Mars brings Marathon name back in UK as nostalgia rises for retro sweets

September202024
A picture


Depending on your age and resistance to change, potentially it never went away, but 34 years after the shock Snickers rebrand the Marathon bar is making a comeback in the UK.The decision to drop the British name for the treat caused uproar back in 1990 and some diehard fans have been complaining about it ever since.So, with this nostalgic audience in mind, Mars has announced it is making a “special Marathon retro edition”.The confectionery company said the revival was to mark a milestone for its UK business.“We’re excited to bring back the Marathon bar branding for a limited period,” said the senior brand manager Steve Waters.

“It’s a great way to celebrate over 90 years of Mars making chocolate in the UK.We hope fans of Snickers, who remember when it was called Marathon, will enjoy picking it up in store.”The Snickers brand is actually the much older of the two, with the bar – nougat topped with caramel and peanuts and encased in milk chocolate – first going on sale in the US in 1930.According to Marathon lore, the company chose a different name for the UK launch because of concerns that Snickers rhymed with “knickers”.The Marathon era ran from 1967 until 1990, when Mars decided that it wanted universal names for all its products, so it changed the by then established brand name to match its American cousin.

Whether you are team Snickers or Marathon there is no doubt that it is a nostalgic reference that ages you.In one episode of the hit TV series Unforgotten, a Marathon wrapper in a victim’s pocket was seen as a big clue that they might have been dead for a long time.Sometimes companies underestimate the depth of loyalty consumers have for their brands, with, for example, last year’s decision by Nestlé to axe the 60-year-old Caramac bar met with dismay.However, the tale brought hope for fans of other defunct chocolate bars and biscuits (Nestlé also recently shelved the Breakaway) as come the summer it was back in stores.Calls for its return were “heard loud and clear”, said Lisa Butterworth, the chocolate classics brand manager for Nestlé UK & Ireland, with the limited run giving people the “opportunity to savour and stock up on Caramac”.

Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionIt is not the first time that the Marathon name has been revived, with Mars also producing a limited edition several years ago.This time round the bars are being sold exclusively in the supermarket chain Morrisons.
technologySee all
A picture

Google Pixel 9 review: a good phone overshadowed by great ones

Google’s cheapest Pixel 9 offers almost everything that makes its top-flight sibling one of the best smaller phones available, cutting a few key ingredients to price match Apple and Samsung.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.The Pixel 9 costs £799 (€899/$799/A$1,349) shaving £200 off the asking price of the stellar Pixel 9 Pro while sitting above the excellent value sub-£500 Pixel 8a from May

September192024
A picture

British MPs and international organisations hacked on X

British politicians and international organisations have had their accounts on X hacked on Wednesday night.MPs including Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary, and the Labour MPs Chris Elmore and Carolyn Harris all shared the same message on the social media site. Although quickly removed, the messages could still be read on TweetDeck, a dashboard used to manage accounts on X, formerly Twitter.The messages, which also included a lengthy code, said: “THIS IS HACKED ACCOUNT!!!! INTRODUCING HACKED ON SOLANA on each account we hack we publish the token address so we pump it and make profits together.”The message on the justice secretary’s account was posted at 7

September182024
A picture

All 23andMe board members but CEO resign over no adequate buyout offers

Seven of eight members of 23andMe’s board have resigned in yet another blow to the struggling genetics company. The CEO is now the only remaining member.The independent directors of the genetic testing firm said in a letter posted Tuesday that they were quitting the company’s board after not receiving a satisfactory buyout offer from the CEO, Anne Wojcicki.“After months of work, we have yet to receive from you a fully financed, fully diligenced, actionable proposal that is in the best interests of the non-affiliated shareholders,” said the seven directors, including the CEO of YouTube, in a letter to the company’s co-founder and CEO.In a memo to employees reported by the Wall Street Journal, Wojcicki responded: “I am surprised and disappointed by the decision of the directors to resign

September182024
A picture

Albanese government forging ahead with social media age restrictions despite Meta’s new Instagram teen accounts

The Albanese government is forging ahead with its plans for an age restriction on social media despite Meta announcing new restrictions for teens on Instagram, with the communications minister arguing children’s use of social media is unbalanced.On Wednesday Instagram announced changes to teen accounts, including giving parents the ability to set daily time limits for using the app, block teens from using Instagram at certain times and to see accounts their child is exchanging messages with and the content categories they are viewing.Teens under the age of 16 will need parental permission before any of the settings can be changed. Meta said the move had been planned for months, but the announcement came a week after the federal government announced plans to introduce legislation to parliament, by the end of the year, to raise the age children can access social media up to an as-yet-undefined age – likely between 14 and 16.The communications minister, Michelle Rowland, said the government welcomed the announcement, but “it does not negate the government’s intention to introduce legislation this year to mandate a minimum age for access to social media

September182024
A picture

Meta to put under-18 Instagram users into new ‘teen accounts’

Meta is putting Instagram users under the age of 18 into new “teen accounts” to allow parents greater control over their activities, including the ability to block children from viewing the app at night.The change will apply to new teen users but will also be extended to existing accounts held by teenagers over the next few months.Changes under the teen account setting include giving parents the ability to set daily time limits for using the app, block teens from using Instagram at certain times, see the accounts their child is exchanging messages with and being shown the content categories they are viewing.Teenagers signing up to Instagram are already placed by default into the strictest privacy settings, which include barring adults from messaging teens who don’t follow them and muting notifications at night.However, under the new “teen account” feature users under the age of 16 will need parental permission to change those settings, while 16- and 17-year-olds defaulted into the new features will be able to change them independently

September172024
A picture

Users of ‘throuples’ dating app Feeld may have had intimate photos accessed

Users of Feeld, a dating app aimed at alternative relationships, could have had sensitive data including messages, private photos and details of their sexuality accessed or even edited, it has emerged, after cybersecurity experts exposed a string of security “vulnerabilities”.Feeld, registered in the UK, reported soaring revenues and profits this month, thanks to millions of downloads from non-monogamous, queer and kinky users across the world.But while the app has gone from strength to strength financially – and attracted plaudits for its approach to sexuality – a British cybersecurity company claims to have uncovered serious failings in Feeld’s systems earlier this year.Feeld said it had dealt with the concerns “as a matter of urgency”, resolved them within two months and that it had not seen any evidence that user data had been breached.It did not know how long the vulnerabilities had existed before it was told about them in March by the London-based cybersecurity firm Fortbridge

September172024