I'm the great great grandson of the guy who founded Vlasic Pickles. I only found that out because I came back from a vacation to Pennsylvania wearing a Heinz T Shirt. My mother was looking at me like, "Uhhhh you don't know what you're doing by wearing that shirt."
Side note: was also the first person (to my food knowledge) to make his factory to have electricity and also he was the first man to push the USDA through Teddy Roosevelt. Because of all the dangerous ketchups people were making, thus food safety, we're glad that this man is into health concerns back in that day.
You gotta give Heinz credit for their promotional merchandising - the pickle pins at the chicago world’s fair would go on to establish merchandise and promotion as one of the key modern aspects of corporate marketing
Heinz was the long-time ketchup partner for McDonald's, in fact ever since the 1960s when McDonald's was incorporated into a national chain, but then when they were bought by Berkshire Hathaway, the parent of Burger King, that made Heinz ketchup a Burger King exclusive and McDonald's switched to their own in-house "fancy ketchup".
Heinz ketchup is not a Burger King exclusive and never was. What did happen was many restaurants asking why they should keep buying Heinz anything when they were also a direct competitor. Ordering Heinz ketchup or mayo or anything was highly competitive sales data going right back to the owners of BK. 3G had to go to great lengths to promise data security and isolation from the BK side but even so, many of their customers are still unhappy about this. The rest look at the shambles BK is in and don't worry about it. BK has issues so big, knowing how much ketchup is sold to whom is not going to help them at all. And it hasn't.
Haven’t gotten ketchup from mcd’s in a while, never knew Heinz was out of there lol. I remember the days of pumping the Heinz out into those little cups
As a Pittsburgher, I gotta say it was disappointing that Pittsburgh was only mentioned once. Despite all the mergers and such, Heinz is still iconic here. Using Hunt's ketchup is an easy way to lose friends around here (not really, but kinda...). Plus the logo/label is a keystone, representing Pennsylvania, the Keystone State.
Back when I was a kid, I thought Heinz and the Pennsylvania Railroad were somehow connected, because they both had keystones for logos. The fact that Heinz did have quite a number of freight cars, including pickle vat cars and wood tank cars lined with glass to carry vinegar that would eat through steel tanks, and the Heinz keystone was on those cars, made it a little more confusing to six year old me.
One of the things I think you missed was that Heinz is the largest producer of vinegar in the US. They originally produced it for their condiments production but then they saw that they could make money selling to it other companies and to the public.
Joe Dimaggio once said that if he had hit one more home run when he finished his 56 game hitting streak the Heinz company would've paid him $10,000. Pretty good money for 1941.
You should do a video on another Pittsburgh company, American Eagle. Really successful in a hard retail clothing market. Commonly known as "The best looking house in the worst neighborhood."
Tasting History with Max Miller has a really awesome episode on TH-cam about the history of ketchup and Heinz. Apparently, ketchup, then called catsup, was from Asia and there was no standard idea of what ketchup really should be but popular versions were white and fish based. Heinz was unique in its spelling the sauce with a K instead of a C and it being a red sauce instead of a white one. As the video mentions, Heinz's use of glass bottles and the number 57 were also amazing marketing strategies.
From my understanding there were actually both in production by Heinz at one point (source: Heinz history museum). They’re just different condiments all together.
They also started screwing over their tomato farmers. They're an extremely extremely scummy company and I personally won't ever give them a cent of my money again.
Kraft is killing Heinz. Heinz had brand loyal customers especially in the Appalachian region. They moved the jobs quality of their products is down and now people, especially in that region, hate Heinz. F Heinz.
As a grocery manager who deals with these products on a daily basis, I value your videos so much and love to learn from them. Keep doing grocery related videos!
really nice! I grew up only a couple blocks away from the factory on the North Side of Pittsburgh. my grandmother worked there during WW2 on the packaging line. thank you so much for highlighting Heinz and making this video.
It is an interesting change of tune to see the DOJ forbid the merger of Heinz with another tuna company which would have created a stronger #2 challenge to the #1 company to later allowing Heinz and Kraft, two giants, to combine.
