Colorful M&M candies in various shades, including red, blue, yellow, green, and orange, scattered across a white background.

Colorful M&M candies in various shades, including red, blue, yellow, green, and orange, scattered across a white background.
Wiki Commons

Two iconic colors will disappear in the process.

Slowly but surely, the Make America Healthy Again movement, headed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is enacting change in the food manufacturing industry.

Now, the long-beloved confection M&M’s is joining the push for a healthier America.

But all change – even positive – comes with a cost: as a result of the changes, two historic colors may end up scrapped.

The New York Post reported:

“As the iconic candy marks its 85th year this summer and in a broader effort to remove artificial dyes, M&M’s will debut a natural-ingredient version.

And while the brand can figure out how to make red, orange, and yellow M&M’s without artificial dyes, blue and brown are on the chopping block and will not be included in this new iteration.”

“As pressure mounts from Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s MAHA movement to ditch synthetic food colorings, candy giant Mars is spending millions of dollars to reinvent one of America’s most recognizable treats.”

Colorful dispensers filled with various M&M's candy varieties, showcasing a vibrant array of colors including red, blue, green, yellow, orange, and multi-colored options.
Wiki Commons

But producing the blue-colored candies has run into difficulties, as the spirulina ingredient is apparently gumming up the machines at the Mars facility.

“The algae-based ingredient requires roughly seven times as much pigment to achieve that M&M ‘cerulean’ hue and ends up creating a thick, foamy mixture that leaves an unwanted plaque, much like what you try to avoid after eating candy.”

Read more:

RFK Jr. Launches His Latest MAHA Project — Getting Americans Off Antidepressants

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