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Before 2012, Pepsi One was the last Pepsi variant to include the old logo used from 2003 to 2008, while all the other Pepsi variants had been using the current logo used since late 2008; the only other Pepsi product not using the current logo was Pepsi Throwback, which intentionally used retro packaging. However, Pepsi One's logo was later ...
Circa 1890, he dropped out of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, owing to his father's business going bankrupt. After returning to North Carolina, he was a public school teacher for about a year, and soon thereafter opened a drug store in New Bern named the "Bradham Drug Company" that, like many other drug stores of the time, also housed a soda fountain.
The find was unprecedented in its size (worldwide) and ushered in an age of rapid regional development and industrialization that has few parallels in U.S. history. Texas quickly became one of the leading oil-producing states in the U.S., along with Oklahoma and California; soon the nation overtook the Russian Empire as the top producer of ...
A Brief History of Coke and Pepsi. ... Mountain Dew and 9 Other Beloved Brands With a Twisted History. Then in 1985, Coca-Cola made one of its most controversial moves when it launched “New Coke ...
People on social media are calling to boycott Pepsi over a report that found that Pepsi donated to Texas GOP lawmakers supporting the abortion ban. Pepsi responds to boycott calls over its ...
After the product still failed to become a success, he introduced Pepsi in a twelve-ounce format but with the same price as the six ounce drink. By 1933, Pepsi-Cola was sold in 313 stores in the United States and in 83 other countries. [15] By 1936, his company was making two million dollars of profit and had become the second largest soda company.
Former YUM! Brands Chairman & CEO, David Novak, joins 'Influencers with Andy Serwer' to discuss the creation of Crystal Pepsi in the early 1990s.
Coca-Cola and Pepsi vending machines in Indianapolis, 1988. The Cola wars are the long-time rivalry between soft drink producers The Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo, who have engaged in mutually-targeted marketing campaigns for the direct competition between each company's product lines, especially their flagship colas, Coca-Cola and Pepsi.