way back in the day TV dinner symbolized the future it was a compact multi-course meal that took 15 minutes to bake didn't require you to scrub any dirty pots pans or dishes afterwards and they were also always incredibly affordable some of them even tasted good lucky me my wife uses swatson TV turkey dinners and make your husband lucky too but the TV dinners we're familiar with today have a very sordid origin story which is only rivaled by its messy final days today on weird history food we're gonna talk about the history of TV dinners but before we get started be sure to subscribe to the weird history Food Channel and let us know in the comments below what other unconventional Foods you would like to know more about and now let's peel off that aluminum foil lid and get some nice crunchy corners like the light bulb the telephone and penicillin the Frozen TV dinner is one of those game-changing innovations that has more than one party claiming they invented it Gilbert and Clark Swanson of the Swanson brand claimed they invented the TV dinner in 1953 but history shows that their marketing department was really stretching the truth here's how TV dinners were really invented it all started almost 10 years earlier in 1944. William L Maxson a successful New York inventor got the idea for packaging an entire frozen meal several years earlier when he planted too much cauliflower on his property and who hasn't had to deal with that problem before he cooked the excess cauliflower seasoned it froze it and then forgot about it about a year later Maxim said he thawed his Frozen cauliflower reheated it ate it and realized that his year old veggies were as good as the first day he prepared them of course it's cauliflower so that is not saying much always looking for his next invention maxson's cauliflower experiment inspired him to create a good looking frozen meal that tasted great but was pretty basic one single serving of meat and vegetables set and separated in a round partitioned glossy paper tray about 12 inches in diameter and a paper lid he didn't develop these pre-made meals for public consumption though Maxson took his invention to the private sector for his new revolutionary frozen meals Maxson approached the Navy Navy officials love the idea of light compact meals that cost pennies to make because aircraft carriers are pretty expensive now instead of receiving the usual canned mystery meat compressed cereal biscuits and cigarettes enlisted personnel on the aircraft of the Naval Air transport service would be served hot meals with food that looked smelled and tasted surprisingly good and just in time for World War II these frozen meals consisted of a main course steak meatloaf beef stew corned beef hash ham steak or breaded veal cutlets with either two separate servings of vegetables or veggies and hot bread these meals were called Max and Sky plates and they were heated on another Maxin invention the Maxin Whirlwind oven a sort of convection oven this special compact oven could warm six Sky plates at a time although Maxin would develop the same oven to be able to heat up to 120 frozen meals at a time for the U.S war shipping administration's Merchant vessels that's quite an upgrade can anyone buy those ovens or eventually Maxin agreed to an exclusive deal with Pan-American Airways to serve the exact same Frozen military Meals to domestic passengers with civilian packaging and as news of his revolutionary invention began making its way to the public it was only a matter of time before the public wanted Sky plates for home consumption so in September of 1946 one year after World War II was over Max and rebranded Sky plate as the strato meal presumably because it would knock your taste buds into the stratosphere the GI Bill gave returning WW2 veterans the ability to buy homes allowing the Rosie the Riveter wives to leave the workforce and raise families in the suburbs and that is who Max and stratomials were designed for housewives who were busy raising their kids and taking care of the household while their husbands were at work in the city it was marketed as a full meal you could pop in the oven with no need for prep time or cleanup afterward you just throw everything in the trash which is part of the fun it's way more exciting to toss the dishes than do the dishes the meals began to catch on and soon other smaller frozen food companies tried their hand at frozen dinners by 1952 Maxson had enjoyed six years of being the only option in grocery stores but that year Quaker State's Foods came in and changed the game forever with lightweight aluminum trays featuring a thin aluminum lid soon other small Regional companies joined in the frozen food race like frigid dinner which expanded their frozen meal choices with beef stew with pea season corn niblets veal goulash with potato chunks and peas and chicken chow mein with egg rolls and fried rice and who does not love a good reheated goulash technological advancements in frozen meals were coming fast but they were still considered a novelty while Max and Quaker State Foods and frigid dinner were not seeing a decrease in sales they weren't seeing much growth either that is until September 10 1953. on September 10 1953 Swanson which was a very popular and trusted brand name at the time launched their own version of the Frozen pre-packaged meal my wife never panics she just takes Swanson TV turkey dinners from the freezing compartment of our refrigerator when I'm on a little off schedule it consisted of a few slices of turkey cornbread dressing with peas and sweet potatoes there's also a famous origin story about Swansons invention Swanson family lore claims that the Swanson company developed the idea for a pre-packaged frozen meal when they realized that they were looking at 520 000 pounds of surplus turkey that went unsold after Thanksgiving the previous year while the brothers Swanson tried to figure out how to unload all that turkey it's alleged that all 520 000 pounds of the Frozen bird parts were loaded onto refrigerated train cars to buy time as this turkey train crisscrossed America the Swanson company desperately tried to come up with ideas on how to save those turkey parts and that idea came from either Gilbert and Clark Swanson or Jerry