How a viral TikTok video led to a year-long global shortage of Swedish candy


A global shortage of Swedish-made candy, all thanks to a viral TikTok video? Stranger things have happened.

But that’s exactly what went down earlier this year, when TikTok influencer Marygrace Graves showed followers the sweets she’d scooped up from a weekly visit to BonBon, a Swedish candy shop in New York.

“This is a strawberry squid. This is the first time I’ve ever had these, they’re delicious,” Graves told her followers in the January video, as if letting them in on a secret.

Well, the secret got out — and other TikTok users starting making their own Swedish candy videos, resulting in millions of posts, a viral internet phenomenon and an ongoing global shortage of the nation’s prized sweets.

Graves’s viral haul from the original video included some candies were were foamy, and others that made her teeth feel like they were going to break, she said. Some were bizarrely shaped, including a rat gummy that she held by its tail; and many were uniquely flavoured, like a sour raspberry-lemon gummy that she approved of, and a grapefruit candy that she said made her feel nauseous.

All of them were imported from Sweden, a country known for manufacturing high-quality sweets.

What makes Swedish candies stand out is that they lean into unusual forms and flavours, and away from additives typically found in North American candy, according to Michelina Jassal, who owns Swedish candy shop Karameller in Vancouver.

“No GMOs, no corn syrup, typically [fewer] ingredients than your conventional candy that you’re going to find at the grocery store,” said Jassal of the Scandinavian sweets. “You don’t quite have that sick-to-your-stomach [feeling] that you sometimes experience with conventional candy.”

The shortage sent Canadian importers scrambling to find supply.

Jessica Borchiver, who runs online Swedish candy shop Sukker Baby from her home in Toronto, said an an increasingly impatient (and increasingly American) clientele urged her to restock on a particularly high-demand brand: Bubs Godis.

What had previously been a steady business for Borchiver skyrocketed overnight. But the run on Bubs “tipped everything over the edge,” she said. “Everyone who was anyone wanted to get their hands on it.”

Several bags of assorted candy are shown bearing the label 'The Playful Pop'.
Jessica Borchiver, who runs online Swedish candy shop Sukker Baby, says a mix-and-match bag of Swedish candy released in honour of Father’s Day became so popular among her clients that she’s continued selling it year-round. (Shawn Benjamin/CBC)

Swedish candymakers prioritizing Nordic customers

Bubs Godis is one of Sweden’s largest candy manufacturing companies. As demand spiked from its sudden virality, it was forced to stop taking on new international customers, an ongoing policy as of late December. The company was already running low on stock by the summer months, when Sweden began its yearly six-week factory holiday.

Any company would be glad to see a sudden surge in international interest. But the makers of Bubs decided to take care of their own people first.

“We have had long relationships with our customers in Sweden and the rest of the Nordics,” said Niclas Arnelin, director of international expansion at Orkla, the Swedish food and snacks corporation that owns Bubs. “And we need to prioritize them currently.”

A woman is shown in a room where bags of candy line shelves.
Borchiver says her e-commerce company couldn’t keep up with the skyrocketing demand for Swedish candy. (Shawn Benjamin/CBC)

They just might be their best customers, too — Swedes have a notorious sweet tooth, eating up to 16 kilograms of sweets every year, according to a spokesperson for Business Swedish, a government- and business-owned organization that promotes Swedish exports.

The country has a longstanding tradition called Lördagsgodis, or “Saturday sweets,” in which families are known to load up on sweets. The custom was born out of a 1950s study by medical researchers that found that the nation’s dental health would improve if they limited their candy-eating to one day per week.

Stockholm resident Linda Rose remembers when the custom became popular. With her own children, she held a similar ritual on Fridays.

But if there’s a global shortage currently afflicting the sweet-toothed community, Swedes have been spared the pain.

“There’s no shortage here,” she said. “None, whatsoever.”


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