Butterfinger

For other uses, see Butterfingers (disambiguation). For the Canadian band, see Butterfinger (Canadian band).
Butterfinger
Product type Confectionery
Owner Nestlé (since 1990)
Country United States
Introduced 1923
Related brands Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, Clark Bar, 5th Avenue
Previous owners

Curtiss Candy Company (1923-1964)
Standard Brands Inc. (1964-1981)
Nabisco (1981-1985)
RJR Nabisco (1985-1988)

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (1988-1990)
Tagline Crispety, crunchety, peanut-buttery!
Website butterfinger.com

Butterfinger is a candy bar created in 1923 in Chicago, Illinois by Otto Schnering, which currently is manufactured by Nestlé. The bar consists of a crispy core of creamy peanut butter blended with sugar candy in chocolatey coating.[1] Butterfinger has become known for humorous marketing and a roster of memorably funny spokespersons, including Bart Simpson, Seth Green, Erik Estrada, Rob Lowe, and Jamie Pressly, its most recent and first female spokesperson. Other memorable ad campaigns include counting down the end of the world or BARmageddon, with evidence such as the first-ever, QR-shaped crop circle in Kansas, a Butterfinger comedy-horror movie called “Butterfinger the 13th,” the first interactive digital graphic novel by a candy brand starring the Butterfinger Defense League, and several attention-grabbing April Fool’s Day pranks, including the renaming of the candy bar to “The Finger.”[2]
With 2010 sales of $598 million, Butterfinger has become increasingly popular and has typically ranked as the eleventh most popular candy bar sold in the $17.68 billion United States chocolate confectionery market between 2007 and 2010.[3]

History

The Curtiss Candy Company was founded near Chicago, Illinois, in 1922 by Otto Schnering, using his mother's maiden name. He invented the Butterfinger candy bar in 1923.[4] The company held a public contest to choose the name of this candy. In an early marketing campaign, the company dropped Butterfinger and Baby Ruth candy bars from airplanes in cities across the United States as a publicity stunt that helped increase its popularity. The candy bar also was promoted in Baby Take a Bow, a 1934 film featuring Shirley Temple.

In 1964, Standard Brands Inc. purchased the Curtiss Candy Company. It then merged with Nabisco in 1981. RJR Nabisco was formed in 1985 by the merger of Nabisco Brands and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. In 1988, RJR Nabisco was purchased by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. in what was at the time, the largest leveraged buyout in history.

In 1990, Nestlé, a Swiss multinational food and beverage company, bought Baby Ruth and Butterfinger from RJR Nabisco. When measured by revenues, Nestlé is considered the largest food company in the world.[5][6]

Nestlé advertising campaigns

Two of the slogans currently used to advertise the candy bar are "Follow the Finger" and "Break out of the ordinary!" Prior to these, Bart Simpson, Homer Simpson, and other characters from Fox's The Simpsons, appeared in numerous advertisements for the product from 1988 to 2001, featuring the slogans "Nobody better lay a finger on my Butterfinger!", "Bite my Butterfinger!", and "Nothin' like a Butterfinger!"

Butterfinger, for unknown reasons, terminated a long-standing advertising contract with The Simpsons in late 2001. Reacting to this, the January 2002 Simpsons episode "Sweets and Sour Marge" included a scene depicting Butterfinger bars as nonflammable; the character Chief Wiggum says, "Even the fire doesn't want them."

In February 2003, in the episode "Barting Over", Bart claims he does not recall being in any commercials in the past, and then eats a Butterfinger just as he did in the commercials. In the November 2014 episode Simpsorama, a crossover with Futurama, Butterfingers are used to lure the Bart creatures into Madison Cube Garden.

On April 1, 2008, Nestlé launched an April Fool's Day prank in which they claimed that they had changed the name of the candy bar to "The Finger", citing consumer research that indicated that the original brand was "clumsy" and "awkward". The prank included a fake Web site[7] promoting the change that featured a video press release. When the joke was revealed, the website redirected visitors to the fictitious "Butterfinger Comedy Network".

In 2009, a new advertisement for Butterfinger was produced that appeared to be a homage to the earlier The Simpsons commercials. In 2010, Butterfinger revived its "Nobody better lay a finger..." slogan as "Nobody's gonna lay a finger on my Butterfinger."[8]

In 2011, a comedy horror film entitled Butterfinger The 13th, was made to promote the product.[9] In April 2013, an official announcement via the Twitter account of The Simpsons stated that the "Nobody better lay a finger" advertising campaign featuring Bart Simpson would be returning.[10]

Variations

Butterfinger Snackerz
Butterfinger Snackerz candies

Use by other manufacturers

A part of Edy's Fun Flavors line (Dreyer's west of the Rocky Mountains and outside the U.S.). The product is vanilla ice cream with a peanut butter swirl and bits of the Butterfinger candy bar in it.

Grocery store Kroger has a flavor in their "Jammed" line called Peanut Butter Candy Crunch that is a peanut-flavored frozen dairy dessert with Butterfinger chunks and a peanut butter swirl whose taste resembles that of the Butterfinger candy bar.

German GMO controversy

Butterfinger was withdrawn from the German market in 1999 due to consumer rejection when it was one of the first products to be identified as containing genetically modified ingredients (GMOs) from corn.[15][16] Butterfinger sales ended after a successful campaign by Greenpeace pushed Nestlé to remove the product from German supermarkets.[17]

Similar products, other manufacturers

See also

References

  1. "Butterfinger". Nestlé USA. Retrieved July 14, 2016.
  2. "Butterfinger Celebrates 90ish Years Of Awesome-Ness" (Press release). Glendale, CALIF.: Nestlé USA. January 1, 2013.
  3. Chocolate Confectionery Brand Shares 2007–2010 (Report). Euromonitor International. 2010.
  4. Sanders, Dennis (1982). The First of Everything. Dell Publishing. p. 21. ISBN 978-0385282833.
  5. 1 2 "Nestlé's Brabeck: We have a "huge advantage" over big pharma in creating medical foods", CNN Money, 1 April 2011
  6. "Nestlé: The unrepentant chocolatier", The Economist, 29 October 2009. Retrieved 17 May 2012
  7. "The Finger Bar website". Archived from the original on 2008-07-02. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  8. Butterfinger Ad Brings Back Slogan
  9. Butterfinger the 13th at the Internet Movie Database
  10. "The Simpsons on Twitter: "Bart Simpson reunites with @Butterfinger in Nestle's "Nobody Better Lay A Finger" campaign. Follow the reunion on Twitter! #LoveAtFirstBite"". Twitter.com. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  11. Chris McNamara (February 18, 2009). "Butterfinger with caffeine generates some buzz".
  12. Butterfinger Archived November 10, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. at snackmemory.com
  13. "Butterfinger Cups". Nestle. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  14. Jenn Harris (2014-01-15). "Butterfinger cups to launch with Super Bowl ad". LA Times. Retrieved 2014-01-23.
  15. Jung, Alexander (December 26, 2005). "What Can a Nation Do? Taming the Globalization Monster". Spiegel Online. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  16. "Jugendliche bei Greenpeace" (in German). Greenpeace. May 15, 2003. Archived from the original on 2009-01-01. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  17. K. Fahlenbrach, M. Klimke, J. Scharloth, L. Wong (2012). The Establishment Responds: Power, Politics, and Protest since 1945. Springer.
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