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New Goldfish Branding
Juanmonino/istockphoto / Pepperidge Farm Inc / Cheapism

Campbell’s, the owner of Pepperidge Farms, announced today that it would rename its iconic snack, Goldfish to attract a new audience. This comes about a month after Campbell’s dropped the “soup” from its name and changed it to The Campbell’s Company, so changes abound.

What Is Goldfish Changing Its Name To?

Goldfish Chilean Sea Bass
Pepperidge Farm Inc.

Goldfish will now be known as, you guessed it, Chilean Sea Bass. This may seem arbitrary, but there’s actually a pretty clever joke hidden behind this rebrand. 

Chilean sea bass itself is one of the most successful rebrand stories of our time, considering the original name for this fish was Patagonian toothfish. Not as appetizing, eh?

Why Is Goldfish Changing Its Name?

Goldfish New Name
Pepperidge Farm Inc

Because of an apparent decline in snacking since the pandemic, Goldfish is hoping to reach a new audience with this name change: Adults and Gen Z. No doubt girl dinner has something to do with this.

Where Can I Buy the New Goldfish?

Limited Edition Chilean Sea Bass Crackers
Pepperidge Farm Inc

Chilean Sea Bass crackers will only be exclusively available online this week (October 23 — October 30), with new bag drops every morning at 9 a.m. EST. Since they sold out in a flash today, you can expect the same thing to happen every morning. You can grab two bags for $7.38.

Has Goldfish Made Other Moves Like This?

Goldfish Mega Bites
Pepperidge Farm Inc

Goldfish has already debuted things like “Mega Bites” to attract an adult audience, not to mention collaborations with Old Bay, Hello Kitty, and Frank’s Red Hot

And Lisa Loeb.

How Long Will This Name Change Last?

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Much like “New Coke”, and the oh-so-stupid IHOB, this is a limited time change and will probably serve as nothing more than a big source of confusion that nobody has fond memories of. Good luck with this one, Pepperidge Farms!

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Meet the Writer

Wilder Shaw is a staff writer at Cheapism who has written for publications like The Washington Post