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The story of Good Humor began in Youngstown, Ohio, during the infancy of the Roaring Twenties. Ice cream parlor owner and candy maker Harry Burt created a chocolate perfect for coating solid ice ...
Blech and his partner Jorge Fernandez kept hunting and found two more vintage Good Humor trucks, including a 1969 Ford F-100 and a 1949 Ford F-1 with a dry ice compartment to keep the product frozen.
Dante Bernard was doing his part to remember a local late confectioner who changed the ice cream landscape — and, while doing so, gave homage to the 1957 Jerry Lee Lewis hit song “Whole Lot of Shakin’ ...
Good Humor ice cream asked the Wu-Tang Clan's RZA to come up with a new jingle to replace "Turkey in the Straw," a ubiquitous ice-cream truck song with a racist past.
Good Humor no longer makes the Toasted Almond bar. Credit: From Good Humor/Stop&Shop Good Humor confirmed that its Toasted Almond bar, which has been around since the 1960s, is no more.
In 1976, Good Humor sold its fleet of vehicles to focus on selling its ice cream in grocery stores. The company did not create the controversial “Turkey in the Straw” or other truck jingles.
Sometimes mess-essity is the mother of invention.Consider the creation of the Good Humor bar. Back in 1920, a fellow named Harry Burt ran a lollipop factory and ice cream shop in Youngstown, Ohio.
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