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It is the third song by Del Rey that mentions soda in the title—the previous two being "Cola" (2012) and "Diet Mountain Dew" (2012). She, however, has made references to soda on songs like "Bartender" (2019). The song garnered unanimous critical acclaim, immediately cited as a masterpiece and one of Del Rey's best.
Diet Mountain Dew is a no-calorie Mountain Dew that was first introduced in 1986. [1] It was formerly known as "Sugar-Free Mountain Dew" until 1986, when it was given its current name. In 2006 Diet Mountain Dew was reformulated with a new "Tuned Up Taste", using a blend of sucralose , aspartame , and acesulfame potassium as sweeteners.
There's none of 'Video Games''s measured, piano-led reflection. Instead the psychosexual rumblings of the lyrics and the dual voices she uses offset the comparatively simple musical shades on display." [29] Del Rey's vocals on "Off to the Races", "National Anthem", and "Diet Mountain Dew" were described as "chatty" and "almost rapping".
Vance joked that liking Mountain Dew would make him "racist" according to Democrats.
Seal takes his namesake to new surreal heights in Mountain Dew’s 2025 Super Bowl commercial. The 30-second spot features the 15-time Grammy nominee transformed into a literal seal (with a ...
Diet Mountain Dew coming in hot with the pre-debate CBS ad — Michael Scherer (@michaelscherer) October 2, 2024 CBS just aired an ad for Diet Mountain Dew where the implied storyline is that that ...
"Diet Mountain Dew" by Lana Del Rey "Digital" by Goldie featuring KRS-One "The Diminished Triangle – Three Part Composition" (including "Blues For Manhattan") by Gerald Wilson Orchestra "Dinner At The Ritz" by City Boy (Stork Club) "Dirty Apple" by Johnny Hammond "Dirty Boulevard" by Lou Reed "Dirty Cash (Money Talks)" by Adventures of Stevie V
The singer employs an "almost rapping" technique, hip-hop beat and heavy basslines, similar to that of "National Anthem" and "Diet Mountain Dew" in the song. [2] Pitchfork Media said the rapping technique was almost "chatting." [3] The song refers to Vladimir Nabokov's novel, Lolita, with lyrics such as, "Light of my life, fire of my loins". [4]