>>134915561>>134915585>>134915636Weetabix is just a breakfast cereal. It's basically just a reference to what you probably already see with Kellogg's Cornflakes and some form of "Start your day right with [brand]!"
>During the 1990s, the brand was advertised with the slogan "Have you had your Weetabix?', based on the idea that someone who had eaten Weetabix would be filled with unbeatable strength and energy, causing those who oppose them to flee out of self-preservation.It's not something that mid-late millennials and zoomers in the UK will understand.
There are ones that come with chocolate if you're sugar starved and fruit if you're sugar starved but want to pretend you're healthy.
It's about as nice as porridge. Its nutritional content is something that's hard to ascertain, because like any cereal, its advertising spiel starts with "Well it's low in salt and sugar!" which are things that foods shouldn't be high in to begin with. The iron, vit B, and folic acid seem to be fortifications rather than naturally present (saying this because most(?) breakfast cereals are bad for you without additives, like how unfortified flour makes for empty value bread), the calcium is probably solely from the cow's milk, but the fibre is going to be from the cereal grain.
Also I swear the captchas were changed subtly a few months ago because the noise keeps giving me really awkward letters.