Gutbrain Records


Wednesday, 05 September 2007

I've just read the Wikipedia entry on Ding Dongs. Fascinating. The best part is this paragraph:

The Ding Dong was first marketed by Hostess in 1967. The name was given to coincide with a television ad campaign featuring a ringing bell. The company marketed the snacks on the East Coast as Big Wheels, to avoid confusion with the Ring Ding, a similar (and pre-existing) treat by Drake's Cakes. The names were consolidated in 1987, when a short-lived merger of Drake's with Hostess' parent company (then Continental Baking Company) briefly resolved the Ring Ding/Ding Dong conflict. When the merged company broke up, however, Hostess was forced to cease, once again, using the Ding Dongs name in areas where Ring Dings were available. The compromise sound-alike name King Dons lasted until Interstate Bakeries Corporation, which had recently merged with Hostess' parent company, bought Drake's in 1998. The Hostess product is now sold under the name Ding Dongs throughout the United States. However, the snack is still sold as the King Don in Canada.

I will fall alseep tonight thinking of the phrase "Ring Ding/Ding Dong conflict".

The Wikipedia entry includes some television shows and movies in which Ding Dongs have been mentioned but fails to include the Ding Dong motif in Bill Griffith's Zippy the Pinhead. It's been going on for decades! Maybe I'll edit the entry to include this.