They’ve really taken their foot off the gas WRT antitrust elements. See also how they’re happy to have a quadopoly in meat packing today, even though the legislation they’re not using was passed when it was far less monopolised. The recent T-mobile merger comes to mind as well.
@@samanthab1923 If you mean their quality, then they definitely are a lessor company. It's sad that Heinz signed their good nature away after the original family members died. It seems honesty in business is always short lived.
My family always used "Pride of the Farm" brand ketchup, which later became Hunt's and I've always preferred it to Heinz. However, due to the shipping problems and shortages of the last few years, we ended up with a bottle of French's ketchup, which is my new favorite. I wasn't even aware it existed and now it's my preferred ketchup.
As a brit... Heinz means beans... and ketchup of course... but they have started marketing pasta sauce under their own name recently its interesting to find out they have owned pasta sauce brands for a while too!
For decades Heinz got most of their tomatoes from an area around a small town in Canada that grew the very best tomatoes. They also build a factory in that town for the Canadian market. Up until 1970 they had the same recipe but changed it and started to buy tomatoes from many regions to meet the demand. A few years ago they closed the Canadian factory and also stopped importing the tomatoes. Both the farmers and workers were devastated. Some local entrepreneur got a brilliant idea. Why not supply all the different Supermarket chains with original tomatoes using the original recipe. Bingo! Everyone's a winner. The workers have their jobs, the farmers their farms both can expect a steady growth and I can get the true original Heinz at a fraction of the cost :-)
That factory, in Leamington, ON, is now owned by a company called Highbury Canco, and Kraft-Heinz is actually one of their customers. But their biggest customer is French's, now a division of McCormick's.
Yes Leamington Ontario outside of Windsor Ontario. It's true the town was centered around this factory and most of rural area around was all Tomato growers. I was working in that town a few years back when it was still Heinz. Good to read they came up with a solution to keep on going
I hope they don’t make you wait too long to load and unload at the warehouses. I hope they’re just a PITA about appointment scheduling or something like that. I mean they all suck but… yk. Waiting around unpaid sucks worse.
I'm a bit of a ketchup aficionado since I put the stuff on all sorts of foods (even salad), so my friends reached out to me to tell me about that "Heinz Ketchup Biggest Fan" contest a few years back. Now, I do love ketchup but I'm not as hardcore of a Heinz brand as most people who were in the contest. Like, some people had full out Sleeve Tattoos dedicated to Heinz Ketchup, pickles and their other condiments. Some people made videos of them putting ketchup on ice cream and other odd combinations. One guy used it as tooth paste hahaha It was pretty wild and was a good marketing ploy for them.
I lowkey expected that to be the Beanz Meanz Heinz campaign being invented, in the show, just like they did with “it’s toasted”. Was surprised to find out that was UK only. Megan’s bean campaign was a nice ad, but “some things never change” is definitely a worse tagline than Beanz Meanz Heinz!
I do find it interesting that the cost cutting extends to the football stadium naming rights since the Pittsburgh STEELERS stadium used to be called Heinz Field but not anymore which is stunning to me since it’s been called Heinz field since it was constructed a couple decades ago.
growing up within smelling range of one of Heinz's pickle plants, I've always associated them with pickles. Found out later than the local Heinz plant also does vinegar, mustard and Jack Daniels BBQ sauce. I did not know about Heinz having made StarKist or 9 Lives. Baby food I knew about from stocking shelves in a grocery store (although Gerber by far was a better seller.) I knew about Boston Market but not TGIFriday, Weight Watchers or Ore-Idea being Heinz companies.
I can relate to the comfort odor of a Heinz product; I spent one summer living in Tracy, CA while their ketchup factory just outside of town was still open. I knew when I was close to home when I could smell ketchup in the air!
8:54 And of course back then Weight Watchers didn't say squat about how much carbs and sugars was in the packaging, as we know today that is what's adding layer onto your frame more than anything.
@@SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 it was a very private school. I was there on scholarship. My only friend was the other poor scholarship kid on campus. They picked us up in a van because the school was too small for busses. I got to know him pretty well.
