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100 Grand Bar (formerly known as $100,000 Bar until the mid 1980s) is a candy bar produced by Nestlé in the United States.
Sin Parar or Sem Parar (Non Stop in English) is the name of a line of candy bars and ice cream made by Nestlé.
The Wonka Bar is both a fictional candy bar, introduced in the 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl, and a type of real life candy bar inspired by the fictional confection.
The "Oh Henry!" Candy Bar was invented by a man named Tom Henry of Arkansas City, whose family now runs a candy factory on route K-15 in Dexter, Kansas called "Henry's Candies".
The Curtiss Candy Company asserted that the "Baby Ruth" candy bar (formerly known as Kandy Kake from 1900–1920) was named after Ruth Cleveland, a claim that the urban legends website Snopes.com has debunked.
A Sky Bar candy bar is shown twice in the 2009 film The House of the Devil.
Based on the Baby Ruth joke from the film Caddyshack, she is confident that it is really a candy bar, and picks it up and takes a bite -- only to find out it was a real turd.