but at a loss of loyal customers because of the things you mentioned
Most cereals, especially the ones formulated for the US market, are nothing but highly sweetened synthetic food. It's a great way to generate life long customers to the private healthcare system.
Why is there no mention of lactose intolerance? I used to eat cereal all of the time when I was younger. I became lactose intolerant when I was 18 years old. Because of that, I stopped eating cereal. Also during that time, a "milk alternative" was unheard of. These days we do have milk alternatives, but since I spent so many years without eating cereal, my craving for cereal has been diminished.
last time i ate cereal after i became lactose intolerant was over 4 years ago. but when i do eat cereal i eat it with same old whole milk rather than the alternatives because to me whole milk tastes way better with cereal than almond, soy, and other types of “milk”
@@FelixBibian I agree with you, Felix. Regular milk tastes and feels much better than its alternatives. My favorite alternative milk is oat milk. I use oat milk in my coffee drinks now.
No, we don’t need anymore of plant based toxic “alternatives” to already fake factory made government enforced modern-day “milk” or “dairy”. You should just simply stop buying pasteurized crap that does nothing but makes lifeless indigestible liquid that your body gets rid of which what people define as “lactose intolerance”. Why don’t you f.cing just for once purchase raw untainted milk from a farmer and see what happens? I drank raw milk from cow and that’s when I realized this whole lactose intolerance thing is pure BS and worldwide scam since I unexpectedly literally had no bowel problems or the salmonella fearmongering sickness after that instead of falling for the awful plant based agenda crap.
@@MrPolandball Toxic alternative? Where did you get that claim? I also get sick from tomatoes, tomato-based products, cherry juice, and grape juice. I know my body. If cow milk makes me sick, then it doesn't matter if it's processed or not. I will still get sick from it. Oat milk works just fine for me.
Also the breakfast habit changed a lot I remember back in the 1990s 2000s it was quite maintstream to take a bowl of cereal and milk and eat it Now people replace that with strong high quality coffee with their coffee machine. And simply drink it alone or eat it with banana or piece of cake/bread with jelly peanut butter or some cookies Even young ones dont take cereal anymore. They will just take their glass of milk with 2 3 cookies Basicaly if you like sugar simply take cookies/cakes. And if you like healthy food. You can take piece of bread with some kind of healthy peanut butter or eat bananas or any fruits along Basicaly cereals is kind of useless in front of competition
the sugar is bad but please stop with having no health benefits... cereals typically provide a quarter to 35% of most vitamins you need... but their heavy reliance on adding sugar, hardly any fiber or protein on most of them, that's what really screws them up.
All these top comments are over a year old I get it, but NO ONE is talking about the CEREAL ALTERNATIVES to Kellogs these days. They existed a year ago as well. Cascadian Farms for example uses WAY less sugar than Kellogs AND all-natural ingredients. It's worth the extra money. I usually go for the Hearty Morning Fiber; helps keep things moving downstairs if you know what I mean. I got Raisin Bran on sale on time, and was astounded at how it has TRIPLE the sugar content with not even the same Fiber. Kellogs can start by matching companies like Cascadian Farms.
@@nahor88 I hate to break it to you, but organic cereal is **still** starch. All starch is pure sugar. Cascadian Farms, Kellogg’s, Quaker, they’re all one and the same thing-junk food.
@@richerDiLefto Wrong, the ratio of fiber to sugar makes a difference. That literally why I mentioned the Hearty Morning Fiber. Cereals that have a poor fiber to sugar ratio regardless of brand should not be consumed in excess. Also why I used the example of Raisin Bran being packed with sugar despite it's higher than average fiber content. Ezekiel is probably the best brand out there as it uses sprouted grains, essentially grains in their true form, not stripped down and enriched back with added sugars tacked on.
I usually just now buy generic brand cereal from tescos as its much less sugar and so much cheaper than buying from Kellogs. This video actually made me wanna eat some Kellogs cereal which my other family members consume and boy I just finished the bowl and I forgot how sugary it is. This is definitely something I would eat as a treat and not on a regular basis, yall stay safe tho
What sugar? Unless its "Frosties", the sugar coated version, the regular corn flakes has no sugar. That's why it tastes boring and people pour spoonfuls of sugar in it. Or am I mistaken? Does it have added sugar? And the generic brands are thin and go soggy.
@@TheBooban no they don’t have added sugar, I think OP knows this but just wants too make an American brand look bad. All the companies have the same sort of sugar in the uk, and similar ingredients and added vitamins, if you look at the ingredients list Honestly Kellogg cereal is better than tesco but a bit more expensive.
@@TheBooban Read the side of the box. Just because you your bombed out taste buds can't detect it through the high amount of salt put in to balance out the flavor doesn't mean it isn't there. Nobody but fatties and future diabetics pour spoonfuls of sugar on processed cereals if they even eat them any more. Oatmeal, pancakes eggs bacon that's what's up.
@@oo--7714it’s not just Kellogg’s it’s nearly all the cereal brands. Next time you’re in the cereal aisle, look at the nutrition facts from fruit loops or Rice Krispies. Loads of sugar, nearly your total daily recommended amount (20g), and most of us will intuitively pour multiple servings into a bowl without even knowing. Makes you wonder why the serving size is so small. Not even a child eats that little, but it makes the food seem healthier on the label.
I shop at D'Agostino's grocery in Manhattan - New York - a 6 oz box of Raisin Bran is $8.29 prior to sales tax - why don't they start by lowering prices?
NO. With Kellogg's the problem isn't sugar, after all, you can buy UNSWEETENED corn flakes, and do with them what you wish. Instead, with Kellogg's, the problem is GREED: They kept making the boxes smaller and smaller, while making the price larger and larger! There was no reason for this in the USA (price a bushel of oats or corn, and you will see the RIDICULOUSNESS of the cereal prices) And so? Consumers pushed back! Our corn flakes come from MEXICO, and that's a GOOD THING called competition, and SHAME on Kellogg's, they're getting EXACTLY what they deserve. We consumers are FED UP with the "Just Because" price increases of food from GREEDY COMPANIES LIKE KELLOGG'S, and we're not putting up with it! That's How It Is.
Unsweetened corn flake are still full of sugar simply because of the way they been processed. They are easily absorbed into the blood. Also, the corn used was sprayed with glyphosate from the herbicide Roundup. Glyphosate was patented as an anti-biotic and destroys good gut bacteria. Glyphosate also causes leaky gut because it breaks the tight junctions along you gut wall. The leakage causes low grade inflammation throughout the body which can lead to a host of auto-immune diseases. This is one of the reasons why we have an obesity epidemic in the US. Over 80 percent of f the population is insulin resistant, meaning they can't switch from burning sugar to burning fat, so the fat remains stored and accumulates. This does not include the other chemical additives.
Kellogg’s, as well as some of the other name brand cereals are so expensive. That’s the main reason my family limits our purchases of Kellogg’s brand stuff. A lot of store brands are just as good, but a quarter of the price.
Even with eggs being so expensive right now, they’re still a better buy than cereal. And speaking of nostalgia, I tried some lucky charms awhile back…they were nasty, nothing like I remembered. Plus I felt sick and sleepy all day. Even my teenage boys prefer eggs or breakfast burritos to cereal.
