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Touchdown Crunch is not free.

Ahhh, the first (real) post of 2009. I think I'll blow the milestone on Cap'n Crunch.

On a hot tip from a reader, I found myself paying the ridiculous $8 bridge toll to get to the nearest Wal-Mart over in Jersey, just for the chance to own the latest in an incredibly long string of Cap'n Crunch spinoffs. It's called Touchdown Crunch, and though it isn't even the first time our friendly captain has dressed as a football player, I still find the idea of football-themed Cap'n Crunch 100% insane.

Maybe it's because I can see the lie on Cap'n Crunch's face. He's sold out, and he knows that we know he sold out. Yet, there he is, grasping the pigskin and forcing a smile, silently wondering if he's crossed the invisible line that determines acceptable behavior for a naval hero with loose ties to pirates. It's not for me to say, but football has to come close to crossing that line.

The real problem is the cereal itself. The box boasts a "limited edition" inclusion of football-shaped green and blue pieces, but as you can see, they are decidedly NOT football shaped, looking completely like normal Crunchberries -- albeit blue and green ones. These cereal bits aren't even close to football-shaped. If I poured you a bowl and made you guess, you would never respond with "footballs." Never!

All told, we have a terrible mix: A theme that I don't care about, a totally nonfunctional special feature, and nary a plastic army man freebie to keep me occupied. Three strikes and I'm ready to kill Cap'n Crunch. The only reason I haven't is because I still appreciate what he did for me last month. But ol' Crunch can't ride that wave forever. If he screws up again, you'll be hearing about both of us on the evening news.

I was probably the only person on the planet who asked for the 25-page Free Stuff For Everyone guide this Christmas, but I'm glad I did. For years, I've been lamenting the loss of one of my favorite childhood books, titled 1001 Things Free. "Book" might be a strong word; it was only a "book" in the sense that it was made of pages and bounded together. Published annually at least until the early '90s, 1001 Things Free was always on my order form when I blew money on shit from the Johnson-Smith catalog.

Printed on phonebook-style paper, 1001 Things Free featured an enormous list of samples, doodads, pamphlets and novelties that were ours for the asking. All we had to do was send letters to random companies, chip in for the shipping and wait 6-800 weeks for our worthless baubles to arrive by mail. In the pre-Internet age, it was a terrific way for us shut-ins to pass the time. With diligence, I managed to get more mail than anyone else in my family, even if all it amounted to was horse stickers, half-inch magnets and sheets of paper that told me the proper way to collect seashells.

1001 Things Free was only the most popular in a fairly large series of books that rattled off random freebies. (If you're around the same age as me and liked ordering from grade school book clubs, you might remember a similar entity titled Free Stuff For Kids.) This "freebie guide" genre has largely gone extinct, due in no small part to the thousands of upstart websites that do the same thing, but in more up-to-date fashion. The shitty pamphlet shown above was published pretty recently, and seems to be one of the only freebie guides left that lives on honest to goodness paper.

While not as thorough as 1001 Things Free used to be, there's a fair amount of amazing crap to be found within the guide's 25 pages. Just from the photo above, you've got a chance to score everything from glow-in-the-dark dinosaurs to bug magnets -- and there's at least a hundred other offers just like those. I wouldn't spend the energy to pick this stuff up off the ground if I walked past it, but there's just something about getting random nonsense in the mail that will forever intrigue me.

Why do companies make these offers? Many reasons, and they have nothing to do with charity. For some, it's an opportunity to get you on their catalog mailing lists. For others, even the nominal shipping charge is enough for them to make a small profit, which is then multiplied by tens of thousands into a larger profit. (In the case of the glowing dinosaurs offer, we can assume them to be those flat, lightweight wall decorations that are usually sold in multi-packs. Assuming they send you two of them, the shipping cost will be less than half of the two bucks they're charging, and even after you factor in the cost of the actual dinos, they're pretty much ripping you off.)

This particular pamphlet has a few bad reviews on Amazon, and I can see why. The authors really stretched the idea of what people would consider a "freebie." In many cases, they simply tell you the URLs of food companies who include recipes somewhere on their websites. Still, if you dig deep enough, there's enough here to give your pen a busy afternoon. I'm sending away for around a dozen freebies tomorrow, and once some of 'em get here, I'll do a follow-up. Won't that be exciting?

As for the Advent Calendar, don't fret. I won't let 2008 (2009?) turn into 2002. We'll get there, and I'll figure out some way to turn this lateness into a positive thing for the story. I'm also hoping not to kill all of the site's December momentum just yet, so expect new blog posts pretty much everyday. Stay tuned; beware the crabs.

Posted by Matt on 01/01/2009. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 148 comments

Well, after today, the holiday season is over… sigh. Nothing is going on in this world till July… which is SUMMER MEGAPARTY! But… February should be a good month. My 16th birthday, No Way Out 2009 (coincedence that it’s in my home town? I think not!), etc. Then Wrestlemania, which should be awesome, and if I have a job, video games galore!
Now on topic, I’m SO temted to buy a box of that just to make $2,000,000 of that box 20 years down the road. Free stuff… they make “books” like that? Ah, Amazon. Got a $50 gift certificate there. Now Sonic Unleashed should be hear 800 weeks from now. Sweet.

