Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/breakfast-cereals

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Flutie Flakes

Breakfast cereal named after football quarterback Doug Flutie


Breakfast cereal named after football quarterback Doug Flutie

Flutie Flakes is the name of a brand of frosted corn flakes breakfast cereal named for American football quarterback Doug Flutie.

The brand was created in 1998, after Flutie, then the starting quarterback for the Buffalo Bills, saw his popularity soar because of his scrambling, last quarter heroics and his impressive win–loss record. A large portion of the profits made from sales of Flutie Flakes were donated to the Doug Flutie Jr. Foundation for Autism, created in honor of Flutie's son who has Childhood disintegrative disorder, a very rare severe late onset form of autism spectrum disorder. The goal of the foundation is to create awareness of autism and to seek a cure.

PLB Sports and Entertainment (PLBSE) of Pittsburgh was hired to oversee marketing, product development, packaging, and sales. The cereal was originally made by Jasper Foods, a private-label producer. Initially, PLB Sports intended to produce just 50,000 boxes, but wound up selling more than 3 million. When the millionth box came off the production line in December 1998, it was put up for auction online and was sold for over $1,400.

Flutie Flakes remained popular in the region even after Flutie was controversially benched for Rob Johnson.

Four box designs of Flutie Flakes were featured. The first edition is red and features two images of Flutie in blue Bills uniforms. The second edition, released in 1999, is blue with a picture of Flutie in a red jersey and helmet (he had previously worn red jerseys with the Boston College Eagles football team, the New England Patriots and the Calgary Stampeders). The 2000 third edition is white, blue, and red and features Flutie in a white Bills uniform. After Flutie signed with the San Diego Chargers in 2001, the third edition photo was altered to match the Chargers' color scheme and was placed on top of a navy, yellow, and white design. Additionally, the 2001 box reads "Super-Charged" above the Flutie Flakes logo, replacing the "Collector's Box" text that is featured in the three Buffalo editions of the cereal.

In 2008, Flutie Flakes were re-introduced for a limited time commemorating the 10-year anniversary.

Other products

The 1998 and 1999 editions of Flutie Flakes were also complemented by Flutie Flakes Chocolate Bars. The candy bars feature Flutie Flakes cereal inside milk chocolate. After being chosen to the 1999 Pro Bowl, the second edition of the chocolate bar featured a new color scheme and honors the accomplishment by making a special collector's edition of the treat.

Flutie Fruities are a brand of fruit snacks

Each edition of the cereal came with product offers on the reverse. Fans could mail in to purchase t-shirts, teddy bears, footballs, ball caps, and even CDs featuring Flutie's own band, The Flutie Gang.

PLB Sports has produced cereal brands for other celebrities, mostly football players (as of 2020, it produces branded cereals featuring JuJu Smith-Schuster, Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, Tyler Herro, Aaron Jones, and the late The Joy of Painting host Bob Ross, along with a line of mustards endorsed by Ed McCaffrey and sauces endorsed by Stefon Diggs). It previously produced branded cereals for baseball and hockey players. Of the various product lines PLB Sports has released, Flutie Flakes has been the longest-running, with the Allen cereal, Josh's Jaqs (a red-and-blue fruit ring cereal), being the only other to last at least three cycles. PLB founder Ty Ballou, a self-professed Pittsburgh Steelers fan, has acknowledged the debt he has to Bills Mafia for keeping his company solvent.

Controversy

Flutie Flakes became the subject of a minor controversy in January 1999 when Miami Dolphins head coach Jimmy Johnson poured Flutie Flakes on the ground and invited his team to stomp on it after defeating Flutie in a playoff game; as the product was created to help individuals with autism, Flutie was upset that Johnson would use it in such a manner. Johnson issued a public apology.

References

References

  1. "Ex-Pats, BC QB Flutie to re-release Flutie Flakes » Sports » SalemNews.com, Salem, MA". Salemnews.com.
  2. (1998-11-23). "FLUTIE FLAKES ARE SCORING BIG IN BUFFALO, NEW ENGLAND".
  3. "Cereal sensation Flutie Flakes return for 10th anniversary".
  4. (26 January 1999). "Flutie Looms Tall as a Fund-Raiser for Children's Charities".
  5. steve b.. (July 2011). "Worst Moments In Bills History, No. 20: Rob Johnson Over Doug Flutie". Buffalo Rumblings.
  6. (3 December 2019). "Flutie Flakes will be back into the...".
  7. (2019-12-03). "A breakfast renaissance: Flutie Flakes returning after 20 years".
  8. (24 December 1998). "Flutie Flakes Scoreboard: 1 Million Boxes and Counting".
  9. Roe, Jim. (2012-02-27). "Justin Verlander Aims for Number One in Cereal Sales: A Fan's Take - MLB - Yahoo! Sports". Sports.yahoo.com.
  10. [https://plbse.com PLB Sports & Entertainment] retrieved September 12, 2020
  11. Veronica, Nick. (2022-08-17). "Josh Allen enters rarefied air with third edition of Josh's Jaqs cereal".
  12. "CNN/SI - 1998-99 AFC Wild Card - Buffalo at Miami - Dolphins hold off Flutie, Bills for 24-17 wild-card win - Saturday January 02, 1999 09:17 PM". Sportsillustrated.cnn.com.
  13. Jason Plautz. (2012-04-11). "11 Athletes Who Had Their Own Cereals". Mental Floss.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Flutie Flakes — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report