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I would say it depends on a few things.
What chameleon are we talking about? Is it an adult, is it a juvenile?
No way would I try it out on a pregnant female, especially on a young female about to lay eggs the first time. Neither would I do that with a juvenile or a chameleon that already has or is prone to easily getting health problems.
What do you mean by ungutloaded crickets? Are you just gonna buy a bunch and keep them for a month without feeding them? Well, then your crickets are going to eat each other or they are going to die, and probably not gonna last a whole month that way. Another things is, if you are going to buy them regularly from a pet-shop in smaller portions during that month and worry that pet-shops don't gutload them properly.
Because then another important thing is supplementation. Lets say that for whatever reason for a month you can only feed you chameleon ungutloaded crickets (from a pet-shop?). Do you have the necessary supplements? Ca, Ca+D3 and multivitamins?
From my personal experience with an adult healthy male veiled chameleon I can say that with supplements used as required two month on crickets (primarily) and locusts (occasional treats) that I bought in the pet-shop and didn't additionally gutload went fine and had no consequence for the chameleon. But I have to underline, that this is all very, so to say, case-specific - I had no other choice in the situation I was in. Every chameleon is different and they are, after all, very sensitive creatures.
In a very tight situation could you use plain cheerios?
yes, temporarily.
But not long term. You need nutritious items. If the "tight situation" is money related, .... sometimes grocery stores will give away fruit and veg that is bruised or similar - butternut squash is cheap, as are carrots and romaine lettuce and there are even weeds (depending where you live) that make for good gutloads, like dandelion leaves or even clover.
Also go outside and find areas that are pesticide free and look for raspberries/blackberries and their leaves, dandelions, wild mustard greens and related plants, chickweeds, mallows, mulberry, grape leaves, even some grasses! If you look up which kinds of wild plants are safe for reptiles and tortoises/turtles, you can go and look for them outside.