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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 Pepsi" is a song by American singer Addison Rae. It was released on August 9, 2024, through Columbia Records, as her major label debut single, marking also her first single release in three years since "Obsessed" (2021). [4] "Diet Pepsi" received positive reviews unlike the former, and charted in several countries worldwide.
Crewe first heard the song performed in a jingle demo for a Diet Pepsi commercial, and according to Greg Adams, writing for All Music Guide, the song "exemplified the groovy state of instrumental music at that time." [1] In Bob Crewe's version, a trumpet plays the whole verse, the first time around, sounding like Herb Alpert's Tijuana brass style.
Five months later, Rae released her single "Diet Pepsi," which became her first to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 and even landed on year-end lists from various publications including Business ...
Ray Charles crooned about Diet Pepsi, baby (1991) Another early influential celebrity commercial featured the soul legend, surrounded by models, tickling the ivories and singing the jingle “You ...
In the early 1990s, Ray Charles was the star of a Diet Pepsi campaign called "You Got the Right One, Baby," which was also known as "Uh-huh." During the late 1990s the Spice Girls became the face of Pepsi with the tagline “Generation Next,” inspired by their song Move Over from their album Spiceworld. Promotion included TV commercials, CD ...
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 ...
Bob Crewe himself (recording as The Bob Crewe Generation) released a version of Sid Ramin's 1967 instrumental "Music to Watch Girls By" (originally composed as a Diet Pepsi commercial jingle) on DynoVoice. [3] The song became a Top 20 hit. [3] and spawned another successful instrumental version by Al Hirt and a vocal hit by Andy Williams.