In 1948, Earl Tupper introduced a new brand of airtight containers called Tupperware that allowed for food to be preserved and stored for longer periods of time. No one really cared. The revolutionary ...
To herald the opening of his unprecedented new theme park in 1955, Walt Disney broadcast a series of popular television shows. In March, the segment "Man in Space" touted one of Disneyland's most ...
Few things evoke mid-20th-century suburban life more than Tupperware parties. Though these home get-togethers were designed as a way to sell new products, they also doubled as social events where ...
The year was 1954, and Tupperware was having a party. The company’s new Osceola County headquarters was dedicated by famed Tupperware executive Brownie Wise during a five-day “jubilee,” which also ...
Tupperware Ladies and Tupperware Parties became an icon of midcentury suburban living and an early form of multilevel marketing. Above, a party sometime in the 1950s. Getty Images About eight years ...
When American Horror Story, the Museum of Modern Art, and Napoleon Dynamite pay homage to an invention, you know it’s made a cultural impact in a big way. Tupperware has a staying power that most ...
Tupperware parties are a blast from the past if there ever was one. If you were wondering whether Tupperware still exists, and if they even have those parties anymore, the answer is an emphatic yes.
Tupperware Brands Corp. is famous in the U.S. for plastic storage containers, but it’s increasingly known in China for a much different product: $1,000 water filters. The success of the Nano Water ...
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