You're probably familiar with the classic orange jack-o'-lantern kids use to collect their Halloween candy each year. But these days, treat buckets come in all different forms. Kids are using tote ...
TULSA, Okla. — For kids who are ready to trick or treat, some may feel left out due to dietary restrictions or special needs, like autism. In 2012, a mother of a child with food restrictions put a ...
Companies like Walmart are helping spread awareness of color-coded Halloween buckets. Blue buckets signal that a child has autism, which means they may experience sensory overload, struggle with ...
The buckets temporarily replace the company’s cardboard Happy Meal container, bringing customers some Halloween nostalgia. McDonald’s first debuted the Boo Buckets in 1986. The limited-time buckets ...
Children holding Halloween buckets. (Photo by Charles Parker from Pexels.) Spreading awareness is important, and over the past decade more people have been trying to do so on Halloween with different ...
A new initiative is promoting awareness with color-coded buckets that signal specific sensory and dietary needs for children during trick-or-treating. Companies like Walmart are helping spread ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. McDonald’s famous Boo Buckets are making a ...