Science

How Nickelodeon Mixes its Green Slime

Turns out the awful-looking goo might not taste all that bad, depending on who made the mix.

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Vanilla pudding. The secret of the infamous Nickelodeon Green Slime is vanilla pudding.

It’s not the biggest industry secret in television history, but the question of what the notorious sludge is made from came up Friday during an MTV News interview with Summer Sanders, the former Olympic swimmer who had hosted Nick’s Figure It Out —and, for all the TV trivia people out there, also handled hosting duties for MTV’s Sandblast in the early 1990s with actor/comedian Kevin James.

Sanders was asked about the content of the green slime— Nickelodeon’s signature goo that has been a part of its programming since the days when You Can’t Do That on Television was pouring it on the likes of a preteen Alanis Morissette:

Her answer: vanilla pudding. Sanders explained it has always just been vanilla pudding with green food coloring. However, MTV has gone on to further explain that her experience only informed her of one particular slime mixture, with other concoctions including oatmeal, Jell-O and even baby shampoo. Somehow, knowing that green smile isn’t made of more noxious chemicals still doesn’t make it look all that inviting.

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