Imperial margarine

Imperial is a brand of spread previously distributed by Unilever, currently marketed by Upfield. It is best remembered for television commercials in which a person who recently ate something with Imperial margarine would suddenly have a crown appear on their head (accompanied by a four note fanfare). However, Imperial's product today is not margarine. It contains just 53% vegetable oil, while margarine by definition must be 80% (or better) vegetable oil. Imperial is "spread."[1][2][3][4]

History

In 1956 Lever Brothers (Unilever) developed Imperial, a margarine which had a lower melting point and which contained butter.[5][6]

In 1980 Michael Angus became chairman. The bulk of Lever's losses stemmed from Imperial margarine. So in 1981, Angus shut down the outdated Hammond, Indiana, plant that made Imperial and farmed out the work to contractors able to produce it more cheaply.[7]

In 2018, Unilever sold its margarines and spreads to Upfield.

The commercials inspired sporadic cultural references throughout the years. The commercials were spoofed in episodes of The Carol Burnett Show, Green Acres, and Parker Lewis Can't Lose. On a 1982 episode of Georgia Championship Wrestling, wrestler "Rowdy" Roddy Piper gave an interview wherein he mentioned Imperial Margarine by name in the course of mocking his opponent.[8][9]

gollark: I know what they do in businesses, I mean I don't understand what they would do in your hypothetical government, how this relates to centralised supply chain management, and why this would involve *less* power.
gollark: Yes, I know what HR stands for, I just have no idea what you mean by that in context.
gollark: What?
gollark: Not as much as it would be if one entity just did *all* economic planning.
gollark: It's not an infrastructure problem, it's a this-is-computationally-very-hard problem, and a horribly-centralizes-power problem, and a bad-incentives-to-be-efficient problem, and a responding-to-local-information problem.

References

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