@@sly-fi6502 if dad didn’t buy you a new sports car when you got your drivers license you weren’t part of the club. The other poor kid who was there on scholarship is still my best friend today. I’d take him over the whiny Heinz kid any day.
When you said "bigger than you know" I predicted them owning Orida, just because I remember there being an ad campaign where they were marketed as going well together (like, Orida fries were the only fries strong enough for thick Heinz Ketchup and Heinz Ketchup was the only ketchup that wouldn't make your fries soggy).
I’ve always associated Heinz with ketchup, but I’ve known that they make other products, like beans, vinegar, and Ore-Ida products among others. I have their vinegar in my house. I’d like to see you make a ‘Bigger Than You Know’ video about Honda as they make more than just cars.
Finally 1 o’clock (1300)! I was sitting at my table this morning and saw it was 947 am. I was like hmm only 3 hours and 13 minutes until Company Man blesses us with another great video! I am a huge fan of the channel and have been since 900k subscribers. Love your work, please keep it up! I’ll keep watching and waiting!
Because Heinz and Kraft didn't overlap in business. Kraft was basically Cheese and Lunch meat. Heinz was pickles and Condiments. Together they make a great sandwich!
LG is another biggie. Did you know that, besides appliances and electronics, they have a whole division dedicated to health, beauty, and home products? Fruits & Passion, The Face Shop, Perioe, Homestar, and Avon are some of their brands.
heinz had a product here in the uk that at least to me growing up was iconic, Toast Toppers, a little metal tube filled with a ham and cheesy sauce intended to you know top toast, yummy😋
@@noahthenormal people certainly do put ham or sausage with their cheese on toast. But cheese on toast itself is more of a British thing, in the USA it’s more likely to be a grilled cheese. Which isn’t so conducive to toppings since that’s a closed sandwich, whereas cheese on toast is an open sandwich.
You won't unsee this when I point it out- The labels are in the shapes of keystones, because Heinz is based in Pennsylvania, which is the Keystone State.
Okay...I was an impressionable 5th grader when in the Rugrats spinoff, All Grown Up!, Dylan "Dil" Pickles drank Ketchup as a 9 year old. I can confirm, that at least in Michigan in 2005, Heinz made the best brand of ketchup to drink.
im a veterinary assistant at a clinic, and this one lady is so obsessed with heinz ketchup that she named her vizsla "heinz-57" thats exactly how it is on his id tag
Heinz's core products that is popular in the uk: Ketchup (Low salt, regular, organic) Mayo (vegan, regular, light) Salad Cream (Regular, Vegan) Soup (Cream of; Tomato, tomato and basil, chicken, mushroom; minestrone and all of them in regular, low salt and light.) British Baked Beans (with sausages, light, low salt) Spaghetti Hoops, Strands and shapes.
Note; I didn't include seperate brands like weight watchers and tgi fridays which are also sold in the uk, but are much less popular than the original core products.
Ask YT Creator WallieB26 (he's from Pittsburgh). He just foreplays with his SO in videos because he wouldn't find Heinz ketchup in a(n open) fast food restaurant.
If anybody hasn't heard of it, the show Food that Built America on History Channel is surprisingly good and goes in depth into companies like Heinz
I was just thinking about that
Yep
The info is great...the cheesy acting is almost unbearable though.
Thanks. Didn't know about that show.
Cool, thank you...I'll have to seek that out. No cable over here for this guy
I'm the great great grandson of the guy who founded Vlasic Pickles. I only found that out because I came back from a vacation to Pennsylvania wearing a Heinz T Shirt. My mother was looking at me like, "Uhhhh you don't know what you're doing by wearing that shirt."
do you have unlimited pickle privileges?
Omg I am cackling like an idiot imagining this whole scenario. 😂
I'm the great grandson of Charlie the Tuna
Yeah so what's up you get free pickles? If so u one lucky dude
You’re great great grandfather is a legend. He’s the reason my grandfather found the true meaning of happiness through consumption of his pickles
Side note: was also the first person (to my food knowledge) to make his factory to have electricity and also he was the first man to push the USDA through Teddy Roosevelt. Because of all the dangerous ketchups people were making, thus food safety, we're glad that this man is into health concerns back in that day.
