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==Product description==
==Product description==
[[File:Logo happy meal english.JPG|right|150px|thumb|Old Happy Meal logo, English]]
[[File:Logo happy meal english.JPG|right|150px|thumb|Happy Meal logo, English]]
[[File:Logo happy meal japanese.JPG|right|150px|thumb|Happy Meal logo, Japanese. Text reads "Happy Set" (''Happī Setto'') in [[Katakana]]]]
[[File:Logo happy meal japanese.JPG|right|150px|thumb|Happy Meal logo, Japanese. Text reads "Happy Set" (''Happī Setto'') in [[Katakana]]]]
[[File:logo happy meal spanish.jpg|right|150px|thumb|Happy Meal logo, Spanish. Text reads "Happy Box" (Latin America)]]
[[File:logo happy meal spanish.jpg|right|150px|thumb|Happy Meal logo, Spanish. Text reads "Happy Box" (Latin America)]]

Revision as of 19:13, 22 June 2018

"Cajita Feliz" box

A Happy Meal is a form of kids' meal sold at the fast food restaurant chain McDonald's since June 1979. A small toy is included with the food, both of which are usually contained in a red box with a yellow smiley face and the McDonald's logo. The packaging and toy are frequently part of a marketing tie-in to an existing television show, film, or toy brand.

Product description

Happy Meal logo, English
Happy Meal logo, Japanese. Text reads "Happy Set" (Happī Setto) in Katakana
Happy Meal logo, Spanish. Text reads "Happy Box" (Latin America)

The Happy Meal contains a main item (typically a hamburger, cheeseburger, or small serving of Chicken McNuggets), a side item (french fries, apple slices, a Go-Gurt tube, or a salad in some areas), and a drink (milk, juice, or a soft drink). The choice of items changes from country to country, and may depend on the size of the restaurant.

In some countries, the choices have been expanded to include items such as a grilled cheese sandwich (known as a "Fry Kid"), or more healthy options such as apple slices, a mini snack wrap, salads, or pasta, as one or more of the options.[1]

History

In the mid-1970s, Yolanda Fernández de Cofiño began working with her husband operating McDonald's restaurants in Guatemala. She created what she called the "Menu Ronald" (Ronald menu), which offered a hamburger, small fries and a small sundae to help mothers feed their children more effectively while at McDonald's restaurants.[2][3] The concept was eventually brought to the attention of McDonald's management in Chicago. The company gave the development of the product to Bob Bernstein, founder and CEO of Bernstein-Rein, an agency that has counted McDonald's as a key client since 1967. Bernstein came up with the Happy Meal.[4]

In 1977, the McDonald's restaurant owner clients who regularly met with Bernstein were looking for ways to create a better experience for families with kids. Bernstein reasoned that if kids could get a packaged meal all their own instead of just picking at their parent's food, everybody would be happier. He had often noticed his young son at the breakfast table poring over the various items on cereal boxes and thought, "Why not do that for McDonald's? The package is the key!" He then called in his creative team and had them mock up some paperboard boxes fashioned to resemble lunch pails with the McDonald's Golden Arches for handles. They called in nationally known children's illustrators and offered them the blank slate of filling the box's sides and tops with their own colorful ideas from art to jokes to games to comic strips to stories to fantasy: whatever they thought might appeal to kids, at least 8 items per box. Inside the box would be a burger, small fries, packet of cookies and a surprise gift. A small drink would accompany these items. Bernstein named it The Happy Meal and it was successfully introduced with television and radio spots and in-store posters in the Kansas City market in October 1977. Other markets followed and the national roll-out happened in 1979.

Award for creation of Happy Meal packaging
Bronze Happy Meal presented to Robert Bernstein crediting him with creation of the Happy Meal

Bernstein received Trademark #1136758 (Serial #73148046)[5] for his idea in 1977 which he assigned to his valued client, McDonald's Corporation, on June 10, 1980. In 1987 at the annual McDonald's marketing meeting, he was recognized for his accomplishment with a full-size bronze replica of the Happy Meal box with the following inscription:

McDonald's Happy Meal 10th Anniversary 1977-1987
To Robert A. Bernstein, Bernstein-Rein Advertising
Thank you for bringing the Happy Meal, a bold idea, to the McDonald's System.
Your insight and conviction truly has made McDonald's a fun place for children for the past 10 years!
McDonald's Corporation
September, 1987

