The History of Easter Candy
tanagra writes "The days are longer, the sun is brighter, the colors are rich, and the candies are pastel. It's springtime once again, and in celebration of its triumphant return we enter into the saccharin sanctity of a world filled with Marshmallow Peeps, Jelly Beans, and other well packaged bits of sweetness sure to bring about a sugar-induced coma. Join us as we delve into the delectable not-so-distant past of Easter candy and learn, among other things, just how Marshmallow Peeps came to rule the world."
//These days, nothing symbolizes Easter and Spring quite like your child throwing up marshmallow peeps. //
Not quite. Nothing symbolizes Easter quite like the empty tomb of Christ.
Frammin' on the jim-jam, frippin' at the krotz!
The American approach to celebrating Easter is noting more and noting less that a relatively recent invention with purely commercial roots. As it is with most of the holidays in the US, it is trageted at the most vulnerable group - children. It doesn't have any genuine historical or religious background. The idea of that nonsense "ruling the world" is hilarious at best.
I've never heard of Marshmallow Peeps. Are they our secret masters?
I've seen them on TV.
See, this is like when people in the states say "World series", they mean "United states of America series", or when they elect the "leader of the free world", they really mean "the leader of the United states of America".
When a magazine decides to publish a collection of the prettiest people in hollywood, they call them the most beautifull people in the world.
Or when they say "America" and they exclude two thirds of North America, as well as all of South America to only mean "United states of America".
It's the result of a very limited world view.
You can't take the sky from me...
Or perhaps it's just an author engaging in a bit of hyperbole to spice up his article?
Oh right, because he probably really did mean that marshmallow birds are actually ruling the United States, but he was so narrow-minded he thought that was the whole world.