He's the reason why the US population is over 300 million nowadays (him, and Nick Cannon)
Interesting
@@TimmyTickle and Nick Cannon lmfao.
I'm glad an American owner pushed for this.
You gotta give Heinz credit for their promotional merchandising - the pickle pins at the chicago world’s fair would go on to establish merchandise and promotion as one of the key modern aspects of corporate marketing
mad respect, that city is a living nightmare
Heinz was the long-time ketchup partner for McDonald's, in fact ever since the 1960s when McDonald's was incorporated into a national chain, but then when they were bought by Berkshire Hathaway, the parent of Burger King, that made Heinz ketchup a Burger King exclusive and McDonald's switched to their own in-house "fancy ketchup".
Man, I remember when McDonald’s lost the Heinz ketchup. Sad times
That seems like a good way to sell less ketchup
What were they thinking?
Interesting. I always noticed Dairy Queen had these cute Heinz packets.
Heinz ketchup is not a Burger King exclusive and never was. What did happen was many restaurants asking why they should keep buying Heinz anything when they were also a direct competitor. Ordering Heinz ketchup or mayo or anything was highly competitive sales data going right back to the owners of BK. 3G had to go to great lengths to promise data security and isolation from the BK side but even so, many of their customers are still unhappy about this. The rest look at the shambles BK is in and don't worry about it. BK has issues so big, knowing how much ketchup is sold to whom is not going to help them at all. And it hasn't.
Haven’t gotten ketchup from mcd’s in a while, never knew Heinz was out of there lol. I remember the days of pumping the Heinz out into those little cups
As a Pittsburgher, I gotta say it was disappointing that Pittsburgh was only mentioned once. Despite all the mergers and such, Heinz is still iconic here. Using Hunt's ketchup is an easy way to lose friends around here (not really, but kinda...).
Plus the logo/label is a keystone, representing Pennsylvania, the Keystone State.
Back when I was a kid, I thought Heinz and the Pennsylvania Railroad were somehow connected, because they both had keystones for logos. The fact that Heinz did have quite a number of freight cars, including pickle vat cars and wood tank cars lined with glass to carry vinegar that would eat through steel tanks, and the Heinz keystone was on those cars, made it a little more confusing to six year old me.
Heinz is not quite as iconic after they dropped the naming rights to the church of Pittsburgh, and a fucking insurance company took over.
Did he talk about ketchup?
Very true. If you use Hunts here in the 412, I’d be shocked to see you ever again.
The end result of this entire video is one word we have to live with now: Acrisure.
One of the things I think you missed was that Heinz is the largest producer of vinegar in the US. They originally produced it for their condiments production but then they saw that they could make money selling to it other companies and to the public.
My grandma always puts a splash of Heinz vinegar in her laundry.
Why did you say the N word how dare you
Imagine being The Pickle King 👑
Arguably cooler than Pickle Rick 😄
Didn’t expect to see you here 😂
or The Sausage King
@@mindseyemusicreview Pickle Rick: "I'm going to become the King of the Pickles!"
@@nslouka90 "Welcome back... I guess."
Can't believe it's been so long since you started. Been watching for two years.
Also as a Steelers fan I will always refer to it as Heinz field.
As it should be
Yessir!
So basically Heinz went from historical condiments maker to overly large bean counting corporate overlords.
Joe Dimaggio once said that if he had hit one more home run when he finished his 56 game hitting streak the Heinz company would've paid him $10,000. Pretty good money for 1941.
200 K worth todays $.
You should do a video on another Pittsburgh company, American Eagle. Really successful in a hard retail clothing market. Commonly known as "The best looking house in the worst neighborhood."
Tasting History with Max Miller has a really awesome episode on TH-cam about the history of ketchup and Heinz. Apparently, ketchup, then called catsup, was from Asia and there was no standard idea of what ketchup really should be but popular versions were white and fish based. Heinz was unique in its spelling the sauce with a K instead of a C and it being a red sauce instead of a white one. As the video mentions, Heinz's use of glass bottles and the number 57 were also amazing marketing strategies.
