Long before it became a punchline, SPAM was a lifeline. Launched by Hormel in 1937, it exploded in popularity during World War II, when fresh meat was scarce and soldiers needed protein that wouldn’t spoil. Cans of the pink, glistening block followed troops across continents, then followed them home, slipping into postwar kitchens and family recipes. For many, it tasted like comfort; for others, like desperation and hard times they never wanted to revisit.
The name only deepened its legend. “Specially Processed American Meat,” “Shoulder of Pork and Ham,” “Salt Preserves Any Meat,” “Spiced Ham” – each theory told a different story about what people feared or hoped was inside. Hormel never clearly settled the debate, letting the mystery work its way into pop culture and memory. In the end, SPAM became more than meat. It became a symbol of resilience, thrift, and the strange, salty nostalgia of a world that had to make do with whatever came in a can.