Then Jimmy Olson walks in Jimmy: Clark what you doing at Perry White’s house?! Clark: nothing Jimmy: We better get out here before he sees us! God what he would do to us if he catches us hanging around his house. Clark: Your right! We better get out here! Clark Superman speeds away along with Jimmy!
An "integrated" commerical usually seen at the end of several "ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN" episodes during the 1955-'56 season, originally sponsored by Kellogg's. The "ugly kid", 'miff', was one of several boxes created especially for Kellogg's by legendary illustrator Norman Rockwell- and those boxes are collector's items today.
What we don't see is Kent sneaking into Perry's house to eat all his cornflakes. Sure, it costs him a new box of Corn Flakes. But seeing Perry completely lose his shit like that is worth the cost.
This is Mister Perry White's house. And inside... ...Perry White of the Daily Planet is just sitting down to Breakfast. Mister White is one of those remarkable men who's in complete control of himself in any crisis. Calm, cool headed, easy going, even tempered. Two seconds? This sounds like a job for Superman! Mister White's a man who always gets his way, but even Superman couldn't keep everybody in Kellogg's Corn Flakes all the time. Every morning more people ran out of Kellogg's Corn Flakes than any other cereal. They taste best to more people. Always have, still do. That's why, it's so easy to run out of them. So anytime you buy any cereal of any kind pick up a spare package of, Kellogg's Corn Flakes! You'll like 'em!
Family Guy moment here: Is it good? The recipe is right on the box. Yeah, but is it good? Its made with ingrediemts you probably already have in your house.
As a kid, I loved Adventures of Superman. If I would have seen Clark Kent promote Corn Flakes back then, I would have eaten more of them and less junk food cereals.
Now, I'll bet if you put this onto some "upcoming movies" Facebook page, there'd be an unending stream of insults and "that's a plot-hole! How did he get into his house?" whereas if this was Batman or Iron Man, they'd be like, "oh, that was... AWESOME!!! FTW!!!"
Perry had nice house for the mid 1950's. Would be worth a million dollars today. Of course, maybe Perry deserves to live well. After all, he is the sole editor of a major metropolitan newspaper with only two regular reporters (plus Jimmy Olsen).