From my understanding there were actually both in production by Heinz at one point (source: Heinz history museum). They’re just different condiments all together.
I find it kinda crazy how Heinz started to underperform when it got into a merger with Kraft, I would’ve expected the opposite effect.
They also started screwing over their tomato farmers. They're an extremely extremely scummy company and I personally won't ever give them a cent of my money again.
Npc comment
It didn't surprise me, Kraft is a very poorly run company.
Clearly you're not very familiar with the Kraft company then.
Kraft is killing Heinz. Heinz had brand loyal customers especially in the Appalachian region. They moved the jobs quality of their products is down and now people, especially in that region, hate Heinz. F Heinz.
As a grocery manager who deals with these products on a daily basis, I value your videos so much and love to learn from them. Keep doing grocery related videos!
really nice! I grew up only a couple blocks away from the factory on the North Side of Pittsburgh. my grandmother worked there during WW2 on the packaging line. thank you so much for highlighting Heinz and making this video.
Weren’t folks up in arms because they renamed Heinz Field?
It is an interesting change of tune to see the DOJ forbid the merger of Heinz with another tuna company which would have created a stronger #2 challenge to the #1 company to later allowing Heinz and Kraft, two giants, to combine.
They’ve really taken their foot off the gas WRT antitrust elements. See also how they’re happy to have a quadopoly in meat packing today, even though the legislation they’re not using was passed when it was far less monopolised. The recent T-mobile merger comes to mind as well.
Not so strange when you understand John Kerry, a Heinz by marriage, was in the cabinet at the time. It's a big club and we ain't in it.
For some reason I think of Kraft as a lessor company
@@FozzyBBear A Heinz by marriage with a mother from the Forbes family. Gotta love when powerhouses combine through super exclusive marriage.
@@samanthab1923 If you mean their quality, then they definitely are a lessor company. It's sad that Heinz signed their good nature away after the original family members died. It seems honesty in business is always short lived.
My family always used "Pride of the Farm" brand ketchup, which later became Hunt's and I've always preferred it to Heinz. However, due to the shipping problems and shortages of the last few years, we ended up with a bottle of French's ketchup, which is my new favorite. I wasn't even aware it existed and now it's my preferred ketchup.
Yay it's a New company man Video!! Love this channel
Glad you enjoy it!
As a brit... Heinz means beans... and ketchup of course... but they have started marketing pasta sauce under their own name recently its interesting to find out they have owned pasta sauce brands for a while too!
Their pasta sauce is decent mixed in with tinned tomatoes, cheap too. They make bolognaise seasoning tubs as well I’m pretty sure.
It’s funny to see those blue beans cans on UK shows. Never see them in the US
Yeah, you mean BEANZ, right?
@@samanthab1923 I have seen the Heinz Baked Beans in the international section at a Kroger in Illinois.
@@samanthab1923 Probably because they’re terrible lol. I’m from the UK and I absolutely hate baked beans, no idea why people like them so much
Out of college I ended up working for Kraft Heinz from 2018-2021 so this was a lot of fun to watch!
For decades Heinz got most of their tomatoes from an area around a small town in Canada that grew the very best tomatoes. They also build a factory in that town for the Canadian market. Up until 1970 they had the same recipe but changed it and started to buy tomatoes from many regions to meet the demand. A few years ago they closed the Canadian factory and also stopped importing the tomatoes.
Both the farmers and workers were devastated. Some local entrepreneur got a brilliant idea. Why not supply all the different Supermarket chains with original tomatoes using the original recipe. Bingo! Everyone's a winner. The workers have their jobs, the farmers their farms both can expect a steady growth and I can get the true original Heinz at a fraction of the cost :-)
And John Kerry continues to embarass the company with his global warming rants.
That factory, in Leamington, ON, is now owned by a company called Highbury Canco, and Kraft-Heinz is actually one of their customers. But their biggest customer is French's, now a division of McCormick's.
