Lifestyle

Billion-dollar products that are complete rip-offs

Every time you eat a Big Mac or play with𝓡 Lego, you’re supporting theft.

In fact, many of the world’s best known and most financially su♈ccessful products were ac🐼tually , who have mostly been consigned to the trashcan of history.

Whet༒her due to cutthroat business practices, poor marketing or just plain bad timing, here are some of the original products that were left behind by thౠeir copycats.

Hershey’s Kisses vs. Wilbur Buds

A Hershey's Kiss
iStockphotos

With annual sales of more than $10 billion, The Hershey Company is one of the world’s Big Four 𝐆chocolate 🔜makers alongside Mars, Nestle and Cadbury owner Mondelez.

But its signature product, the one that catapulted it to the top of the chocs, was actually a rip-off of a competitor. In 1894, a full 13 years before the Hershey’s Kiss was created, rival chocolate maker𒅌 H.O. Wilbur and Sons pioneered the design with its Wilbur Buds.

Samira Kawash, author of ““, said Hershey wasn’t the only copycat, and in 1909 Henry Wilbur even tried taking some of his imitators to court.

“Unwrapped, the Wilbur Bud was quite distin💯ctive — the bottom of the candy was molded into a flower shape and the letters W-I-L-B-U-R embossed in each petal,” Kawash .

“In contrast, the Hershey’s Kiss then as now isn’t much to look at. 🌠It is just a plain cone, its bottom flat and unadorned. While this perhaps was less lovely to behold, it did mean the Kiss could be manufactured ꦏby dropping the chocolate on a flat belt, rather than needing special molds.

“The 🌞decisive moment for the Hershey’s Kiss was 1921, when new manufacturing equipment allowed the foil wrapping to be automated. Wilbur, and many other small American chocolate concerns, eventually fell behind Hershey in the race for market share.”

Angry Birds vs. Crush the Castle

Angry Birds is one of the most popular mobile games of all time.
Angry Birds is one of the ☂most popular mobile games of 💃all time.iStockphoto

In 2009, California-based Armor Games released a free Flash-based browser game called “Crush the Castle.” The goal of the game was to kill the inhabitants of a castle using rocks or bombs flung from a catapult.

Just eight months later, Finnish game developer Rovio released Angry Birds fꦇor iOS, featuring the exact same gameplay — but in the place of rocks or bombs, players shot multi-colored birds to knock down fortresses created by green pigs, to retrieve their stolen eggs.

“Although it copied the concept of ‘Crush the Castle,’ Rovio improved everything about it: the user interface, the art, the music, the level designs,” Wired . “But it was still based on someone else’s gameplay insight.”

Released just when iPhones and the App Store were booming, Angry Birds was an instant smash hit. Today the games have been downloaded billion🐽s of times, while Crush The Castle is largely forgotten.

Things aren’t all rosy for Rovio, t🍸hough — after a much-hyped $2 billion float on the Helsinki Stock Exchange in September, as it struggles to convince players to pay for bonuses in its “freemium” g𝓀ames.

While Rovio faces accusations of being a “one-trick pony” unable to replicate the success of Angry Birds, owning one of the most successful game franchises of all time — complete😼 with movie and TV spin-offs — is not a ter꧑rible problem to have.

Big Mac vs. Classic Double Deck Cheeseburger

When McDonald’s franchisee J𒊎im Delligatti invented the iconic Big Mac in 1967, he was more than 30 years late to the party. Delligatti was inspired by rival chain Big Boy’s Classic Double Deck Cheeseburger, created in 1937 by Bob Wian at his Glendale, California burger stand, then known as Bob’s Pantry.

“My ideas were working out all right, but a hamburger joint is just a hamb🐷urger joint until it wins a reputation,” Wian .

“It takes an idea to give a place a reputation. I was always looking for just the right idea and then one night in February of 1937 some of the Glendale high school orchestra dropped in, as was their custom.”

“‘The usual burger, I guess,’ one ordered. Then another asked, ‘How about somet😼hing different, something special?’ I took this challenge and got to work. The guy raved and before long my special was pulling in trade.”

At the time , McDonald’s was lacking a signature burger. By 1968, it was on the menu in every restauran🍷t and soon accounted for nearly one-fifth of all sales. Today, roughly one billion are ಌsold every year.

, Delligatti conceded he didn’t come up with the idea of a double-decker burger. “This wasn’t like discౠovering the light bulb,” he said. “The bulb was already there. All I did was screw i🎃t in the socket.”

Snuggie vs. Slanket

Snuggies became such a cultural phenomenon that the company had a how at New York Fashion Week in 2009.
Snuggies became such a cultura🅘l phenomenon that the🌃 company had a how at New York Fashion Week in 2009.AP

One freezing night in 1998, while watching Late Night With Conan O’Brien, college student Gary Clegg decided to tear a hole in💜 his sleeping bag so he could keep his upper body warm but still channel surf during ad breaks.

And so the Slanke♚t — the first sleeved blanket — . It wasn’t until 10 years later, however, that the idea really took off. And unfortunately for Clegg, it wasn’t the Slanket .

“In 2008, Clegg found that his product, a blanket with sleeves, had been eclipsed by The Snuggie, another sleeved blanket,” John Deighton and Leora Kornfeld from Harvard Business Schoo﷽l on Snuggie’s “brazen” use of marketing to eclipse its rival.