Often, the Happy Meal is themed to promote a current family-oriented movie. The first such promotion was the Star Trek Meal, to promote Star Trek: The Motion Picture in December 1979. The packaging used for the Star Trek Meal consisted of various images and games related to the film, as well as a comic strip adaptation of the film. Consumers had to buy numerous meals in order to complete the set. In 1992, McDonald's withdrew their range of Happy Meal toys for the film Batman Returns, after complaints from parents that the film was unsuitable for children.[6]

In July 2011, McDonald's announced plans to make Happy Meals healthier, including the addition of apples. The redesigned meals will contain a smaller portion (1.1 ounces) of fries, along with the apples. On February 4, 2013, McDonald's announced that Fish McBites, fried Alaskan pollock, the same fish used in Filet-O-Fish, would be added as an entree, which would run until March, intended to coincide with Lent.[7]

In 2014, McDonald's added a mascot to Happy Meals in the United States, known as Happy. Happy was originated from France in 2009. Reactions were mixed, with criticism that the mascot's design was too frightening.[8]

Happy Meal toy

Happy Meal toys in Indonesia

The Happy Meal did not introduce the practice of providing small toys to children. When the Happy Meal started in 1979, the toys back then were a McDoodle stencil, a McWrist wallet, an ID bracelet, a puzzle lock, a spinning top, or a McDonaldland character-shaped eraser. In Canada, the promotion prior to the Happy Meal was called the "Treat of the Week", where a different toy was available free on request each week.[9] This promotion continued after the Happy Meal was introduced in 1979. Happy Meal toys have become increasingly elaborate in recent years. While initially they were little more than a cheap plastic trinket such as a Frisbee or ball, they have gradually been replaced with increasingly sophisticated toys, many of which are a tie-in to an existing TV show, film, or toy line.

Bans

On November 2, 2010, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed a law requiring that children's meals sold in restaurants must meet certain nutritional standards before they could be sold with toys, to reduce triggering of childhood obesity. The law, urged in part by an increase of childhood obesity in the United States, would allow toys to be included with children's meals that have less than 600 calories and less than 640 milligrams of sodium, contain fruits and vegetables, and include beverages without excessive fat or sugar. The board overturned the veto of Mayor Gavin Newsom on November 23 to pass the law.[10] The law has been ridiculed by the satirical news program The Daily Show.[11] McDonald's circumvented the ban by charging 10 cents for the toys.[12]

A class action lawsuit seeking to ban Happy Meal toys in California was filed in 2010. The suit was dismissed in April 2012.[13]

In Chile, the Happy Meal, along with kids' meals at other fast food chains, will no longer include free toys, in response to a law banning such toys in a move to curb obesity.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sliced apples sold to McDonald's, Burger King and grocery chains recalled for Listeria". CBS News. August 13, 2012.
  2. ^ "La señora del Mac menú". El Periodico. 1 August 2006. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014.
  3. ^ Pellicer, Lilliana. "Señora Presidenta". Prensa Libre. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2011. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ "Creator of the Happy Meal Says KC Makes Him Happy". NBC Action News. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  5. ^ United States Patent and Trademark Office. Trademark #113678. , 1977. Web. 7 Mar 2011
  6. ^ Olly Richards (September 1992). "Trouble in Gotham", Empire, pp. 21—23. Retrieved on 2008-08-14.
  7. ^ Choi, Candice (2013-02-04). "McDonald's to put 'Fish McBites' in Happy Meals". Yahoo! News. Retrieved 2013-02-04.
  8. ^ Tuttle, Brad (23 May 2014). "Why McDonald's Is Loving the Creepy New Mascot Everybody's Bashing". time.com. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
  9. ^ Staff. "25 of the Coolest McDonalds Happy Meal Toys from the 1980s - TechEBlog". Retrieved December 10, 2016.
  10. ^ "San Francisco Overrides Mayoral Veto, Bans Happy Meals with Toys". CNN. November 23, 2010. Retrieved December 15, 2010.
  11. ^ "San Francisco's Happy Meal Ban". The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. January 3, 2011.
  12. ^ "McDonald's finds a way around San Francisco's 'Happy Meal ban'". NBC News. November 30, 2011.
  13. ^ "McDonald's Can Keep Happy Meal Toys, Court Rules". ABC News. 2012-04-06. Retrieved 2012-06-12.
  14. ^ Cuen, David (4 August 2012). "Chile bans toys in children's meals to try to fight obesity". BBC. Retrieved 28 August 2017.