Thomas one of Swanson's best salesmen that's right not even Swanson can get the Swanson TV dinner Legend straight Thompson claimed the concept for the Frozen pre-packaged meal came to him while on a return flight from a business trip during which he was served a warm three-course meal in a disposable trisectional tray and if you haven't put it together I'll do it for you Thomas was on a Pan-American flight and they were serving maxson's stratomio which had already been on the market for seven years Thomas returned to the office and pitched the concept he just invented and I was putting some pretty hard air quotes around invented that concept would take all the Frozen Swanson turkey and use it to create a pre-assembled turkey dinner in an aluminum tray which their customers could then reheat eat and throw away over the decades the controversy has brewed and only gotten muddy over time did Jerry Thomas invent the pre-packaged frozen meal former Swanson employees and family heirs who were around back then stated in interviews that it was Gilbert and Clark Swanson who came up with the idea not Thomas but the truth is me either party did the Swanson company just took Maxim's Concept in Quaker State's Foods all-aluminum tray and repackaged it in a great looking box the only reason anyone believed the swats and story is because it was a multi-million dollar company with an established name and a bigger marketing budget oh hello Steve Jobs while the Swanson Brothers had absolutely nothing to do with inventing Frozen pre-packaged meals it's been proven that Jerry Thompson did actually have a hand in the product success he gave it a name as the decades have gone on since the mid-1950s Jerry Thomas's origin story about the trains in the Frozen Surplus turkey parts has proven to be false that said it's been confirmed that Thomas came up with a name for Swanson's frozen meals he called them TV dinners Thomas said he came up with a TV dinner concept when he noticed how popular the TV tray was becoming which began showing up in commercials and newspaper ads ironically no one's really sure who invented the TV tray I'm surprised Thomas didn't take credit for that one too we only know that TV trays came about because home television sales skyrocketed after World War II which enabled America to lift the manufacturing freeze and make more television sets and there is nothing more American than eating your meals in front of the television of course Thomas did have some help with The Branding and Crawford Pollock Swanson in-house marketing Chief came up with designing the TV dinner's outer packaging to look like a television set Swanson only sold 5 000 units of their debut Thanksgiving themed turkey TV dinner for 98 cents but the following year in 1954 the First full year of production they sold a whopping 10 million trays the following year they sold 25 million and with that an American institution was born because the Swanson Brothers had the money and name recognition their TV dinners completely obliterated smaller Regional Brands like Maxin Quaker State Foods and frigid dinner but they didn't stay in the TV dinner game for long in 1955 Gilbert and Clark Swanson sold their TV dinner brand to the Campbell Soup company for a huge chunk of Campbell's stock beef stock or chicken stock while they kept the rest of their business the Swanson Brothers retained no further connection to TV dinners except in name while many popular products begin to decline in quality once they've been bought out by a massive conglomerate the TV dinners only got better with Campbell's soup at the helm as this for innovation in 1960 Campbell Soup added a fourth compartment to their tray a desertre it usually included apple cobbler cherry pie or brownie this is arguably the most significant invention in modern history in 1969 they started making breakfasts with the TV dinner tray featuring pancakes scrambled eggs sausage bacon and home fried potatoes soon after they called their breakfast offerings great starts and included Canadian bacon and egg breakfast sandwiches and then in 1973 Campbell introduced the granddaddy of them all the Hungry Man the Hungry Man TV dinner featured bigger portions of protein and a badass marketing campaign with cool commercials featuring the Pittsburgh Steelers Mean Joe Greene and Rocky blier as the Hungry Man spokesman look at all that meat Swanson knows I'm a second helping man during the 80s other contenders such as banquet Morton and Libby land attempted to fight for the remaining grocery store shelf space chicken turkey Salisbury steak not bad but by then Campbell launched the menu and overtook the industry La menu TV dinners featured a revolutionary microwavable plate with more mature and sophisticated Cuisines for the lazy person with refined tastes these Gourmet frozen meals included entrees like pepper steak with rice pilaf sweet and sour chicken chicken breast Florentine with Savoy spinach and turkey scalloping with garlic parmesan Duchess potatoes I don't know what half those words even mean so it must be good by the 90s people began eating healthier and heavyweight frozen meal Brands like Stouffer's targeted the diet food market with its reduced calorie Lean Cuisine line Campbell's never caught up with a health craze and eventually sold the Swanson TV dinner brand to Vlasic Foods International by 2001 Vlasic changed their name to Pinnacle Foods which promptly discontinued the Swanson TV dinner brand and just began calling all of its frozen meals hungry man dishes the great starts breakfast line became the Aunt Jemima breakfast line but the Aunt Jemima brand was permanently discontinued after a product recall in 2017. today all that's left is the Hungry Man microwavable Meal which is now owned by a company called ConAgra Brands sure maybe it doesn't have the excitement of Mean Joe Greene ripping off freezer doors or Steve Garvey and Tommy Lasorda enjoying double servings of meat in the Dodger Stadium Dugout while the game is in play but the brand still makes 9 million dollars a year which ain't bad for frozen food so what do you think which was your favorite TV dinner go ahead and confess everything in the comments below and while you're at it check out some of these other weird history food videos