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As Coco the Monkey, you’ve been persuading us to eat Coco Pops cereal in TV ads since 1986. Kids love you for your cheeky cartoon capers promising “chocolatey fun”.
The ad for Coco Pops Granola (pictured), which aired in the UK in January, showed a group of cartoon animals standing on each other's shoulders as they tried to knock a coconut out of a tree.
Fans of Kellogg’s cartoon characters Coco the Monkey and Tony the Tiger will be pleased to read that the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has overturned a ruling that stopped the characters ...
Cartoon characters like Tony the Tiger and the Coco the Monkey have won a reprieve, as regulators have overturned a decision to stop them from advertising "healthy foods" on children's television.
A Coco Pops advert has been banned after it was broadcast between back-to-back episodes of a cartoon aimed at young kids. The Advertising Standards Authority has rapped Kellogg's for the Coco Cops ...
The ASA found Kellogg's promoted a Coco Pops product during a Mr Bean cartoon, likely to have been seen by children. It also ruled KFC advertised a Mars product on a phone box by a school.
A poster encouraging children to eat Kellogg’s Coco Pops as an after-school snack did not break advertising rules, a watchdog said today. The advertisement, featuring cartoon character Coco the ...
While at the time the advert aired Coco Pops original cereal was considered a HFSS product, the spokesperson added that reformulation efforts mean that it now meets the “strict nutritional profiling” ...
CARTOON characters such as the Paddle Pop lion and the Coco Pops monkey should be banned from packaging because they encourage children to eat unhealthy foods, an obesity expert says.
The Coco Pops White Choc flavour is available for $5.40 from Woolworths now ... 'Whether it's over breakfast watching Saturday morning cartoons or as a fun afternoon snack, ...