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Fruit Stripe

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Fruit Stripe is an artificially and naturally flavored fruit chewing gum notorious for its strong yet fleeting flavor. It proudly claims to be the only gum with painted-on stripes, and is packaged in zebra-striped wrapper temporary tattoos.

Contents

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Fruit stripe gum commercial from 1991


History

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The "Five Flavor Gum" was invented by James Parker and launched in early 1969 as an extension of the Beech-Nut gum line. Farley's & Sathers Candy Company acquired Fruit Stripe in 2003 from The Hershey Company. Farley's & Sathers merged with Ferrara Pan in 2012, forming the Ferrara Candy Company.

Flavors

Two five-flavor packs of Fruit Stripe are currently produced:

Fruit Stripe Fruit Stripe Gum Candy Classics The Candy Baron
  1. Chewing gum: wet 'n wild melon, cherry, lemon, orange, and peach smash
  2. Bubble gum: cherry, grape, mixed fruit, lemon, and cotton candy

In the late 1970s, there was a chocolate version called Chocolate Stripe.

Mascots

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A character known as the Fruit Stripe Gum Man promoted the product as late as 1967; he merely consisted of an anthropomorphic gum pack with limbs and a face. The Stripes Family Animals, which included a zebra, tiger, elephant, and mouse, were also used in advertising and featured in a coloring book and plush toys.

However, a cartoon zebra named Yipes has outlasted the other characters to become Fruit Stripe's long-standing, sole mascot. Wrappers contain tattoos of Yipes inline skating, skateboarding, playing baseball, hang gliding, playing basketball, bicycling, snowboarding, surfing, playing soccer, playing tennis, and eating grass. In 1988, Yipes was made into a promotional bendy figure.

Yipes is shown prominently on Fruit Stripe gum packaging. Yipes is often shown as a sports player, playing basketball or soccer on the gum's packaging.

Promotions

In 1996, Fruit Stripe gave five cents from the sale of each Jumbo Pack and Variety Multipack to the World Wildlife Fund, totaling up to $100,000, for the preservation of endangered animals and their habitats.

Some packs of Fruit Stripe gum include temporary tattoos.

The Beastie Boys compared their band's "flavor" to Fruit Stripe on their song "B-Boy Bouillabaisse" on the album Paul's Boutique.

In the feature film Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, Macaulay Culkin's character, Kevin, gives a piece of Fruit Stripe gum as a "tip" to a bellboy (played by Rob Schneider).

In the television sitcom King of Queens, Season 6, Episode 6, "Affidavit Justice," Doug mentions that his shirt looks like a package of Fruit Stripe gum. A similar joke is made in an episode of the sitcom That '70s Show by Donna regarding Eric's shirt.

The Peepers brand of reading glasses offers a colorful set of "Fruit Stripe Gum" frames.

In "Play It Again, Brian", a Season 6 episode of the animated television series Family Guy, a cutaway makes reference to the short-living flavor of Fruit Stripe.

Fruit Stripe

References

Fruit Stripe Wikipedia