Yes Leamington Ontario outside of Windsor Ontario. It's true the town was centered around this factory and most of rural area around was all Tomato growers. I was working in that town a few years back when it was still Heinz. Good to read they came up with a solution to keep on going
It's actually a brilliant move to sell both the Potato Products AND the Ketchup.
Heinz: Can we acquire this company?
Govt: No.
Heinz: Can we merge with Kraft to create a giant mega corporation?
Govt: Ok!
As s trucker specializing in food transport, kraft-heinz loads are a pain in the ass
Why are they a particular pain?
Why is that ???
I hope they don’t make you wait too long to load and unload at the warehouses. I hope they’re just a PITA about appointment scheduling or something like that. I mean they all suck but… yk. Waiting around unpaid sucks worse.
Worse than the Cargill plant in southern Iowa?...🌽
Remember the green & purple ketchup they use to make? What a great way to get the kids to like it.👍
I'm sure all the sugar content helped too. 😆
Use to be a Heinz factory in Tracy, CA the old brick building is beautiful.
Glad we got a "Bigger Than You Know" video. Would like to see Company Man Mike upload "American Airlines: Bigger Than You Know" one day.
The irony of me watching this still in my heinz shirt after working my shift at the world's largest ketchup factory
I'm a bit of a ketchup aficionado since I put the stuff on all sorts of foods (even salad), so my friends reached out to me to tell me about that "Heinz Ketchup Biggest Fan" contest a few years back. Now, I do love ketchup but I'm not as hardcore of a Heinz brand as most people who were in the contest. Like, some people had full out Sleeve Tattoos dedicated to Heinz Ketchup, pickles and their other condiments. Some people made videos of them putting ketchup on ice cream and other odd combinations. One guy used it as tooth paste hahaha
It was pretty wild and was a good marketing ploy for them.
I really enjoy my Wednesdays,
As always thank you for taking the time to educate me more
“Pass the Heinz”
“You mean Heinz Ketchup?”
“It’a Heinz, it only means one thing.”
I lowkey expected that to be the Beanz Meanz Heinz campaign being invented, in the show, just like they did with “it’s toasted”. Was surprised to find out that was UK only. Megan’s bean campaign was a nice ad, but “some things never change” is definitely a worse tagline than Beanz Meanz Heinz!
Babysat for a little girl who called Heinz ketchup SLOW. From the Anticipation ad
I did not know all of that. I love these vids, great to listen to while drawing or brushing your teeth. You just learn as you go 😄
I do find it interesting that the cost cutting extends to the football stadium naming rights since the Pittsburgh STEELERS stadium used to be called Heinz Field but not anymore which is stunning to me since it’s been called Heinz field since it was constructed a couple decades ago.
Don’t the Rooney Mara’s have enough? 😂
@@samanthab1923 right he a white man of course he does
Another good company profile, but there is a minor misspelling at the 3:26 mark. It should be "varieties," instead of "varities," as it appears there.
growing up within smelling range of one of Heinz's pickle plants, I've always associated them with pickles. Found out later than the local Heinz plant also does vinegar, mustard and Jack Daniels BBQ sauce.
I did not know about Heinz having made StarKist or 9 Lives. Baby food I knew about from stocking shelves in a grocery store (although Gerber by far was a better seller.) I knew about Boston Market but not TGIFriday, Weight Watchers or Ore-Idea being Heinz companies.
Have seen Heinz relish so figured they did pickles. Never had them. Like Clausen.
I can relate to the comfort odor of a Heinz product; I spent one summer living in Tracy, CA while their ketchup factory just outside of town was still open. I knew when I was close to home when I could smell ketchup in the air!
8:54 And of course back then Weight Watchers didn't say squat about how much carbs and sugars was in the packaging, as we know today that is what's adding layer onto your frame more than anything.
i would 100% watch a documentary series made by company man ngl
I love this channel ❤
I'm supposed to be studying for a math test tomorrow
*Company man uploads video*
Meh, math can wait
Oh no! How did the test go?
I had no idea this was so involved. Seems like a lot of our foods are made by just a handful of companies
I went to high school with the heir to the Heinz fortune. He was *exactly* what you’d expect.
