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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 widespread critical acclaim unlike the former, and charted in several countries worldwide.
Fortunately, high triglycerides can be addressed with diet changes, such as eating more fiber and omega-3 fatty acids, while limiting excess dietary fat and added sugars. And that’s where canned ...
Hypertriglyceridemia is the presence of high amounts of triglycerides in the blood.Triglycerides are the most abundant fatty molecule in most organisms. Hypertriglyceridemia occurs in various physiologic conditions and in various diseases, and high triglyceride levels are associated with atherosclerosis, even in the absence of hypercholesterolemia (high cholesterol levels) and predispose to ...
Don’t tell the football players, but there’s so much more to the Super Bowl than the game. Last year viewership hit an all-time high, with 202.4 million people, or roughly 60% of the U.S ...
Pepsi got the right ones (baby!) when they cast Beyoncé, Britney Spears and Pink in a Gladiator-inspired commercial. While the brand spent lots of money to make it, the ad ended up never airing ...
Hyperlipidemia is abnormally high levels of any or all lipids (e.g. fats, triglycerides, cholesterol, phospholipids) or lipoproteins in the blood. [2] The term hyperlipidemia refers to the laboratory finding itself and is also used as an umbrella term covering any of various acquired or genetic disorders that result in that finding. [3]
The backlash to the ad was swift and brutal and Pepsi, ostensibly, is smarting from the mockery and damage to its reputation before they begin to count the cost of pulling an expensively assembled ...