Personally, I stopped eating it for a time because I became more nutrition-conscious. It wasn’t that cereal had components I didn’t like - it does sometimes, like excess sugar, but there are still varieties that minimize this if it’s a priority for you - but that cereal was often missing things I realized I needed, like protein and various micronutrients. But then eventually I noticed companies suddenly had protein-rich cereals on the market (and the heavily micronutrient-fortified kind also emerged on my radar, though those have been around for years) except at this point I’ve learned to cook and experimented with a lot of alternative, easy, healthy, breakfasts so going back to a cereal-heavy breakfast menu is just unlikely. My tastes, skills, and practices changed. 🤷♀️ I still totally appreciate having fortified minimal-sugar cereal on hand for occasional consumption but I’ll never go back to my old cereal breakfast dominance. I can make so many delicious things now it’s hard for cereal to compete.
People don't really buy these cereals now because of all of the bad press regarding their bad and toxic ingredients. Also, the high sugar content. People are wiser now thanks to all of the information out here and are prioritizing their health more than previous years when these cereals were really popular.
Well you really can’t go wrong with the more wholesome cereals like Bran and Corn Flakes. Something based in vitamins and nutrients. And of course eat a few bowls, not a pallet. The wall of nonsensical coloured flavoured what nots really puts me off, but keep it simple guys.
isn't all cereal was containing BHT that proven to cause cancer? no wonder there are ton of young people getting cancer these day, those people consume the cancerous ingredient for 20 years straight
No. People are not wiser. If they were, they would have thrown away Dr. Kellogg's food philosophy long ago. They would have disposed of the notion that food is either bland/disgusting and healthy or delicious and bad for your health long ago.
Kellogg has declared war on the American family through cost-prohibitive pricing, coupled with an inferior product. They must think there's gold dust in this box of rigid corn derivatives and preservatives they foist upon us. As far as I'm concerned, Kellogg can use their cereal for shipping peanuts. Perhaps that would make them more worth the price.
Truth is these cereals are not Food. They may be entertainment for the tongue, but they have little or no nutritional value. Often loaded with sugar, food colorings, and heavily processed. Americans are learning about nutrition on the Internet. As they become more educated they stop buying junk food and stop feeding it to their children. That is great! Better Health! More Energy! Better Sleep! Weight Loss!
Back in the 70s I rem health advocates telling us the only healthy thing in cereal was the vitamins and that's why they put them in the cereal in the first place.
Anything with flour, wheat, grains or oats is always sugar and more than listed on the box due to the regulations. Best to eat something other than those things anyway
Growing to had cereal everyday. But now as an adult with young kids I understand most cereals have way too much sugar and are really expensive. I offer my kids healthier breakfast options. When I go buy cereal isn't always the generic store brand because it's a better value financially.
I recently purchase cereal for the first time in many years (young niece and nephew visiting). I was shocked by the price $7 a box! (I recalled cereal being about $2-3). When the children left there was cereal left. My husband and I tasted it. The lucky charms was the texture of styrofoam and tasted of chemicals while the cinnamon toast had a cardboard texture and tasted of dirt. We threw it away and decided the kids would have to do without on their next visit.
Very true. But we don’t have any choice about the subsidies that are funded by taxpayers that cause these foods to be such profit makers for companies.
@@ladymacbethofmtensk896 Not quite, they made up things like the food pyramid to sell foods, they knew full well it was BS and sales. Just like the got milk ads were really to boost dairy sales. Not actual health.
Literally could’ve summed up this whole story with: “I refuse to pay $7 for a box of cereal I can buy generic for $4”. Especially with smaller and smaller portions.
GMO is a scarey thought to the ignorant masses. Over use of sugar, especially fructose sugars is a way, Way, WAY bigger problem for most Americans! Many GMOs have no effect on people, like making grains bug or drought resistant. Would you rather have a non-gmo grain that had chemical pesticides put on it, or a GMO grain that didn't need pesticides because of its bug resistance? But either way it will be coated in sugar. Ya just have to be a smarter & more disciplined eater.
Growing upon in the 80s with 4 siblings, there were always 4 to 6 boxes of cereal in the house along with 2 to 4 gallons of milk. Time went by and sometime in the 90s we stopped eating cereal mainly because of the high content of sugar and realizing how unhealthy it is.
Yes, back when we could play outside adter breakfast and work off the sugar high. What to do for kids now who follow breakfast w video games on phones?
10 cents of value in a 10 dollar box of cereal. Same formula for Potato chips. This formula doesnt work anymore, too many shareholders gouging customers. Pretty sad when beef costs less per pound than cereal.
Our family was always big on cereal. I'll never forget once when I had a sleepover when I was little and the girl I had over was in awe when I opened the cupboard where the cereal was when I asked her what kind she wanted. We always had around 6-7 boxes on the go in different flavors. She said at her house they only ever had one at a time. We ate it in the morning and often before bed as well! I like the sweet ones and the not sweet ones, just depends on my mood. It has gotten ridiculously expensive though.
Cereals, and foods in general, have decreased fat and replaced it w sugars. Not only has that decreased the flavor, it's increased doctor and dental visits, and turned former size medium ppl into multi large ppl!
I bailed on Heinz and Kellogg products when they shutdown facilities and left Ontario, Canada. These shutdowns impacted dedicated skilled employees and their families immensely.
Because we learned cellulose, sprayed with sugar, and fortified with nutrients is not healthy. Even if it is actual cereal grains, the heavy use of sugar makes it a poor choice for a nutritious meal
Just the other day in the cereal aisle I was reading over the ingredients of all the cereals I always used to eat when I was younger thinking to myself, "is this even food" ?
Wow, our kids grew up eating Frosties, CoCo pops, Sugar Puffs etc and never got fat. It's not as if they're eating it all day but for breakfast......... Tried a box of Sugar Puffs recently and they're horrible, no honey, sugar... bleugh!
i ate cereal occasionally as a little kid, but even then, my mum didn't let us have it often. i have never eaten any as a adult. nearly all cereals are just garbage - junk carbs loaded with sugar. i do eat carbs but prefer more wholesome and less processed ones, mainly vegetables. unsweetened cereal tastes like cardboard due to the very low fat content, and sugar is terrible for us. i don't see myself buying cereal at any point.
I quit buying Kellogg products 30 years ago because of the sugar, high fructose corn syrup, maltose dextrine, salt, and processed corn. Kellogg now markets a healthy ceral called musli, but I can find better products elsewhere that I know ate unadulterated. And, most stores in the U.S. don't carry Kelloggs Musli.
After having a surge in sales during a global pandemic, Kellogg couldn’t pass those profits onto their employees (who’d been striking for months) without government intervention? Just another reason to avoid their unhealthy cereals
I get difference cereals and eat at different hours, golden grahams, honey oat, and cheerios. Its hits the spot when gaming late at night lol. I use almond milk. I used to be able to drink cow milk as a kid from 1-2%, whole, etc. But in my 20s I became lactose intolerant except for cheese and ice cream. So cereal only gets the almond kind.
