Moo & Oink
Moo & Oink was a South Side Chicago, Illinois-based grocery store chain and wholesaler that catered to the inner-city community and south suburbs. Originally named the Calumet Meat Company, the company was renamed Moo & Oink in 1976.
It became well known for its odd late-night television commercials that ran through the 1980s and mid-1990s, usually featuring dancing people in cow and pig costumes. The cow and pig mascots were quietly phased out of the ads in the late '90s, but would continue to make public appearances, albeit sporadically. The commercials often featured an eerie hip-hop jingle, that started off with a raucous: "Moo and Oink! Moo Moo Moo!" and eventually ends with a well-known sign-off "Moooooooooooooo & Oink!". In the 2000s, the jingle was heavily shortened down to just the opening verse and sign-off. In 2005, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler sang the opening verse of the Moo and Oink jingle on the "Weekend Update" portion of Saturday Night Live in order to prove to Scott Podsednik that they were native Chicago White Sox fans.
Moo & Oink is also famous for its Chicago-style hot links and hand-cleaned chitlins.
In April 2010, they revealed a new company logo, replacing the classic cartoon-ish cow and pig logo with a logo featuring animated but realistic looking animals.
All Moo & Oink stores closed in 2011, after the company went into Chapter 7 bankruptcy, though there was interest in buying and resurrecting the company.[1] By the end of the year, the brand and trademark were sold to Best Chicago Meat. The stores remained unsold.[1]
See also
- Celozzi-Ettleson Chevrolet
- Eagle Insurance
- Empire Today
- Victory Auto Wreckers
- Peter Francis Geraci
- Walter E. Smithe
References
- ^ Iconic Chicago meat store closes after 150 years. Chicago Tribune. October 1, 2011. Retrieved on October 1, 2011.
External links