This article may contain affiliate links that Yahoo and/or the publisher may receive a commission from if you buy a product or service through those links. Breakfast may be considered the most ...
No matter how the world changes, one thing always remains constant: kids love to eat cereal for breakfast. There’s nothing like sitting down with a heaping bowl of your favorite colorful concoction at ...
You already know that sugary cereal isn’t exactly a healthy food. Still, a recent study finds that breakfast cereals marketed to kids may be getting even worse: sweeter, saltier and less nutritious.
A bowl of cereal with cold milk is the all-American standby for breakfast. Now, it's on the menu more than ever before, any time of day or night. Other WRAL Top Stories As a collegiate athlete, Kym ...
Last year, I wrote about a study that showed cereal companies market the cereals with the sugariest nutritional profiles to kids, essentially encouraging children to choose Froot Loops over, say, ...
Many now have more fat, sugar and sodium and less protein and fiber. Reviewed by Dietitian Annie Nguyen, M.A., RD A new study suggested that kids’ cereals have changed in nutritional value over the ...
The new Mystery Crunch cereal is an unidentified flavor that the Cap’n’s counting on you to discover. The cereal is made with ...
(Reuters) - While U.S. food companies are making healthier breakfast cereals for children, they're also aiming more ads for their unhealthiest products at kids, according to a report issued on Friday.
Cereal has had a spot at the breakfast table for decades, but longtime favorites such as Cheerios and Frosted Flakes are the exception, not the rule. So many cereals have come and gone that many ...
One of the top sources of added sugar in kids' diets is in their breakfast bowls. A new study shows that advertising drives sales of high-sugar... Families buy more sugary cereal if advertising ...
One of the top sources of added sugar in children's diets is in their breakfast bowls. A new study shows that advertising aimed directly at kids is driving sales of high-sugar cereals, and it's having ...
A new study suggested that kids’ cereals have changed in nutritional value over the last 15 years. Those cereals now have more fat, sugar and sodium, but less protein and fiber. Starting your day with ...