Everyone here saying their ice cream sucks and they never buy it, I don’t think you realize Magnum and Cornetto are this brand. Those are the world’s best selling ice cream brands
I mean sure, it’s not the greatest ice cream on Earth, but it’s not meant to be. It’s the cheapest ice cream I’m prepared to eat. If it’s cheaper than Walls, it’s probably not even legally allowed to be called ice cream.
Much better than Nestle. Cornetto chocolate cone taste like Chocolate. Nestle chocolate taste like ice with a little milk colored brown.
Wall’s Ice Cream. Good Humor in the US.
Thank you. And wow.
❤️Free market competition❤️
There are other brands you know…
We found it! The one thing Belgium and Portugal have in common!
I don’t get it.
Unilever‘s ice cream brand has various different names in different countries.
I think most of it comes from buying already established brands and then rebranding them, but keeping their name.
Do you mean it’s not called “Helados Holanda”???
I’m thinking escort services?
Nope, ice cream company.
It says Algida on my country (correctly), but back when I was a kid it was Eskimo. It might be a false memory but I also remember Langnese for a short time, but it could have been the foreign TV channels (Pro7, RTL, Sat1).
Oh, this is handy, I specifically avoid these guys.
Not for ethical reasons or anything, just I had these weird frozen meatballs from them when I was like 7 and nearly vomited myself to death in a holiday caravan’s bedroom before collapsing unable to move for an hour, conscious the entire time and simply unable to make my body respond. 1/10, not reccommended.
Wait, they make meatballs? I thought it was just ice cream
Just looked it up because I too was unsure of this. There is a Wall’s meats, but they are no longer related. Unilever owns Wall’s ice cream but they sold off Wall’s meats in 1994. The logos are different and the meats one only operates in the UK. So this map is useless for avoiding dodgy meatballs.
Very interesting. Does anyone know if it’s a case of them buying out local brands in a country, trying to make their brand sound like a local one or a mix of the two?
IIRC, they bought out local companies, and gradually replaced their branding with the corporate standard.
From what ive heard, their original name was bought when they moved to their second country so they just use whatever name, altho I have no source for that
Inmarco (Инмарко), not Algida in Russia.
But yeah, this is curious.
Streets in Australia.