Cap'n Crunch

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For information on the phone phreak called Captain Crunch, see John Draper.
A box of the Cap'n Crunch breakfast cereal, featuring the Cap'n Crunch character.
A box of the Cap'n Crunch breakfast cereal, featuring the Cap'n Crunch character.

Cap'n Crunch is a sweetened corn and oat breakfast cereal manufactured by Quaker Oats Company. Quaker Cap'n Crunch was introduced in 1963 and has become one of the most successful sweetened ready-to-eat cereals ever launched. Pamela Low, while working for the Arthur D. Little consulting firm developed the flavor for Cap'n Crunch cereal based on a recipe that her grandmother, Luella Low, used to serve.[1]

The mascot of the cereal is a character named Cap'n Crunch, whose full name is Cap'n Horatio Magellan Crunch.[2][3] The cereal pieces resemble yellow, slightly-flattened boxes, intended to look like treasure chests.

Contents

A Cap'n Crunch Crunchberries version of the cereal was created in 1967 and also contained spherical pieces in red, intended to represent berries (in the '90s, additional colors of the Crunchberries [blue, purple, green] were added to the mix. All are flavored the same, regardless of color). Peanut Butter Crunch would follow two years later in 1969; according to sales charts, this version was the most successful. Two more editions were issued in the '70s (Vanilly Crunch and Jean LaFoote's Cinnamon Crunch) but were later discontinued. A special edition named Christmas Crunch was first released for the 1988 holiday season and contained Cap'n Crunch with red and green crunchberries in a green box with the Cap'n wearing a Santa Claus hat. This variety is now only available currently in certain regions of the United States. Another special edition was Oops! All Berries containing nothing but the strawberry flavored crunchberries and none of the corn squares. And yet another version was Galactic Crunch featuring space shapes, which has also been discontinued. Another variation has recently come out entitled "Choco Crunch", a cereal containing the traditional squares but, brown and chocolate flavored rather than yellow.

For over four decades, TV commercials have made Cap'n Crunch a Saturday morning icon. In 1963, the first Cap'n Crunch commercials aired, featuring four children and the canine Sea Dog, who sailed with the Cap'n on his ship, The Good Ship Guppy. The crew was tasked with keeping the cereal safe from the Cap'n's nemesis, Jean LeFoote, the Barefoot Pirate. The characters also appeared in a comic book included in Cap'n Crunch cereal boxes.

Jay Ward is credited with the creation of the Cap'n Crunch character and his Jay Ward Studios produced the first Cap'n Crunch commercials. The commercials have historically used basic cartoon animation; however, Vinton Studios produced a claymation ad during the '80s. [4]

Daws Butler was the original voice of the Cap'n and continued in the role until his death in 1988. Other characters in the original ads were voiced by Ward Studio veterans June Foray, Bill Scott, and Paul Frees.

In modern TV ads, Cap'n Crunch is often seen riding his ship through a wall as the whistle blares. He often comes in the middle of a predicament and uses his cereal to solve the problem at hand by "Crunch-a-tizing" it. Another reference to the cereal's crunchiness, a regular theme used to feature Cap'n Crunch battling off the evil "Soggies" who attempted to "sog out" the taste of his cereal. In a recent ad, Jean LeFoote returns, this time trying to steal the Captain's cereal recipe.

Cap'n Crunch was the most popular children's cereal from 1965-1971 when Post released its fruit-flavored crispy rice cereal known as Fruity Pebbles.[citation needed] It took 6 years for Crunch to dominate the segment again, releasing a new flavor of the crunch berry ingredient, grape.


  • In the movie Benny and Joon, Joon mixes a breakfast drink out of peanut butter, peanut butter Capt N Crunch and milk.
  • The dispute over the cereal cutting peoples' mouths was referenced when, on the television show, Family Guy, Cap'n Crunch was seen asking a Don to whack Count Dracula, due to the fact that, "That son-of-a-bitch has been spreading lies! My cereal does not cut the roof of your mouth!"
  • Singer Melissa Etheridge has mentioned the cereal several times during concerts, including proclaiming "it's the kind of love that makes you sustain your life on Capt N Crunch and orange juice!" and, in reference to ended relationships "Aww, there's the Capt N Crunch we ate together! Boohoo!".
  • Christian rockers Newsboys reference Cap'n Crunch in their 1996 hit "Breakfast": "When the toast has burned and all the milk has turned, and Cap'n Crunch is waving farewell...When the Big One finds you may this song remind you that they don't serve breakfast in Hell." [5]

Main article: John Draper
Cap'n Crunch Bosun whistle CA 1971.
Cap'n Crunch Bosun whistle CA 1971.

In early 1971, a Vietnam War veteran named John Draper (later nicknamed Captain Crunch, Crunch or Crunchman) discovered with his friend Joe Engressia that a toy whistle that was, at the time, packaged in boxes of the cereal could be easily modified to emit a tone at precisely 2600 hertz, the same frequency that was used by AT&T long lines to indicate that a trunk line was ready and available to route a new call. This would effectively disconnect one end of the trunk, allowing the still-connected side to enter an operator mode. Experimenting with this whistle inspired Draper to build blue boxes, electronic devices capable of reproducing other tones used by the phone company. He was sentenced in October 1971 to five years' probation for toll fraud.

In Neal Stephenson's 1999 postcyberpunk novel Cryptonomicon, over 11,000 words are used to describe a character's Cap'n Crunch eating habits.

  1. ^ Gregg, John P. “Love the Guilty Pleasure of Cap'n Crunch? Thank New London's Pam Low”, Valley News, 2007-06-03, p. 1, Retrieved on 2007-06-10.
  2. ^ http://www.capncrunch.com/faq.aspx
  3. ^ The middle name "Magellan" was revealed in the May 2007 issue of the magazine Saveur.
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ http://www.seeklyrics.com/lyrics/Newsboys/Breakfast.html
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