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The taste is similar to the now-defunct Count Cola. The product was widely available in supermarkets and small take-away food outlets. In Australia, the product was discontinued when Schweppes obtained a license to produce Pepsi products in Australia. Schweppes Cola is currently owned and distributed by Dr Pepper Snapple Group. Today, the ...
Pepsi Blue. Okay, technically not a canned food, but it was a canned beverage, and its discontinuation still stings. Pepsi Blue was PepsiCo's contender in the Cola Wars of the '90s, launching in ...
Cottee's – brand of cordial drinks, owned by previously Cadbury-Schweppes, now Schweppes Australia; Count Cola – now discontinued brand of soda; Crows Nest Soft Drinks – Crows Nest, just north of Toowoomba, [12] one of the oldest in Australia, est. 1903; Crystal – discontinued line of soft drinks, renowned for selling via their home ...
It sold for about US$1.7 billion, plus about US$870 million of Dr Pepper/Seven-Up debt. This made Cadbury Schweppes the largest soft drink company in the world not to be named after a cola beverage. In early 2006, Cadbury Schweppes purchased the remainder of Dr Pepper/Seven Up, Inc. and Dr Pepper/Seven Up Bottling Group from The Carlyle Group.
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Snapple, Mistic, and Stewart's (formerly Cable Car Beverage) were sold by Triarc Companies, Inc. to Cadbury Schweppes in 2000 for $1.45 billion. [9] That October, Cadbury Schweppes purchased Royal Crown Cola from Triarc. [10] In 2006 and 2007, Cadbury Schweppes purchased the Dr Pepper/Seven Up Bottling Group, along with several other regional ...
After a dose of online speculation, the company confirmed to TODAY.com on Sept. 24 that it would be discontinuing Coca-Cola Spiced — the flavor that made its debut earlier this year.