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PostPosted: Wed Jun 13, 2018 11:39 am 
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His autobiography is required reading for any Caucasian sports fan who wants to start to understand the struggles which the post-Robinson ballplayers endured. The frustration and resentment just seeps out of the pages, but in a sympathetic manner.

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 13, 2018 11:46 am 
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badrogue17 wrote:
beni hanna wrote:
I can't think of a candy bar or coffee maker named after the guy. He was simply consistently great and walked as far as I knew walked away.

Fucking Gen Y’ers

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Come on Brogue. I am an old guy. If I'd a smoked at 10 I may have seen an ad with Aaron. Right Guard...should have seen that one.

https://www.candyfavorites.com/blog/candy-history-oh-henry/

Candy History, Candy News
Candy History: Oh Henry
September 19, 2013 by Jessica Prokop
oh-henry-vintageThe Oh Henry Bar is a straightforward, delicious candy bar with a somewhat complicated history. As opposed to Snickers that was named after Forrest Mars’ beloved racehorse, no one is 100% certain where the name for Oh Henry came from.

Theories abound but one thing that almost everyone agrees upon is that this is a delicious candy bar and has been for close to 100 years. And no, this candy bar is not named after the baseball great Hank Aaron.

Spark your curiosity? Read on…
Lore has it that the name was derived from that of a randy young man who made frequents visits to the original manufacturers – the Williamson company – less for sugary sweets and more to flirt with the eye candy who worked on the assembly line. This leaves us to assume that the young man’s name was — you guessed it — Henry. But certain proof eludes us.

Perhaps a more credible theory is that the candy bar was named after the owner of the now defunct Peerless Candy company. The owner’s name was Tom Henry and in a vainglorious move, created the Tom Henry Bar. It was a short-lived venture as he sold the rights to the candy bar in 1920 to the Williamson Candy who changed the name to Oh Henry.

oh-henry-candy-bar-history

Oh Henry was also one of the first examples of “guerilla marketing” as an employee of Williamson Candy Company was determined to make the Oh Henry Bar famous. Lacking the funds to launch a full frontal Madison Avenue advertising campaign, this wily salesman had bumper stickers printed with only two words – Oh Henry. Curiousity didn’t kill the cat and this candy bar quickly made a name for itself.

Things remained much the same for close to 65 years until 1984, when Nestle acquired the rights to distribute Oh Henry in the United States. The candy bar is also sold in Canada but distributed by Hershey with the difference being a “chocately” coating as opposed to milk chocolate.


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 13, 2018 11:58 am 
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I reject this reality and substitute my own. It’s named after him.

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