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Nestea is a Swiss brand of iced tea and other beverages owned by Nestlé, [1] Nestea provides a variety of tea products, including liquid and powdered tea concentrates, refrigeratable teas, and ready-to-drink bottles dispensed by vendor or vending machine. The beverage comes in several flavors, depending on the country.
Honest Tea; Type: Iced tea: Manufacturer: Honest Tea, Inc (1998–2011) The Coca-Cola Company (2011–2022): Distributor: The Coca-Cola Company: Country of origin United States
This is a selected list of the former brands formerly owned, discontinued, or sold to another company by Nestlé. Overall, Nestlé has discontinued, sold, or changed the name of many of its brands. Former brands are categorized by their targeted markets.
Canada Dry – A very popular brand of ginger ale, but many other soft drinks are available. Although it (as the brand name suggests) originated in Canada, Canada Dry is now produced in many countries such as the United States, Panama, Mexico, Chile, Costa Rica, Japan, Turkey, and in a number European and Middle Eastern countries.
Later, Nestlé introduced a new brand in Canada and the US called Taster's Choice, which supplanted Nescafé for many [vague] years. The company continues to sell Taster's Choice as a separate product, branded as superior to Nescafé and higher priced. [citation needed] "Any time is coffee time with Nescafé", 1948 advertisement
Fuze Beverage (/ f j uː z / fyooz), commercially referred to as simply Fuze (marketed in Switzerland, Turkey, Georgia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan as Fuse; formerly in Malaysia and Singapore as Heaven and Earth [2] and in Indonesia as Frestea), is a manufacturer of teas and non-carbonated fruit drinks enriched with vitamins. [1]
After that, on April 1, 2013, YouTube briefly repeated the "YouTube Collection" joke from April 1, 2012. They also broadcast a live ceremony in which two "submission coordinators" continuously read off the titles and descriptions of random videos (the "nominees") for twelve straight hours, claiming they would do hold the same ceremony every day ...
In August 2021, YouTube began piloting a second subscription tier, "YouTube Premium Lite" in European markets such as Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg, Norway and Sweden, at a price point of €6.99. It contained only the ad-free viewing benefit. [29] YouTube discontinued the Premium Lite plan in October 2023. [30]