![]() I do think that some Jazz figures intended to receive a second door sticker, (as evidenced by the blank sticker sheet), probably did not - in error, as there are many known errors in the G1 history - and it is plausible that these were among the early inventory at ARS. The first shipments may have been received weeks or months before the promotional materials were finalized and the promotion went live, and those shipments may have contained transitional stock. One has to consider that Purina Ralston was receiving some bulk shipments of Jazz toys from Hasbro, and then packing them into mailer boxes at Fuesser Road. ![]() The flipside is this double-doored Jazzes tend to attract 'matching' ephemera - the manual/sticker/box/bio - as collectors try to piece them together into sets that contain all the definitive hallmarks. Basically nothing less than a sealed mailer being opened up could prove this beyond a doubt. It is impossible to rule out type 4, but also extremely difficult to verify as they look would like standard late Jazzes without the bio/mailer box. The types that were received via the Ralston Purina promotion where mostly type 3, with a few types 2 potentially received early on. Blank-door Jazz Figure (factory applied blank sticker)/Blank Sticker Sheet Blank-door Jazz Figure (double stickered - opaque blank paper sticker is placed over the existing factory applied sticker/Blank Sticker Sheet as aboveĤ. Regular Martinii Jazz Figure (probably slipped through the cracks)/Blank Stickers Sheet (indicates Hasbro intent to change, note these blanked stickers can be both trimmed and untrimmed)ģ. ![]() Regular Martinii Jazz Figure/Porsche Martinii Sticker SheetĢ. Unused Cookie Crisp jazz with paperwork (minus bio).ġ. Used Cookie Crisp Jazz with double-stickered door, blocked out manual, blank applied stickers, mail-away bio. There are plenty of US packaged non-Martinii Jazzes out there for a toy that was not part of the 1986 USA assortment, meaning the change to remove those references must have occurred mid 1985. By the time the promotional mock-ups and commercial were cut, Jazz already had the 'Martinii logo' removed from the promotional artwork, photographs and video.Ĭookie Crisp Jazzes developed their own special variant status among collectors, namely that they usually have all references to 'Porsche' and 'Martinii' (sic) missing from the factory applied door sticker and sticker sheet, (and the manual had these references blacked out with marker as well) which led to a kind of collector's rule that all blank-door figures are Cookie Crisp, when in fact these blank-door figures were also regularly found on toy shelves as well. (ARS), a full-service promotional fulfillment and coupon management company set up by Ralston Purina and operating out of 711 W. The fulfillment of the 'mail away' toys was by American Redemption Systems Inc. All in all, the promotion ran for less than a year, beginning sometime in late 1985, likely post September, and ending on. Without a Transformer brand cereal to provide context for a toy redemption promotion, up to 25,000 figures were earmarked to be given away for free via other cereal brands - Cookie Crisp and Cracker Jack. In the end, the cereal did not launch, and I speculate that Ralston Purina had already committed to an unknown wholesale purchase of Jazz figures that it now needed to clear. It was intended to be only a purchase offer of Jazz. However, the instant win prize claim was not present on this mock up. The promotion is also seen on boxes of the unreleased 'The Transformers' chocolate cereal, with mock-ups dated 9.26 (1985), that was probably the cereal originally intended for the promotion, as a tie-in to launch the product.
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