#Mascot

5 items

A vintage Borden-era Elmer's School Glue bottle with the orange twist cap and Elmer the bull on the label
Trends 1947–present

Elmer's Glue

The white bottle with the orange twist cap and the bull on the label — the glue of every 90s classroom, and the raw material of two sacred rituals: peeling dried glue off your palm, and the (never-quite-true) legend of the kid who ate paste.

Video thumbnail — 1992 Fruity Pebbles Commercial - Rappin' Barney
Food 1971–present

Pebbles Cereal (Fruity & Cocoa)

Fruity Pebbles and Cocoa Pebbles — the crispy-rice cereal fronted by Fred and Barney, with commercials built entirely around Barney's schemes to swipe Fred's bowl. "Yabba-Dabba-Delicious!" and, inevitably, an outraged "Barney! My Pebbles!"

Video thumbnail — 1996 Pringles "Once you pop, you can't stop" TV Commercial
Food 1968–present

Pringles

The saddle-shaped chips stacked in a tall cardboard tube, guarded by the mustachioed face of Mr. P. Technically not even a "potato chip," Pringles were engineered to stack perfectly — and the 90s "Once you pop, you can't stop" campaign made the can a snack-aisle icon.

Video thumbnail — Sonic The Hedgehog 2 Commercial (Sega Genesis)
Video Games 1991–present

Sonic the Hedgehog

Sega's lightning-fast answer to Mario arrived in 1991 as the face of the Genesis console war. Speed was the point—looping green hills, golden rings scattering on impact, and an attitude that made the 16-bit rivalry feel personal.

Video thumbnail — Recovered: 1994 Trix Cereal Commercial — "Silly Rabbit, Trix are for Kids!" [Rare VHS Rip]
Food 1954–present

Trix (Cereal)

The neon-bright fruity cereal and its eternally denied mascot — "Silly rabbit, Trix are for kids!" The Trix Rabbit spent decades scheming for a single bowl and never got one, making him one of advertising's most beloved lovable losers.