Kellogg’s Cereal isn’t even healthy, so much sugar (or corn syrup, really) and it costs like $7 a box now. I grew up on cereal but I won’t go back to eating it. I look at it like buying candy or chips, generally avoided and eaten occasionally as treats
Tubby is in denial if he things a bowl of cereal can still be a "nutritious" way to start the day. Who is he kidding? The guy is not exactly a paragon of health. That being said, who ever actually believed cereal is a "healthy" thing? I don't eat cereal for my health; I eat it to have something to eat, and admittedly, I'm rather nostalgic, where I like to enjoy a bowl for comfort and a taste of "the good ol' days." It's a shame Kellogg's wants to hold onto the "health" myth. Drop "health," drop "part of this complete breakfast." It's just sweet, fun food. I never believed that myth. Reading a lot of the comments here, and a lot of it is true. Cereals have gotten expensive and boxes keep shrinking. Coupled with health-consciousness, it's not hard to see why sales have declined. And who wants to buy cereal from a company that's screwing their workers?
as a kid and teenager, I always used to ask my parents to buy cereal for the morning. However, I think our education system is playing a role in cereal. I found it more convenient to just buy something on my way to school rather than wake up a half hour earlier to eat some breakfast that would make me hungry by 11 am. Most cereal we bought ended up collecting dust on top of the fridge. We also only ate cereal once or twice a week, since its sugar content is way too high.
Do manufacturers/retailers expect to charge $5-$8 for a 20oz box of sugar and corn meal and not expect sales to be declining? Its not all inflation when you can still get the generic crap for much, much cheaper.
In my opinion it is taste . Cost is a problem too but it isn’t as much of an issue if you either order the cereal online , or buy in bulk stores like bj’s , Costco’s, ect. From my experience it’s only really 8-10$ a box if you buy them from like local supermarkets, or corner stores . Health is a valid argument but the thing is many people will say this is unhealthy and then go eat other things throughout the day which is just as bad (in terms of health, and also in terms of cost) . For most people the simple answer is that they just prefer other foods.
TELL THE TRUTH: a decent box cereal is $7 at Ralphs. it's not even the ones the kids like to eat. it's Raisin Nut Brand. I don't know if that's Kellogg's...but it's all the same. It's good, but it's too high in sugar and not high in nutrition. it's a good, but expensive snack. NOT EVEN A BREAKFAST SNACK.
i love cereal, frosted flakes, is my fav, but im not paying 14.99 for an oversized box with two handfuls of sugary corn flakes. i learned to love oatmeal, with a little honey, maybe some blueberries? imma happy camper.
I eat a lot of cereal, but I almost always take low-sugar ones like unsweetened shredded wheat and then add my own sucralose to sweeten them. I think that Post has the best product line-up: I've especially been impressed by their innovative Premier Protein and Incredi-Bowl high-protein cereal brands. Many of Kelloggs' Kashi cereals are good, but I think that Post and General Mills are on average both healthier and more innovative.
Not only did I start realizing of why I've been basically eating desert for breakfast along with all that food coloring. The employee treatment made me choose to avoid Kellogg's. So, another company can go ahead and buy out Kellogg's and maybe they'll have some sense to not treat people that make things happen for them like crap.
When I was a kid, the rule was that we could only get cereal where sugar WASN'T the first ingredient. People may not know this, but the order of the ingredients in the list is based on how much of that ingredient is in there. Most cereal has more sugar than anything else. I think at the time the only 2 cereals that didn't list sugar first were Life, and regular Cheerios.
Ultra processed sugary cereals is bad for you. I was taught as a kid that ultra processed sugary cereal is healthier than bacon and eggs. However I learned in 2019, that what I was taught is completely wrong and it’s actually the other way around. A cereal that is actually healthy is rolled or steel cut oats with fruit.
I think it's pretty simple. Most groups of families these days are concerned about 2 things: health and money. Healthwise these cereals are awful for you, with high amounts of sugar and low amounts of anything good for you. Moneywise, prices for cereal boxes have skyrocketed. 1 box is almost $10 which is absurd, especially when it's finished in just a few days for a family.
that's strange as I can get my favorite Post cereal flavours from 2.99 to 3.99 a box. Kellogg is dead to me with their poor labour relations and the fact its all US made.
That's Capitalism for you, people are greedy no matter who's in office.
$10??? not where I live😆
@@ericacruz8261 Maybe not exactly $10. But some family sizes of some brands go for about $8 or there abouts, especially in those small rural food stores.
@@eudofia $8.99 on a good day for the larger sized boxes
So that's basically ten bucks when you include taxes.
1. Cereal is prohibitively *expensive* these days and the boxes keep getting smaller and smaller.
2. Cereal is *not* healthy. No matter how much its manufacturer claims it to be “enriched”, it’s still a sugar laden processed food. This holds true whether it’s sweetened or not.
3. Cereal doesn’t satiate my hunger, nor fill me up.
4. Like any other sugary food, cereal is addictive. I can’t eat just one bowl, I can destroy a whole box of it within two days.
I haven’t bought cereal for years and don’t miss it.
This and all processed foods
These are all excellent points. Number three especially
I need a protein and fat with breakfast or its like i just ate a bowl of potato chips or cookies
Honestly, these days if i eat cereal it’s as a dessert. Sometimes ill reach for the Oreos, but maybe once in a blue moon I’ll reach for cereal
Nobody wants to pay 7-8 dollars for cereal when it’s just sugar and empty calories. It’s cheaper to get healthier options!
$7-8 dollars? Unless it's a specialized private brand it is not $7-8 per box. At least not with Kellogs, General Mills, or Post. At most you will pay about $4.00 per standard sized box from those major labels.
@@exoressdelivers70 Let’s be real. The price honestly depends on where you live. I have NOT seen a box of cereal for 4 dollars where I live in a LONG time. But if it is where you are, good for you!
Seriously. You have it for breakfast and you stay hungry until lunch. It has no nutritional value so it's pointless to eat it.
It's $7.02 after taxes ($6.72 at Walmart) for the big 40oz boxes/bags where I live in Houston for Cap n Crunch. But I don't eat cereal so it's something I don't worry about to much. However, being that I'm near 40, I can certainly remember back in the day how much cheaper and affordable it used to be.
@Exoress Delivers it's 8 to 9 dollars 💸 fam idk what state you live in but over here in NJ it's between $8 to $10
Once upon a time, cereal served a purpose. It changed the world with a fast and simple paced way of getting a good nutritious product with energy that got you going in the morning. No longer did you have to cook meat, bake bread, or simmer porridge for hours before work or school. But then, it became unhealthy. And, if you are diabetic, they tell you that it is one of the worse things you can eat. And the people that were selling it, reinforced this notion that it is the most important meal of the day. Well, the new news is, its not.
Couldn't agree more. I used to eat cereal all the time. But as I got older I realized that there was way too much sugar in it so I stopped eating it.
Not to mention it just got expensive too
It doesn’t help the the first word in their names was usually sugar and people remember that.
I can't even eat bread or baked white potatoes. The glucose level in my blood will get too high. Demographics means less younger people healthy enough to continue buying this sort of crap.
Yup. Even cereals that you don't think are high in sugar, still have a lot of sugar and are quite high in carbs. Even if you are not diabetic, cutting carbs is a good idea. Drop the bread and fruit juices/sugary drinks and sweets, eat more quality proteins, non-starchy vegetables and quality natural fats. Watch the pounds drop off and your cholesterol will plummet.
One question: when the hell has traditional cereal ever been healthy 😭
since cereal is so goddamn expensive now. Why even buy it. In fact I can buy Oatmeal with REAL fruits in it instead.
Facts, healthier too
Still sugar. All of it
@@zachariahsmith9130you don’t have to add sugar to your oatmeal. I don’t. I add fruit, which does add “sugar” but is balanced by fiber and contains vitamins and other micronutrients. I know there is a lot of debate about how fructose behaves in the body but I won’t pretend fruit is unhealthy lol
@@miaomiaou_ oatmeal isnt sugarless
@@miaomiaou_
even just oatmeal is high glycaemic.
you can't win!
