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The Diet Coke Break advertising campaign is a series of six television advertisements that ran from 1994 to 2013, used to promote the soft drink Diet Coke. Each advert centers around a group of women ogling an attractive man while he works, soundtracked to a version of " I Just Want to Make Love to You ".
The tag-phrase of the song included the words "Uh Huh!", which, as part of the ad campaign, were featured on Diet Pepsi packaging. Later, after Diet Pepsi phased out the aspartame / saccharin mix in favor of a 100% aspartame formula, many commercials ended with an announcer saying, "With 100% Uh Huh" replacing the earlier "With 100% NutraSweet".
Diet Coke hunk: Diet Coke: 1990s: played by Lucky Vanous "Alternative" Rob Lowe: DirecTV: 2014–present: Rob Lowe in dual roles Hannah Davis and her talking horse: 2015–present: model Hannah Davis pitching DirecTV on a beach accompanied by a talking horse who brags about himself ("The Horse's Mouth" as alluded by Davis) "Alternative" NFL ...
Prolific commercial and music video director Joe Pytka, who directed the original Pepsi spot, tells Yahoo Entertainment that many people have reached out to him about the reimagining. "Some people ...
Diet Coke is undoubtedly beloved — of the more than $285 billion U.S. soft drink market, it’s the fourth most popular soda in the United States. Yet Diet Coke has long benefited from a ...
In front of Work sit five containers of Diet Coke — a Del Taco cup, a plastic bottle, Burger King cup, McDonald’s cup and a can — hidden behind a pink box. Her task is to correctly identify ...
Commercial spokesperson campaigns [ edit ] Sierra Mist - In 2006, the lemon-lime flavored soft-drink line Sierra Mist by PepsiCo hired Johnson to join five other comedic performers— Michael Ian Black , Tracy Morgan , Jim Gaffigan , Guillermo Diaz , and Eliza Coupe —to portray the Sierra Mist comedy team, the Mist Takes, in a nationwide ...
While a 12-can sleeve of Coke may cost $7 to $10, a 12-pack of Poppi clocks in at about $29. You’re better off, she says, spending that money on nutrient-rich food, not soda. Show comments