Chestnuts roasted by Aaron @ 01/01/2009 8:23 PM


2002… I’m still waiting to find out what was in those last 3 boxes. Sure, one was a depressed Santa Clause who refused to come out, but the other two have kept me awake every single night these many years. Is it another length of fence so a square pen could be constructed? Perhaps a bunny, a sheep, or dare I dream it… a goat!? A RAKE?!?! I COULD PICTURE A RAKE SO CLEARLY IN MY HEAD!!!

I have gone and got myself worked up again, I’ll go take a Valium and come back later.

Chestnuts roasted by goblin22 @ 01/01/2009 8:34 PM


Holy crap. I just noticed the updated pics at the top of the blog. Is Clark Griswold Munrab?

Chestnuts roasted by Jack @ 01/01/2009 8:41 PM


I will continue to spout prophecies of doom for an overly-Lincoln-saturated Illinois. Until Matt starts deleting my posts. That said…
IF YOU LIVE IN ILLINOIS, GET TO A BUNKER OR NEAREST SAFE BUILDING- A GIANT LINCOLN-THEMED BLIZZARD IS APPROACHING!

http://www.lincolnbicentennial.gov/

Chestnuts roasted by PlantMonster @ 01/01/2009 9:01 PM


Oops, I meant Arcano. ^

Chestnuts roasted by Jack @ 01/01/2009 9:11 PM


Yay, you are back, and glad to see a review on something football related.

Hmm, holidays to cover? You could give this site a “Valentine’s Day” theme, turn it red and pink and put loads of hearts in. Have you ever reviewed all the way out there stuff they are now making for this holiday?

I remember growing up on the day, and giving “Valentines” to the entire class. And in elementary school, you could put ANYTHING on a Valentine. I remember that they used to print them with just about every cartoon character.

Chestnuts roasted by Tresjolie9 @ 01/01/2009 9:11 PM


I like football but not Cap’n Crunch, yeah, this promotion is lost on me as well. Bonus points for trying something new, though. (And I haven’t seen it at work yet – maybe it’ll come in this week, once we get rid of the last of the Christmas stuff…which is a depressing thought, really.)

And I say, how about a winter theme? Snowflakes, Frosty the Snowman, ice skating, hot chocolate with melting marshmallows. Matt can leave that up until Easter and not have to worry about it being done in a month.

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 01/01/2009 9:19 PM


Is anyone here going to see that 3D horror movie that comes out in mid-January?

Chestnuts roasted by Diego @ 01/01/2009 9:20 PM


JJWSpider- Here, we do celebrate the 6th. We have a cake with a little Jesus figurine in it. It is known as la
“Rosca de Reyes”, the Cake of The Kings. Whoever finds
the Baby Jesus has to do something good. On the 7th, we
will start taking down the Christmas decorations. Well,
we got Obama’s Inauguration and Valentine’s Day coming
up. Have any of the stores in your areas started putting
Valentines stuff up already anyone?

Chestnuts roasted by LoneStar76 @ 01/01/2009 9:22 PM


I happen to notice in the picture the “freebies” all required $2.00 S & H. Back in the day we’d write companies for free stuff and only cost would be a lousy stamp. In school we’d have contests who got the best free stuff. Most kids got things like candy bars in the mail, or a free snuggle fabric softner bear, other kids got keychains or charms. A few Kids wrote to a politician. I got a Model Space Shuttle from NASA! At the time I thought it for sure was going to win. But the winner was this kid who wrote to the HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS. They sent back a letter and 3 of those guys showed up in uniform and did a bunch of basketball skills in the gym! They looked like Giants to me as a kid lol.

Chestnuts roasted by Big D @ 01/01/2009 9:39 PM


Happy New Year all. Hope everyone had a good one.

I wasn’t able to find Christmas Crunch and I hate that bastard the Capn’ for making it so hard to get.

If I find this, which makes no sense what so ever no matter how hard you try to stretch it, I’m going to drown the Capn’.

With dirty looks.

Those damn coconut crabs are unsettling…

Chestnuts roasted by Darth Galvatron @ 01/01/2009 9:41 PM


LoneStar76-
If the Walmart aisles around here were any more pink, they would be mistaken for a cheap brothel.

Chestnuts roasted by PlantMonster @ 01/01/2009 9:41 PM


Where is the end indeed…

Not sure how Chevy is involved though.

Chestnuts roasted by Fungusmungus @ 01/01/2009 10:09 PM


HOLY CRAP.

It’s been a long time since I came here and was reminded of something from way back. But the free stuff book did it. I had a geeky hobby when I was a kid. Well, maybe not a hobby I just liked getting mail. I would send out for everything that would promise me a package, letter or pamphlet in return. Therefore, making our mailbox over-stuffed each and every day. Luckily when we moved when I was 15 none of the companies were able to forward the crap and my mother no longer had to leave a pile of mail on my bed each and every day.