:-(
I remember my mom decades ago pointing out brand name serials were a horrible value, when you consider what you are paying for like 18 ounces worth of sugar with some rice, corn, or wheat. Today, I suspect a lot of people can no longer absorb inflation without cutting spending. Generics, or pancake mix or a bag of potatoes are just a better value.
People are not willing to pay the price that it cost to buy a box of cereal at the store The price is freaking insane and inappropriate.
They know the main reason is price but don't wanna address that issue lol
Exactly a box of cereal is like $9
people rather spend $7-$12 on eating out for one singular meal rather than spending $4-$6 dollars on a box of cereal that will last about a week and complain that its the prices of cereal.
@@APBB84you do know how much a cup is? It's tiny.
I bought a whole chicken instead of a box of frosted flakes
I haven’t purchased cereal for my kids in 2 years. They’re full of sugar. Cereals are no longer a staple in my families breakfast. We prefer fresh homemade food. We don’t get persuaded by marketing . We know the health dangers of processed foods.
its ok to have snacks and treats...calm down
We? No, you
You probably were raised on sugar and I’m sure your alright
@@chocolatechipslimeand your comment right there is exactly why 75% of Americans are overweight/obese
To me the amount of sugar in cereal is way too high and the prices for cereal has gotten too expensive. The Boxes/Bags have gotten smaller and slimmer and yet the prices just continued to go up, even before the past 2 years. My favorite cereals are $8-$9 a regular size box and a regular suggested serving for most cereals are less than 1 cup with an average of 16-18 grams of sugar. That amount of sugar is definitely a lot for the amount you'r suggested.
Aɢʀᴇᴇᴅ...
imo they need to do better ᖇ&ᗪ on cereal as an ingredient. Kinda like a Chex Mix snack or something like Special K Loaf (which surprisingly my kids like as a supplement for dinner)
They might have exhausted the life of buying cereal for breakfast 𝙤𝙣𝙡𝙮 but if you buy the majority as an ingredient and eat the "extra" as a mixed snack or cereal it might bring life to the brand again.
This is specifically why the stock jumped when they successfully split the overall company. If they figure out a way to get useful for uses other than 𝙟𝙪𝙨𝙩 breakfast I think they can sustain it for a bit longer until the new trend. 😉
Agreed, I don't even know who should be eating cereal these days. You're overpaying for something that is very detrimental to your health and can give you diabetes later on.
8-9??? Where the heck you buying your cereal. Cinnamon Toast Crunch and Reese’s are 4-5 here in Florida
@@omgcrisbreezy What really tells you the cost is not total but how much per pound or oz
So places like Costco have huge boxes but in double boxes. Grocery store usually have family size or lower
Yep, and all the sugars make you feel so awful. I remember how hard I used to crash way back in high school after eating cereal or toaster strudels in the morning. The sugar just isn't good.
For like half the price, I can get some oatmeal and frozen blueberries, and just make my own in the morning. Doesn't take that much more time, doesn't have nearly the same sugar.
Or I can make cornbread (I like sweet so its not necessarily better for you) and mix it with milk or pinto beans in the morning. Or there's yogurt with granola and fruit, etc. There's just so many good quick options out there better and cheaper than cereal.
I replaced sugary breakfast with 3 scrambled eggs and veggies. Follow that with plain Greek yogurt, I put a little bit of fruit, almonds, tiny bit of organic granola, flax seeds, coconut, and collagen peptides powder in it. So good 😋 try it.
Yumm even I have 3 scrambled eggs
That seems like a huge breakfast to me
@@Weaver_Games honestly it’s not. It’s just half of cup of yogurt with a bit of toppings and the eggs for breakfast. I also work in construction and go to the gym 5 times a week. I eat 5 meals a day. I’m definitely burning through all that.
It's been declining partially due to the $5-7 a box price.
The way they handled the 2021 strike didn't help in my view.
It declined way before that. After 80s kids stopped eating cereal in the late 90s, the subsequent generation never picked up the torch. They're just not interested. Cereal was still cheap as anything in the late 90s but the market was in free fall. Us 80s kids were literally the entire cereal market. The industry completely failed to convince the next round of kids to eat the stuff, and the market became a shadow of its former self. Sure, us elder millenials would still buy a box of froot loops for a laugh once a year, but now, to come back to your point, we're done with that too because I am not paying $9 for a box of fruity pebbles. Nostalgia isn't worth that much.
It's been too expensive for years.
I hate cereal so I never eat it. Nothing could get me to eat it.
Nah... It's because it's loaded with sugar.
Thank you! That is what i'm saying.
All Kellogg’s has to do is read these comments to find out why people aren’t buying. Prices are too high and it’s basically junk food. But to lower the price and start making real food again would seriously cut into margins lol
maybe ppl figured out that eating candy for breakfast wasnt a good idea
Who do you think you are, my mom?
@@rillest75 candy is cheaper and does the same
Spot on.
One would home, society as a whole would benefit
@@lotusgrl444 how boring that would be
Cereal boxes used to have little games in the back of the back and even came with a little toy at times. That’s what pulled me in to certain cereals as a kid.
Now as an adult, I see the insane price hike while the box keeps shrinking.
Just 2 days ago I went inside the store and the small boxes of cereal are $6 if you have a family that’s practically gone in one sitting. The larger ones were 7 and 8 respectively. It is completely ridiculous. I’m glad I’m a college student and I eat cereal only occasionally.
where do you live? That's stretching believability, unless you're shopping at 7-11.
@@shanecasey8365 I live in South Carolina and shop at Publix because the pandemic ruined the quality of Walmart and Kroger in my area to the point the vegetables on the shelves will be moldy. The small standard cereal box is 5.94$ for GM cereal brand. The large box is 6.94 and the family size is 7.94. Respectively they are 6,7,8 dollars. You can say oh yeah it’s because I’m shopping at a Publix but Walmarts prices are just as high these days and Walmart keeps claiming they are raising prices because of theft.
1 usually buy it at cvs store. It like the other guy said it usually around $ 5 - 8 a box is probably 20+ oz. Unless, you buy a small pouch of cereal that cost a little over $ 1.00 but have like 3.5 oz.
Majority if the times I might buy cereal if it like 2 boxes of cereal for $6 - 7 that on sale price. Usually at cvs ( long drug ).
The milk is kind expensive too it like $ 6 - 7 a gallon . It almost the same price as gasoline for the car.
I live hawaii on oahu.
that is still at leasttt $2 for a meal. is $2 a meal too expensive ? also this is just not true, if your talking about these cheap unhealthy cereals. I've never seen even a big box go for more than $4. I buy Kashi cereal which is quite expensive if you compare it to the normal cereal and the past, but it's a great deal for a quick morning meal that taste delicious and besides it containing a lot of carbs (not sugar) it is quite healthy
@@jakeboynton the point is that it is expensive for larger families (Husband-Wife w/2+ kids). It doesn’t make a huge difference for single, partnered or families with one child. But yes when things like cereal in a family fly out the cabinets. Paying 20-25 for a few boxes of cereal every week is a lot. That’s just one aspect of their shopping haul. No it’s not crazy expensive by itself but it adds up, for larger families. When you calculate all the living expenses for a larger family, it’s easy to say are these groceries going up really that serious or big of a deal? When in reality it is because you still have tons of other things you need to buy and pay for. Like your regular bills, other good for you family etc. Of course there are ways to cut costs and things nowadays but when things just a few years ago used to be a lot cheaper it’s hard for families to not notice.