George Clooney’s house on Lake Como was theirs.
oh man, no private school for him? my heart bleeds ketchup.
@@SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 it was a very private school. I was there on scholarship. My only friend was the other poor scholarship kid on campus.
They picked us up in a van because the school was too small for busses. I got to know him pretty well.
@@CasperInkyMagoo The kids there were really so exclusive to the point where they wouldn't even be friends with you? How sad and distasteful.
@@sly-fi6502 if dad didn’t buy you a new sports car when you got your drivers license you weren’t part of the club.
The other poor kid who was there on scholarship is still my best friend today. I’d take him over the whiny Heinz kid any day.
You know, all these years buying Ore-Ida products and I NEVER had it figured out what it stood for Oregon-Idaho!
Didn’t know either! 😂
When you said "bigger than you know" I predicted them owning Orida, just because I remember there being an ad campaign where they were marketed as going well together (like, Orida fries were the only fries strong enough for thick Heinz Ketchup and Heinz Ketchup was the only ketchup that wouldn't make your fries soggy).
Checked the fridge and my ketchup bottle is 32oz. Exactly how big I expected it to be.
You keep ketchup in he fridge?
@@samanthab1923 Well, yeah. It says so on the bottle.
2 lbs
it has sugar in also I would rather have oats instead
I’ve always associated Heinz with ketchup, but I’ve known that they make other products, like beans, vinegar, and Ore-Ida products among others. I have their vinegar in my house.
I’d like to see you make a ‘Bigger Than You Know’ video about Honda as they make more than just cars.
Honda makes lawn mowers
@@samanthab1923 also ATVs and motorcycles among others
@@gil1989ify Oh you’re right. Thought that was a given. My brothers mini bike was a Honda QA-50! 😂
@@samanthab1923 Do they make forklifts?
I've been binge-watching your videos, trying to ketchup, but thanks to this video, I'll never cut the mustard. But I'm still watching, w/great relish.
Wow Henry Heinz sounded like a total chad of a man.
I love this channel. Forgot all about it for a little while there. 😊
So... this isn't a video about Doofenshmirtz? (In all seriousness, awesome video dude as always!)
I was hoping there would be some reference of him when i clicked this video 😂
You make my day with every upload
love these videos I've seen every single one keep it up
Finally 1 o’clock (1300)! I was sitting at my table this morning and saw it was 947 am. I was like hmm only 3 hours and 13 minutes until Company Man blesses us with another great video! I am a huge fan of the channel and have been since 900k subscribers. Love your work, please keep it up! I’ll keep watching and waiting!
I know it's lunch time when Company Man uploads lol always at 12 on the clock where I'm from
I'm a simple man. I see a Company Man Video notification every Wednesday afternoon I like!
Your videos are always the best to eat over lunch! Thanks
How come some Heinz acquisitions were denied due to anti competitiveness but a Heinz and Kraft merger was allowed?
Because Heinz and Kraft didn't overlap in business. Kraft was basically Cheese and Lunch meat. Heinz was pickles and Condiments. Together they make a great sandwich!
As someone who lives in Pittsburgh, he is right, I had no idea how big they were.
You must live under a rock! Lol
Grew up in the Pittsburgh area. Heinz is a staple business and name.
Hello, please explore the Farley’s candy company, many don’t know about.
Company Man, I got love for you bro. 💛
"I like mine with lettuce ant tomatah, Heinz 57 and French fried potatah" - Jimmy Buffet
You should do Hitachi. I used to work in their electronics division building TV’s but I know they are so much bigger then tools and electronics.
Yeah they make magic wands
LG is another biggie. Did you know that, besides appliances and electronics, they have a whole division dedicated to health, beauty, and home products? Fruits & Passion, The Face Shop, Perioe, Homestar, and Avon are some of their brands.
Great video! I learned more than I thought I would.
Can you make the next video rise and fall and rise again of jack in the box
Great video. Didn't know about Lea & Perrins!
One of New Zealand's biggest food companies, Watties, is actually owned by Heinz! We have Heinz branded products as well, which is interesting.