Key to Snuggie’s success was a $13.5 million spend on TV infomercials. The bizarre two-minute ad became , “talked about on popular television programs such as ‘Oprah’ and ‘The Tonight Show With Jay Leno’” and inspiring hundreds of parodies on YouTube.

While Clegg was doing respectable sales, bringing in more than $9 million in 2009, the cheaper, lower-qualit𓂃y Snuggie went on to sell more than 30🌜 million units to the tune of .

“The problem with certain products is they sit in the back of a catalog, they sit on a retail shelf, and nobody knows about them,” Snuggie CEO Scott Boilen told Yahoo in 2013. “Through the maཧgic of TV and awareness, you can build 🀅a tremendous thing.”

Lego vs. Kiddicraft

A boy submerges himself in Lego blocks at an exhibition in 2017.
A boy subm🌳erges himself in Lego blocks at an exhibition in 2017.Getty Images

In 19🃏49, Danish company Lego b𝐆egan selling its now ubiquitous plastic building blocks, which were based in part on UK toymaker Kiddicraft’s Self-Locking Building Bricks that had been released two years earlier in 1947.

As the story goe♌s, Lego founder Ole Kirk Kristiansen after being given a handful of Kiddicraft bricks by a salesman showing off what the plastic injection-molding machine could do at a demonstration in Copenhagen.

Ther🍸e is much debate about . Kiddicraft founder Hilary Fisher Page’s invention was only patented in the UK, and it was common for toymakers at the time to copy each other’s designs.

In subsequent years, Lego — which went on to on in 1981 — would be involved in numerous intellectual property disput𝐆es in various jurisdictions, many hinging on whether “simple” shapes can be protected.

Regardless, Lego’s Automatic Binding Bricks went on to become a smash hit, while Kiddicra🧔ft faded into relative obscurity. In 1957, amid financial woes at his company and struggling to deliver on an ambitious new line of toys, Page comm🅰itted suicide.

While some folklore attempts to pin the blame for his death on Lego stealin🧜g his idea, Page’s widow told The Daily Mail in 1987, “He 💜died before Lego brought out the product in Britain. He didn’t know about it.”

Barbie vs. Bild Lilli

Barbie (left) was created in Bild Lilli’s image.
Barbie (left) was created in Bild Lilli’s image.Shutterstock; Getty Images

In 1956, American🎶 businesswoman aꦚnd co-founder of the Mattel toy company Ruth Handler was holidaying with her family in Switzerland when her 15-year-old daughter Barbara came across in a gift shop.

The Bild Lilli doll, a busty blond with a high ponytail and exaggerated curves, was created by artist Reinhard Beuthien for a comic strip that ran in German tabloid Bild-Zeitung during the 1940sꦚ and ’50s.

“Lilli dolls could b𒊎e bought in tobacco shops, bars and adult-themed toy stores,” author Robin Gerber writes in Barbie And Ruth. “Men got Lilli dolls as gag gifts at 🅠bachelor parties, put them on their car dashboard, dangled them from the rearview mirror, or gave them to girlfriends as a suggestive keepsake.”

Handler had previously suggested a sim☂ilar idea of an adult-bodied doll to her husband Elꦐliot, after seeing her daughter playing with paper dolls. She bought three Bild Lillis, and after a child-friendly redesign, Barbie made her debut at the American International Toy Fair in New York on March 9, 1959.

In 1962, Elliot attributed Barbie’s success to the “razor and razor blade” technique. “You get hooked on one and you have to buy the other,” he . “Buy the d💫oll and then you buy the clothes. I know a lot of parents hate us for this, but it’s going to be around a long time.”

German toymaker Greiner & Hausser sued Mattel and the companies settled out of court in 1963, with Mattel purchasing its copyright and patents the following year, . Greiner & ಞHausser🍎 collapsed in 1983.

Oreo vs. Hydrox

Hyrdox (right) was the original Oreo.
Hyrox (right) was the original Oreo.Shutterstock ; Amazon

It probably comes as no surprise that the Oreo ,𓄧 with the iconic combination of two chocolate biscuits with a crème filling generating more than $2 billion in annual sales across more than 100 countries.

Invented by snackmaker Nabisco and first sold at Ch🔜elsea Market baker🤡y in Manhattan on April 2, 1912, the Oreo was actually a direct rip-off of something called the Hydrox cookie, created by rival Sunshine Biscuits four years earlier.

Hydrox cookies were “probably doomed because 🌠they were called Hydrox”.

“The name, they thought, would be reminiscent of the sunlight that glimmered through it💛s factories, in addition to speaking to a basic purity of product,” he said.

“The truth was a bit more complicated, however. Intended to imply hydrogen anꦚd oxygen — the two chemicals that make up water — the result has a more clinical, less ✨roll-off-the-tongue convention to it, and instead evokes hydrogen peroxide, a chemical you probably don’t want to drink.

“And it didn’t help that that there was an existing Hydrox Chemical Company on the market, one that sold hydrogen peroxide … Long story short, it was 💖a weird name for a cookie.”

Despite Oreo being the imitator, Hydrox was frequently . The brand was discontinu🐽ed in 1999 after Sunshine was acquired by Keebler. In 2015, Leaf Brands purchased the abandoned trademark and relaunched “America’s first chocolate sandwich cookie.”