Corn Flakes were the only Cereal we ate in the 60s 70s. I always dreamed my mother would buy captain crunch.
Your mother had the right idea. You're better off not having grown up on that sugary crap.
Or cookie crisp 😆 🤣
When I was growing up in the 70s and 80s, my fav cereal was Cap'n Crunch Peanut Butter Crunch. Maybe not the best for you, but it tasted good.
@SwissyChief1265 corn flakes are full of sugar, too.
My parents were d bags. We
Only got healthy cereal in the early 80s. I let my kids eat the sugar ones 😂
I grew up on cereal, I still like it, and yes late night instead of a snack too.
But it's gotten too expensive & the box size keeps shrinking. I'm much more discerning with regards to which to buy or not to buy, and Im well off enough that price isn't the primary issue, the idea of being hustled is.
Buy the store brands!
I love cereal and milk; but I can only use lactaid milk which is ridiculously expensive as is the cereal! The knockoffs are way cheaper (my favorites are rice crispies and cinnamon toast crunch)!😳
shrinkflation
It's not healthy eat rice with milk instead
@@chiragsharma5050 nty im good
1. Sugar
2. Price
3. Price
4. Price
Have they seen the price of a box and how small the boxes have become?
Yup shrinkflation hit the cereal market hard, smaller and smaller packages with the same or higher price, plus the options for sugarless or zero added sugar is very small since people have been realizing giving a spoon of sugar to a kid is not healthy
Mi Fi tell you , the boxes small and you know how much thousands of dollars it cost
Yes, blame the cereal company and not the Government's excessive spending!
@@ladymacbethofmtensk896 oh.,.lol. you misunderstood. They stated no one's buying cereal or eating that much cereal...I wasn't concerned with whatever else...I just said have you seen the price of cereal and how small the box's are getting. That was my theory. Cereal is a luxury depending on who you ask and not many in today's economy afford it for their children. It's not that serious...lol! Blame? Too much...SMH. just I can understand if the sales has went down. Who wants to pay 6 bucks for a pop tart sized box off sugar?
@@DREAM-lv4cj I understand perfectly well what is happening. The trouble is that some people keep insisting that government give them more free stuff. The money has to come from somewhere. What if we just print more money? Higher prices for smaller quantities of product is what happens when the Government prints more money to give away.
It's nice to know that the pressure for change is people getting more health conscious. We are growing and learning.
health-conscious
Fluff that. Cereal is expensive. I'll take Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs over anything else.
Look, let me decide what I like.
If you don't want or believe the product is healthy or whatever for you then don't buy it and let the people who enjoy the product, enjoy it as is!
No tweeking the product ingredients because then it's not the original flavor for those who've come to know and love it the way it was originally made.
@@peterpatton2867 sheer stupidity
"It's nice to know that the pressure for change is people getting more health conscious."
Yes, many people are starting realizing that eating meat & animal fat only (carnivore diet) is what really is healthy and not that that plant BS pushed by the seventh day adventists (like the founder of Kellog's - William Kellog)...
I think one large elephant in the room that you missed here was that in recent years Kellogs has changed the way/formula on their cereals. Corn Flakes, Special K, frosted flakes, and so on, ALL taste so different and have a MUCH different texture. My entire family has been put off by this and many others I know feel the same.
They don't want to admit that. I totally agree.
Yeah I feel like a lot of foods from our childhood have changed their formulas (probably to make them more cost efficient) but at a loss of loyal customers because of the things you mentioned
Not cereal related but close-ish..Is it me or do doritos taste waay different
Red Seraph I agree I thought it was just me
Corn syrup ruined a lot of brands. Soda is undrinkable from the stuff
Most cereals, especially the ones formulated for the US market, are nothing but highly sweetened synthetic food. It's a great way to generate life long customers to the private healthcare system.
Isn't capitalism AMAZING.
Why is there no mention of lactose intolerance? I used to eat cereal all of the time when I was younger. I became lactose intolerant when I was 18 years old. Because of that, I stopped eating cereal. Also during that time, a "milk alternative" was unheard of. These days we do have milk alternatives, but since I spent so many years without eating cereal, my craving for cereal has been diminished.
last time i ate cereal after i became lactose intolerant was over 4 years ago. but when i do eat cereal i eat it with same old whole milk rather than the alternatives because to me whole milk tastes way better with cereal than almond, soy, and other types of “milk”
@@FelixBibian I agree with you, Felix. Regular milk tastes and feels much better than its alternatives. My favorite alternative milk is oat milk. I use oat milk in my coffee drinks now.
Same. I treat cereal like a dessert, I have it a few times a year and opt to buy the individual serving container instead of a full box.
No, we don’t need anymore of plant based toxic “alternatives” to already fake factory made government enforced modern-day “milk” or “dairy”. You should just simply stop buying pasteurized crap that does nothing but makes lifeless indigestible liquid that your body gets rid of which what people define as “lactose intolerance”. Why don’t you f.cing just for once purchase raw untainted milk from a farmer and see what happens? I drank raw milk from cow and that’s when I realized this whole lactose intolerance thing is pure BS and worldwide scam since I unexpectedly literally had no bowel problems or the salmonella fearmongering sickness after that instead of falling for the awful plant based agenda crap.
@@MrPolandball Toxic alternative? Where did you get that claim? I also get sick from tomatoes, tomato-based products, cherry juice, and grape juice. I know my body. If cow milk makes me sick, then it doesn't matter if it's processed or not. I will still get sick from it. Oat milk works just fine for me.
Why? Because the Kelloggs CEO thinks he's Marie Antoinette, with his assinine "Let them eat cereal" comment.
Easy question: it’s like $6 for a box now and not worth the price :/
Buy the store brands.
Also the breakfast habit changed a lot
I remember back in the 1990s 2000s it was quite maintstream to take a bowl of cereal and milk and eat it
Now people replace that with strong high quality coffee with their coffee machine. And simply drink it alone or eat it with banana or piece of cake/bread with jelly peanut butter or some cookies
Even young ones dont take cereal anymore. They will just take their glass of milk with 2 3 cookies
Basicaly if you like sugar simply take cookies/cakes. And if you like healthy food. You can take piece of bread with some kind of healthy peanut butter or eat bananas or any fruits along
Basicaly cereals is kind of useless in front of competition
It's $8 to $10
@@blacklyfe5543 👁👄👁
Meanwhile 5 dollar coffe and 2 dollar bars. Rich people dont want it and poor dont have money
As someone who used to eat their garbage growing up , I hope it doesn’t, it’s a lie and empty food.
I eat 2 eggs, bacon and two slices of bread every morning. Cereal is too sugary and isn't very filling, its more like a treat
Treats with milk lol ill be hungry in 30 mins.
a bowl of cereal has been a go to dessert for me lately ^_^’
Love eggs and bacon
Sales are down because of the "eat cereals for dinner" message!
Sugars + pesticides + highly processed + GMO + lactose = The complete set... For your hospitalization.
Hospital CEOs liked this.
How do you live without milk?
And metal...
@@humanperson9443how could a human being live without drinking the milk of another animal? LMAO. You’re so brain-washed by the dairy industry.