Can you do a video on Sriracha or tapatio next
Nothing beat’s a classic condiment.🙏🍅
You're a big horseradish fan, huh?
I still have a Heinz pickle pin from the 90s that the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra used to give out. :)
You should do an episode about Leo Burnett. Him and his company are the brain behind of the Marketing of most the big food brand and more
There was a transport driver that worked for Heinz. He was tired of carrying all the large jars of ketchup so they invented the ketchup packets
Man, doing a video about a food company on Yom Kippur is just torture, lol.
heinz had a product here in the uk that at least to me growing up was iconic, Toast Toppers, a little metal tube filled with a ham and cheesy sauce intended to you know top toast, yummy😋
Is that supposed to be an approximation of something else you guys eat over there? That sounds like a very odd combo to me, but I'm from the US
I loved that stuff
@@noahthenormal people certainly do put ham or sausage with their cheese on toast. But cheese on toast itself is more of a British thing, in the USA it’s more likely to be a grilled cheese. Which isn’t so conducive to toppings since that’s a closed sandwich, whereas cheese on toast is an open sandwich.
Brilliant video.
Your videos 😃 are always good 😊
Doesn’t Heinz own like 90% of all ketchup packet manufacturing in the world? 😂
Just as we should.
Heinz produces 0% of the world's catsup supply.
@@UCantKetchup2Me We?
@@HOTD108_ This is a weird comment section
@@HOTD108_ American company
Great broadcast
You won't unsee this when I point it out-
The labels are in the shapes of keystones, because Heinz is based in Pennsylvania, which is the Keystone State.
Another good topic to explore would be Oberto and Hormel company. They both have huge operations within the delivery and processed meats industry
Okay...I was an impressionable 5th grader when in the Rugrats spinoff, All Grown Up!, Dylan "Dil" Pickles drank Ketchup as a 9 year old. I can confirm, that at least in Michigan in 2005, Heinz made the best brand of ketchup to drink.
Love the vids bro
Never been this early before . 1 minute release. Ketchup lets goooo!
GREAT video! The J.R. Simplot Company next PLEASE!!!! ORE-IDA comes into play there. Along with McDonalds Corp!
I would have liked to have seen a bit more about Britain basically claiming heinz beans as a British product and not giving it back
That's not a thing. Nobody thinks that.
Mr. Heinz fell behind a few times, but luckily he was able to eventually ketchup.
Too bad John Kerry married into the family that's a disgrace. So I use Hunts ketchup.
3:26 can you find the typo?
Was always suspicious of the 57, so thanks for confirming that suspicion
I just had a classico sauce for dinner tonight. Had no idea it is owned by Kraft now...
im a veterinary assistant at a clinic, and this one lady is so obsessed with heinz ketchup that she named her vizsla "heinz-57" thats exactly how it is on his id tag
I don't think I've ever heard someone say "I'd like to hear what you have to say" in the funniest tone implying the opposite of what he's saying
The Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh is an excellent place to learn even more about the company and it's multitude of products
I had no idea all these companies were associated lol.
Heinz's core products that is popular in the uk:
Ketchup (Low salt, regular, organic)
Mayo (vegan, regular, light)
Salad Cream (Regular, Vegan)
Soup (Cream of; Tomato, tomato and basil, chicken, mushroom; minestrone and all of them in regular, low salt and light.)
British Baked Beans (with sausages, light, low salt)
Spaghetti Hoops, Strands and shapes.
Note; I didn't include seperate brands like weight watchers and tgi fridays which are also sold in the uk, but are much less popular than the original core products.
What is that guitar song at the end of your video?
Growing up in Philadelphia theyd never let you hear the end of Heinz
Ask YT Creator WallieB26 (he's from Pittsburgh). He just foreplays with his SO in videos because he wouldn't find Heinz ketchup in a(n open) fast food restaurant.
This is going to be good. There's more to Heinz than just it's ketchup!
*its.
@@eadweard. Loser.
Yeah, like their history of screwing over Canadian farmers and being absolute twats.
I didn't know all of this so I learned something new :)
Gotta do Texas Roadhouse
Another great video!
great video could you do a video about Lionel please