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The pumpkin spice craze is officially over.

Pumpkin Spice Spam: Fake news becomes unfortunate reality

[Photo: Hormel Foods Corporation]

BY Melissa Locker1 minute read

Pumpkin Spice is big business. According to data from Neilsen, pumpkin and pumpkin spice-flavored items accounted for $414 million in sales in 2017, up 45% from $286 million in 2013, the New York Times reported at the time. While Starbucks has firmly planted the Pumpkin Spice flag with its PSL, the “autumnal” drink hitting the market on August 27 this year, the world has also been gifted with things like Pumpkin Spice Pringles, Pumpkin Spice Coffee-Mate, Pumpkin Spice English Muffins, Pumpkin Spice Beer, and Pumpkin Spice Werther’s Originals.

And now this: Pumpkin Spice Spam. Honestly, there aren’t enough barf-face emojis in the world to properly express our thoughts on this product.

While rumors of Pumpkin Spice Spam circulated two years ago thanks to a hoax Facebook post, this time it’s all too real. A publicist for Hormel Foods Corp. confirmed to NBC News that the company will begin selling a limited-edition run of Pumpkin Spice Spam online at walmart.com and spam.com on September 23.

To crib a line from Jurassic Park, it’s like they were so preoccupied with whether they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should. And now Pumpkin Spice Spam is going to destroy the world or at least the taste buds of those who try it when PR people inevitably send samples to the office.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Melissa Locker is a writer and world renowned fish telepathist. More


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