Since when is lactose bad for you, except for people who are lactose-intolerant?
its cheaper to just eat eggs bacon and toast which is better for you anyways since it isnt sugar flakes
Too much sugar and have no health benefits. I can’t go wrong with old fashioned oatmeal with fruits of my choice if I want to eat cereal.
Honey, banana and natural yogurt with my oats. 😊
the sugar is bad but please stop with having no health benefits... cereals typically provide a quarter to 35% of most vitamins you need... but their heavy reliance on adding sugar, hardly any fiber or protein on most of them, that's what really screws them up.
All these top comments are over a year old I get it, but NO ONE is talking about the CEREAL ALTERNATIVES to Kellogs these days. They existed a year ago as well. Cascadian Farms for example uses WAY less sugar than Kellogs AND all-natural ingredients. It's worth the extra money. I usually go for the Hearty Morning Fiber; helps keep things moving downstairs if you know what I mean. I got Raisin Bran on sale on time, and was astounded at how it has TRIPLE the sugar content with not even the same Fiber. Kellogs can start by matching companies like Cascadian Farms.
@@nahor88 I hate to break it to you, but organic cereal is **still** starch. All starch is pure sugar. Cascadian Farms, Kellogg’s, Quaker, they’re all one and the same thing-junk food.
@@richerDiLefto Wrong, the ratio of fiber to sugar makes a difference.
That literally why I mentioned the Hearty Morning Fiber. Cereals that have a poor fiber to sugar ratio regardless of brand should not be consumed in excess. Also why I used the example of Raisin Bran being packed with sugar despite it's higher than average fiber content. Ezekiel is probably the best brand out there as it uses sprouted grains, essentially grains in their true form, not stripped down and enriched back with added sugars tacked on.
The problem I have with cereal is, who just eats one bowl?! Maybe a large mixing bowl 😂
Word!
me...idk how much u guys eat...
I usually just now buy generic brand cereal from tescos as its much less sugar and so much cheaper than buying from Kellogs. This video actually made me wanna eat some Kellogs cereal which my other family members consume and boy I just finished the bowl and I forgot how sugary it is. This is definitely something I would eat as a treat and not on a regular basis, yall stay safe tho
What sugar? Unless its "Frosties", the sugar coated version, the regular corn flakes has no sugar. That's why it tastes boring and people pour spoonfuls of sugar in it. Or am I mistaken? Does it have added sugar? And the generic brands are thin and go soggy.
@@TheBooban no they don’t have added sugar, I think OP knows this but just wants too make an American brand look bad. All the companies have the same sort of sugar in the uk, and similar ingredients and added vitamins, if you look at the ingredients list
Honestly Kellogg cereal is better than tesco but a bit more expensive.
@@TheBooban Read the side of the box. Just because you your bombed out taste buds can't detect it through the high amount of salt put in to balance out the flavor doesn't mean it isn't there. Nobody but fatties and future diabetics pour spoonfuls of sugar on processed cereals if they even eat them any more. Oatmeal, pancakes eggs bacon that's what's up.
Some times we buy the cereal that comes in a bag .
@@oo--7714it’s not just Kellogg’s it’s nearly all the cereal brands. Next time you’re in the cereal aisle, look at the nutrition facts from fruit loops or Rice Krispies. Loads of sugar, nearly your total daily recommended amount (20g), and most of us will intuitively pour multiple servings into a bowl without even knowing. Makes you wonder why the serving size is so small. Not even a child eats that little, but it makes the food seem healthier on the label.
It is so difficult to market junk food with all these legal requirements.🤪
99% of these cereals are filled with sugar, might as well eat cookies for breakfast
Mmmmm cookies
Cookie Crisp!
Most of the cereals arnt as sweet as they used to be
Precisely !! Like cereal are literal junk food
wait im the only one that does that?
Why did Americans stop eating Kellogs? Fast-forward to present date..."let them eat cereal." Kellogg's CEO
I shop at D'Agostino's grocery in Manhattan - New York - a 6 oz box of Raisin Bran is $8.29 prior to sales tax - why don't they start by lowering prices?
Tell me about it. Price for a box of cereal is ridiculous
I live in PA and at my local BJs it cost $6.00 for 38 oz coco pebbles
You're lucky there's any food at all in Manhattan. That place is a death trap.
Cause that store is probably paying like 85k a month in rent lol
They changed the formula a ton of times and its nasty and unrecognizable
NO. With Kellogg's the problem isn't sugar, after all, you can buy UNSWEETENED corn flakes, and do with them what you wish. Instead, with Kellogg's, the problem is GREED: They kept making the boxes smaller and smaller, while making the price larger and larger! There was no reason for this in the USA (price a bushel of oats or corn, and you will see the RIDICULOUSNESS of the cereal prices) And so? Consumers pushed back! Our corn flakes come from MEXICO, and that's a GOOD THING called competition, and SHAME on Kellogg's, they're getting EXACTLY what they deserve. We consumers are FED UP with the "Just Because" price increases of food from GREEDY COMPANIES LIKE KELLOGG'S, and we're not putting up with it! That's How It Is.
Unsweetened corn flake are still full of sugar simply because of the way they been processed. They are easily absorbed into the blood. Also, the corn used was sprayed with glyphosate from the herbicide Roundup. Glyphosate was patented as an anti-biotic and destroys good gut bacteria. Glyphosate also causes leaky gut because it breaks the tight junctions along you gut wall. The leakage causes low grade inflammation throughout the body which can lead to a host of auto-immune diseases. This is one of the reasons why we have an obesity epidemic in the US. Over 80 percent of f the population is insulin resistant, meaning they can't switch from burning sugar to burning fat, so the fat remains stored and accumulates. This does not include the other chemical additives.
You hit it on the nose. Consumers are hitting back full force, and these companies are feeling their greedy ways are being depleted. Now if only…. ?
@@jamestillman9810 Very informed comment. I have never taken notes from a YT comment, I will be copying this down! Thank you.
Kellogg’s, as well as some of the other name brand cereals are so expensive. That’s the main reason my family limits our purchases of Kellogg’s brand stuff. A lot of store brands are just as good, but a quarter of the price.
My wife doesn’t like me buying Raisin Bran Crunch because it’s so expensive. And the alternatives at stores like Aldi is just as good as the original.
I went from eating cereals and sugary breakfast stuff to eggs, sausage/bacon, toast and fruits. Way more satisfying.
Even with eggs being so expensive right now, they’re still a better buy than cereal. And speaking of nostalgia, I tried some lucky charms awhile back…they were nasty, nothing like I remembered. Plus I felt sick and sleepy all day. Even my teenage boys prefer eggs or breakfast burritos to cereal.
Not only much cheaper if you think about it but much healthier. Also it feels like you’re getting more for what you paid for (If you know how to cook)
Personally, I stopped eating it for a time because I became more nutrition-conscious. It wasn’t that cereal had components I didn’t like - it does sometimes, like excess sugar, but there are still varieties that minimize this if it’s a priority for you - but that cereal was often missing things I realized I needed, like protein and various micronutrients. But then eventually I noticed companies suddenly had protein-rich cereals on the market (and the heavily micronutrient-fortified kind also emerged on my radar, though those have been around for years) except at this point I’ve learned to cook and experimented with a lot of alternative, easy, healthy, breakfasts so going back to a cereal-heavy breakfast menu is just unlikely. My tastes, skills, and practices changed. 🤷♀️
I still totally appreciate having fortified minimal-sugar cereal on hand for occasional consumption but I’ll never go back to my old cereal breakfast dominance. I can make so many delicious things now it’s hard for cereal to compete.
