#Bubble Gum

6 items

Video thumbnail — Big League Chew ad, 1986
Food 1980–present

Big League Chew

Shredded bubble gum packaged in a foil tobacco-style pouch — dreamed up in the Portland Mavericks bullpen by pitcher Rob Nelson and launched in 1980 with backing from ex-Yankee Jim Bouton. A staple of 80s and 90s little-league dugouts where kids mimicked the professional players they idolized.

Video thumbnail — 1991 Charms Blow Pop "That's a Blow Pop" TV Commercial
Food 1973–present

Charms Blow Pops

The two-stage candy: a hard sour shell you worked through to reach the bubble gum hiding in the middle. Sour Apple if you were smart, Blue Razz if you were right. The teacher's candy jar and the corner store were never without them.

Video thumbnail — Bubble Jug History and Review
Food early 1990s–mid-2000s (revived 2024)

Bubble Jug

A little flip-top plastic jug of powdered bubble gum you poured straight into your mouth. Made by Amurol — Wrigley's novelty-gum shop, the same one behind Bubble Tape and Big League Chew — Bubble Jug was an early-'90s corner-store dare: tip in too much powder and your whole mouth seized up.

Placeholder graphic for the Bubble Play ice-cream pop
Food 1994–1999

Bubble Play

Good Humor's baseball-glove ice-cream pop, with a bubble-gum "baseball" tucked in the mitt. A mid-'90s ice-cream-truck treat that paired a frozen cherry glove with a gumball prize — then quietly vanished.

Video thumbnail — Bubble Tape Commercial - For You, Not Them (1990)
Food 1988–present

Bubble Tape

Six feet of bubble gum coiled inside a plastic tin the size of a hockey puck, dispensed like a roll of tape. The whole pitch — "for you, not them" — was a license to hoard, and the move was to peel off a long ribbon and cram the entire thing in your mouth at once.

Video thumbnail — Bubblicious Commercial - 1993
Food 1977–present

Bubblicious

The soft square chunk of bubble gum in the loud neon wrapper — huge flavor for about ten glorious minutes, then you reached for another piece. Launched in 1977 as American Chicle's answer to Bubble Yum, it spent the 90s as corner-store royalty with a flavor list that read like a slushie machine.