But for 60 years, it was .
You read the adventures of Bazooka Joe and his gang (Mort, Herman, and the perpetually eyepatched "Jersey" Joe). But you weren't just there for the jokes. You were there for the .
Depending on the decade, the printing plant, or the alignment of the stars at Topps Company headquarters, the icons meant different things. In the 1950s, a "sailboat" might be the letter S. In the 1970s, it might be a period. bazooka joe code
It was silly. It was inconsistent. It was impossible to read in the dark.
So the next time you see a dusty box of Bazooka at a retro candy store, buy it. Don't chew the gum (seriously, it’s like chewing a candle). Just look at the comic. Find that little box. And remember a time when a secret code only required a piece of gum, a dream, and a complete disregard for dental hygiene. But for 60 years, it was
Did you ever actually own a working Bazooka Joe decoder ring? Or did you just guess the symbols? Let me know in the comments below!
The code made literacy fun. Unironically, millions of kids learned pattern recognition, frequency analysis (if you see that "eyepatch" a lot, it’s probably the letter 'E'), and basic cryptography just so they could read a message that ultimately said: "Today is your lucky day." As the 90s turned into the 2000s, the internet happened. You couldn't keep a secret code secret when a kid could just go to a GeoCities page listing every single symbol translation. The mystique died. You were there for the
Tucked inside every comic, between the bad puns and the offer for a "Secret Agent Decoder Ring," was a box. Inside that box was a . And next to that fortune was a squiggly line of gibberish.