People don't really buy these cereals now because of all of the bad press regarding their bad and toxic ingredients. Also, the high sugar content. People are wiser now thanks to all of the information out here and are prioritizing their health more than previous years when these cereals were really popular.
Mostly they don't buy it because they are priced ridiculously high along with milk.
@@MrThe1234guy They said they had cereal and water combo. That'll be interesting 🤢
Well you really can’t go wrong with the more wholesome cereals like Bran and Corn Flakes. Something based in vitamins and nutrients. And of course eat a few bowls, not a pallet. The wall of nonsensical coloured flavoured what nots really puts me off, but keep it simple guys.
isn't all cereal was containing BHT that proven to cause cancer?
no wonder there are ton of young people getting cancer these day,
those people consume the cancerous ingredient for 20 years straight
No. People are not wiser. If they were, they would have thrown away Dr. Kellogg's food philosophy long ago. They would have disposed of the notion that food is either bland/disgusting and healthy or delicious and bad for your health long ago.
Kellogg has declared war on the American family through cost-prohibitive pricing, coupled with an inferior product. They must think there's gold dust in this box of rigid corn derivatives and preservatives they foist upon us. As far as I'm concerned, Kellogg can use their cereal for shipping peanuts. Perhaps that would make them more worth the price.
Beautifully spoken!
The insane price of cereals is what made me stop buying!! (or that is the main reason)
As well as the fact that the boxes have shrunk as well! So now you are paying more money for less of the product. Its a rip off.
I love the announcer's voice. Y'all should have her do more stuff.
her S's pierce my ears, she needs to chill and back up from the mic a little
I like it that she doesn’t end every sentence like a question. That valley girl lilt is so annoying.
Truth is these cereals are not Food. They may be entertainment for the tongue, but they have little or no nutritional value. Often loaded with sugar, food colorings, and heavily processed. Americans are learning about nutrition on the Internet. As they become more educated they stop buying junk food and stop feeding it to their children.
That is great! Better Health! More Energy! Better Sleep! Weight Loss!
Back in the 70s I rem health advocates telling us the only healthy thing in cereal was the vitamins and that's why they put them in the cereal in the first place.
Anything with flour, wheat, grains or oats is always sugar and more than listed on the box due to the regulations. Best to eat something other than those things anyway
@@grandmalovesmebest blame your government for that. They got big bucks to promote a false study and never bothered to check its facts or background.
Post/Malt-O-Meal also produce a lot of store/generic brands which has helped their company improve.
Growing to had cereal everyday. But now as an adult with young kids I understand most cereals have way too much sugar and are really expensive. I offer my kids healthier breakfast options. When I go buy cereal isn't always the generic store brand because it's a better value financially.
I recently purchase cereal for the first time in many years (young niece and nephew visiting). I was shocked by the price $7 a box! (I recalled cereal being about $2-3). When the children left there was cereal left. My husband and I tasted it. The lucky charms was the texture of styrofoam and tasted of chemicals while the cinnamon toast had a cardboard texture and tasted of dirt. We threw it away and decided the kids would have to do without on their next visit.
You have a choice of what to eat and don’t allow any big corporation or government to tell you what to eat.
Very true. But we don’t have any choice about the subsidies that are funded by taxpayers that cause these foods to be such profit makers for companies.
so do you think
The real irony is that Kellogg's began with the whole idea of healthy food being all about nutrition and flavour be damned.
@@ladymacbethofmtensk896 Not quite, they made up things like the food pyramid to sell foods, they knew full well it was BS and sales. Just like the got milk ads were really to boost dairy sales. Not actual health.
Literally could’ve summed up this whole story with: “I refuse to pay $7 for a box of cereal I can buy generic for $4”. Especially with smaller and smaller portions.
Failed to mention GMO / glyphosate crops used in products in US but not in Europe where banned.
GMO is a scarey thought to the ignorant masses. Over use of sugar, especially fructose sugars is a way, Way, WAY bigger problem for most Americans!
Many GMOs have no effect on people, like making grains bug or drought resistant. Would you rather have a non-gmo grain that had chemical pesticides put on it, or a GMO grain that didn't need pesticides because of its bug resistance?
But either way it will be coated in sugar. Ya just have to be a smarter & more disciplined eater.
Growing upon in the 80s with 4 siblings, there were always 4 to 6 boxes of cereal in the house along with 2 to 4 gallons of milk. Time went by and sometime in the 90s we stopped eating cereal mainly because of the high content of sugar and realizing how unhealthy it is.
Morning cartoons+ Kellogg's were heaven to me growing up.
Yes, back when we could play outside adter breakfast and work off the sugar high. What to do for kids now who follow breakfast w video games on phones?
@@grandmalovesmebest Tell the kids to go outside and play before letting them have the phone...? It's not rocket science.
10 cents of value in a 10 dollar box of cereal. Same formula for Potato chips. This formula doesnt work anymore, too many shareholders gouging customers. Pretty sad when beef costs less per pound than cereal.
Too much sugar. You cant enjoy much without reaching your daily limit
Our family was always big on cereal. I'll never forget once when I had a sleepover when I was little and the girl I had over was in awe when I opened the cupboard where the cereal was when I asked her what kind she wanted. We always had around 6-7 boxes on the go in different flavors. She said at her house they only ever had one at a time. We ate it in the morning and often before bed as well! I like the sweet ones and the not sweet ones, just depends on my mood. It has gotten ridiculously expensive though.
Cereals, and foods in general, have decreased fat and replaced it w sugars. Not only has that decreased the flavor, it's increased doctor and dental visits, and turned former size medium ppl into multi large ppl!
Have you seen the price??? Over $6
I bailed on Heinz and Kellogg products when they shutdown facilities and left Ontario, Canada. These shutdowns impacted dedicated skilled employees and their families immensely.
When did they leave?
@@cocoaorange1 The plant in question started producing corn flakes in 1914. This same plant was closed in 2014, 2 days before Christmas
@@cocoaorange1 The Heinz plant opened in 1909 and also closed in 2014. Fortunately, French's took over production in the area back in 2015 :)
Because we learned cellulose, sprayed with sugar, and fortified with nutrients is not healthy. Even if it is actual cereal grains, the heavy use of sugar makes it a poor choice for a nutritious meal
Just the other day in the cereal aisle I was reading over the ingredients of all the cereals I always used to eat when I was younger thinking to myself, "is this even food" ?
It's not.
Def not
I think part of it is nobody wants to pay 7 dollars for a box of processed grain.
It’s filled with high fructose corn syrup and chemicals…consumers are sick and tired of being sick.
Wow, our kids grew up eating Frosties, CoCo pops, Sugar Puffs etc and never got fat.
It's not as if they're eating it all day but for breakfast.........
Tried a box of Sugar Puffs recently and they're horrible, no honey, sugar... bleugh!
Name brand cereal is too damn expensive!
i ate cereal occasionally as a little kid, but even then, my mum didn't let us have it often. i have never eaten any as a adult. nearly all cereals are just garbage - junk carbs loaded with sugar. i do eat carbs but prefer more wholesome and less processed ones, mainly vegetables. unsweetened cereal tastes like cardboard due to the very low fat content, and sugar is terrible for us. i don't see myself buying cereal at any point.