Makes me miss real mail though.

Chestnuts roasted by kb @ 01/01/2009 10:43 PM


I need to hit up Walmart again for that cereal. They’ve taken lots of my money already, especially now that their Indiana Jones action figures are 2 for 6 bucks…what’s another 3?

Chestnuts roasted by Jerrod @ 01/01/2009 10:56 PM


LoneStar76 – That’s a pretty cool sounding tradition. I’m intrigued.

To this day I still love getting stuff in the mail. Even if you know what’s coming, there is still something exciting about having it arrive in a plain envelope/package and ripping it open. However, this discussion has now reminded me of a Ziploc Transformers mail-away offer from around 1986 when the animated movie came out. Does anyone recall this offer? I believe they had iron-ons in the boxes or maybe this is what you had to send away for?

As for the Candy Confection Holiday – my local Wal-Mart had half of the Christmas aisle filled with Valentines Day treats on Boxing Day! Amazing how they seem to be moving out all holiday merchandise earlier and earlier.

Chestnuts roasted by jjwspider @ 01/01/2009 11:24 PM


I just saw Clark Griswold’s image. Is he Dinosaur Dracula?

January is slow here too. February gets reaaly exciting
here. We have a huge Washington’s Birthday Celebration
here with 2 parades, a carnival, an air show, and a
festival celebrating the jalapenos.

Chestnuts roasted by LoneStar76 @ 01/01/2009 11:32 PM


I guess I’m in the minority here when I say I ABSOLUTELY LOVE January! Yes it’s the month of my birthday, but I also love it BECAUSE nothin happens. A month of nothin is GOOD after the Choas that is the Holiday season. Although I join rev in sayin that August is my least fav month. Not a fan of blazin heat.Plus, it’s a borin month. True nothin happens in Jan. but that’s a good thing because down time after choas season is VERY much needed! Down time in aug. is’nt because at that time of year excitement is needed. I’d still buy that version of Cap,N.Crunch if I saw it.
Matt: Gettin free stuff is fun! :)

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 01/02/2009 12:26 AM


I hate January because it’s when I suddenly realize how much the “I’ll do it after Christmas” to-do list is going to cost. Does anyone else feel like they wake up in January with a hangover and a list of stuff to do stapled to their forehead? In our house, everything that comes up near the end of the year – from haircuts to vet visits to home repair – gets put off “after Christmas”. Then when Christmas is over we realize it’s going to take months to actually DO all of that stuff.

January to me is like a great big fat Monday. Bah.

Chestnuts roasted by jazzy @ 01/02/2009 12:42 AM


If anyone is going to watch Barry Manilow on Entertainment Tonight, watch out because he
is going to Rick Roll everyone who watches
the show.

It turns out that there is a sequel to A
Christmas Story. It was made years later.
It’s called My Summer Story. The only
people to reprise their roles in this
film are Tedde Moore (Miss Shields,
Ralphie’s teacher) and Jean Shepard (the
Narrator). I think I saw it on Comedy
Central some years ago. Keiran Culkin
(Macaulay’s brother) plays Ralphie.

Oh, Happy New Year Waiterbot.

Chestnuts roasted by LoneStar76 @ 01/02/2009 1:32 AM


I love that the posting icons are now Starmen. And considering the Mario RPG kick I’ve been on lately, these vaguely resemble the starfish from Super Mario RPG.

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 01/02/2009 1:36 AM


My school’s librarian told us how to ask for free stuff from… some place when I was in 2nd grade.
6-8 weeks later, every kid in my class was walking around with flower and bug stickers on their folders and packages of sunflower seeds that we all sent away for and got at around the same time.
Would crabs eat Capn’ Crunch? They’ll definately eat apples.

Chestnuts roasted by Lucky @ 01/02/2009 1:37 AM


Invader Norbert, I agree I love the Starmen too.
“Starman, star bright, give us pasta power, give us pasta might! It’s Koopa Bopping time!”, said the Dic Cartoon incarnations of the Mario Bros.

Chestnuts roasted by Lucky @ 01/02/2009 1:40 AM


I didn’t even notice the starmen. Awesome.
Invader Norbert I got Super Mario RPG from my Virtual Console Secret Santa (from Penny Arcade Forums) a few weeks back. I’ve only been able to put a few hours into it, though. Plus, I got CHRONO TRIGGER for Christmas, and I was also playing Final Fantasy VI.

Damn, 3 RPGs at once. This is not a good idea.

Chestnuts roasted by Cameron T. @ 01/02/2009 1:55 AM


Invader Norbert: I LOVE Super Mario RPG! Barely anyone I know has ever played it, which is a shame, because it’s one of the best games I’ve ever played. And when it came out it was way ahead of its time. I remember being blown away by the graphics and the fact that it wasn’t a side-scroller.

Chestnuts roasted by jazzy @ 01/02/2009 2:16 AM


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