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Pepsi Fire: a limited edition, cinnamon-flavored variety that is sold in Guam, Saipan, Thailand, Mexico, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Vietnam. It is also a Pepsi Ice twin version. Pepsi Green: a bright-green variety introduced in Thailand on January 15, 2009. [45] Pepsi Creaming Soda : A strong cream and vanilla light pepsi tasting ...
Pepsi AM can and bottle. Pepsi AM was a variant of Pepsi that contained 25% extra caffeine and was marketed as a morning boost/energy drink. [1] [2] It was introduced in test markets in August 1989, but was discontinued in October 1990 due to poor sales and reception. [3] [4]
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Naked Juice is an American brand that produces juices and smoothies.The company is based in Monrovia, California and is owned by PAI Partners.The first Naked Juice drink was produced in 1983 and sold in California under the name "Naked Juice", referring to the composition of no artificial flavors, added sugar, or preservatives. [1]
Slice was a line of fruit-flavored soft drinks originally manufactured by PepsiCo and introduced in 1984 [2] (to replace the Teem brand) but discontinued by PepsiCo in North America in the late 2000s. Slice was reintroduced in India by PepsiCo in 2008 as a mango-flavored fruit drink [1] where it is currently advertised as Tropicana Slice. [3]
Pick Me may refer to: PickMe, a taxi-hailing app based in Sri Lanka; Pick Me!, a daytime game show from the UK (2015) "Pick Me" (song), a 2015 hit song used as the theme for the South Korean TV contest show Produce 101 "It's Me (Pick Me)", a 2017 song used as the theme for Produce 101 Season 2
The logo was slightly changed in 2007, as the "Pepsi" script, in the case of Pepsi Wild Cherry, was slightly moved up above the globe. This design, however, was only found on the boxes that carried cans, 1-, and 2-liter bottles, as the 20-ounce bottles and 12-ounce cans still carried the original 2005 design.
Donald M. Kendall of Pepsi promoted the Pepsi Challenge. When the preference in blind tests is compared to tests wherein cups are labeled with arbitrary labels (e.g., S or L) or brand names, the ratings of preference change. [9] Scientific findings do support a perceptible difference between Coca-Cola and Pepsi, but not between Pepsi and RC ...