Workers: “We’re going on strike”
Kellogg’s: “Okay, you’re all fired”
*Kellogg factory catches fire*
Workers: *laughs in picket line*
Kellogg’s: “okay…no fire. Let’s strike a deal”
When laws were passed in the UK to make cereals whole grain and low sugar, a lot of my favourite cereals disappeared from the supermarkets.
Why would they? Its unhealthy sugary processed crap. Terrible stuff especially for children.
A homemade fruit smoothie or juice with kale taste better, healthier, and cheaper.
I quit buying Kellogg products 30 years ago because of the sugar, high fructose corn syrup, maltose dextrine, salt, and processed corn. Kellogg now markets a healthy ceral called musli, but I can find better products elsewhere that I know ate unadulterated. And, most stores in the U.S. don't carry Kelloggs Musli.
After having a surge in sales during a global pandemic, Kellogg couldn’t pass those profits onto their employees (who’d been striking for months) without government intervention? Just another reason to avoid their unhealthy cereals
I get difference cereals and eat at different hours, golden grahams, honey oat, and cheerios. Its hits the spot when gaming late at night lol. I use almond milk. I used to be able to drink cow milk as a kid from 1-2%, whole, etc. But in my 20s I became lactose intolerant except for cheese and ice cream. So cereal only gets the almond kind.
Same here 😂
Have you tried Lactaid which is lactose free milk? It's a little expensive, but tastes good.
@@elenaarman-tang7811 I have, it's alright , I drank that for a while before switching to almond.
what games do u play
@@plumpbird. DDLV
Kellogg’s Cereal isn’t even healthy, so much sugar (or corn syrup, really) and it costs like $7 a box now. I grew up on cereal but I won’t go back to eating it. I look at it like buying candy or chips, generally avoided and eaten occasionally as treats
Could it be the fact that it's a toss up as to which is healthier to eat, the _content,_ or the _box?_
Tubby is in denial if he things a bowl of cereal can still be a "nutritious" way to start the day. Who is he kidding? The guy is not exactly a paragon of health. That being said, who ever actually believed cereal is a "healthy" thing? I don't eat cereal for my health; I eat it to have something to eat, and admittedly, I'm rather nostalgic, where I like to enjoy a bowl for comfort and a taste of "the good ol' days." It's a shame Kellogg's wants to hold onto the "health" myth. Drop "health," drop "part of this complete breakfast." It's just sweet, fun food. I never believed that myth.
Reading a lot of the comments here, and a lot of it is true. Cereals have gotten expensive and boxes keep shrinking. Coupled with health-consciousness, it's not hard to see why sales have declined. And who wants to buy cereal from a company that's screwing their workers?
I do really like my Cheerios though. Even though everyone says that they taste like cardboard and are for old people, lol.
Phew. I was searching for a Cheerios comment. I give my toddler a handful in the morning often. I thought they were healthy?
Idk but every time I look at the list of ingredients for cereal it says the ingredients are bioengineered. No thanks!
They throw a bunch of crap in our food. We’re literally being poisoned by corporations. That’s why they don’t eat their own products.
as a kid and teenager, I always used to ask my parents to buy cereal for the morning. However, I think our education system is playing a role in cereal. I found it more convenient to just buy something on my way to school rather than wake up a half hour earlier to eat some breakfast that would make me hungry by 11 am. Most cereal we bought ended up collecting dust on top of the fridge. We also only ate cereal once or twice a week, since its sugar content is way too high.
The boxes are smaller.. But the price is higher.
Cereal is good as a snack.
I consider rather ironic that Kellogg's is suffering because of the same health consciousness that created it.
capitalism 😂
@@distantyahoo You really sound just like John Kellogg, albeit a less educated version of him, but his ideology on food clearly lives in you yet
All these brands are exactly the same: Sugar and carbs or carb with sugar.
I hope not. Kelloogs is diabetes in a box.
Do manufacturers/retailers expect to charge $5-$8 for a 20oz box of sugar and corn meal and not expect sales to be declining? Its not all inflation when you can still get the generic crap for much, much cheaper.
The ingredients include BHT. I checked several varieties and this was the case so I left them on the shelf.
Or are bioengineered
In my opinion it is taste . Cost is a problem too but it isn’t as much of an issue if you either order the cereal online , or buy in bulk stores like bj’s , Costco’s, ect. From my experience it’s only really 8-10$ a box if you buy them from like local supermarkets, or corner stores .
Health is a valid argument but the thing is many people will say this is unhealthy and then go eat other things throughout the day which is just as bad (in terms of health, and also in terms of cost) . For most people the simple answer is that they just prefer other foods.
TELL THE TRUTH: a decent box cereal is $7 at Ralphs. it's not even the ones the kids like to eat. it's Raisin Nut Brand. I don't know if that's Kellogg's...but it's all the same. It's good, but it's too high in sugar and not high in nutrition. it's a good, but expensive snack. NOT EVEN A BREAKFAST SNACK.
Candy full of pesticides, herbicides and petroleum byproducts banned in every other 1st world country.
I can’t buy Frosted Flakes. I will eat the entire bag in a few days.
Frosted Flakes is 100% GMO corn.
the sugar in Frosted Flakes is also GMO.
i love cereal, frosted flakes, is my fav, but im not paying 14.99 for an oversized box with two handfuls of sugary corn flakes. i learned to love oatmeal, with a little honey, maybe some blueberries? imma happy camper.
I eat a lot of cereal, but I almost always take low-sugar ones like unsweetened shredded wheat and then add my own sucralose to sweeten them. I think that Post has the best product line-up: I've especially been impressed by their innovative Premier Protein and Incredi-Bowl high-protein cereal brands. Many of Kelloggs' Kashi cereals are good, but I think that Post and General Mills are on average both healthier and more innovative.
yeah I mostly eat just bran flakes or unsweetened Cheerio type of cereals and sometimes add a bit of my monk fruit/erythritol sweeter.
@@daharos They don't taste good without sugar.
Sucralose is just as bad as sugar use monk fruit or stevia leaf extract
@@luisnavarro293 if you are going to eat sugar eat cane sugar. Screw the alternatives
I work for a grocery store. And I can assure you, people HAVE NOT stopped buying and eating Kellog’s.
Can they make it taste like it did back in the 80s 90s?
Not only did I start realizing of why I've been basically eating desert for breakfast along with all that food coloring.
The employee treatment made me choose to avoid Kellogg's. So, another company can go ahead and buy out Kellogg's and maybe they'll have some sense to not treat people that make things happen for them like crap.
these cereals should be also labeled as junk foods.
When I was a kid, the rule was that we could only get cereal where sugar WASN'T the first ingredient. People may not know this, but the order of the ingredients in the list is based on how much of that ingredient is in there. Most cereal has more sugar than anything else. I think at the time the only 2 cereals that didn't list sugar first were Life, and regular Cheerios.
When I was a kid i only ate cereal that had a prize in the box
Or a record cut out of a hit song.
@@thankthelord4536 in the 60's, I remember seeing baseball cards on the cereal box.
@@racerx4152 wait why is there no more toys in cereal boxes today?
@@plumpbird. money
Ultra processed sugary cereals is bad for you. I was taught as a kid that ultra processed sugary cereal is healthier than bacon and eggs. However I learned in 2019, that what I was taught is completely wrong and it’s actually the other way around. A cereal that is actually healthy is rolled or steel cut oats with fruit.