Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"You Got the Right One, Baby, Uh Huh" was a popular slogan for PepsiCo's Diet Pepsi brand in the United States and Canada from 1990 to 1993. A series of television ads featured singer Ray Charles, surrounded by models, singing a song about Diet Pepsi, entitled "You Got the Right One Baby, Uh Huh". The tag-phrase of the song included the words ...
"Live for Now", also known as "Live for Now Moments Anthem", [2] is a 2017 short film commercial for Pepsi by PepsiCo featuring Kendall Jenner and the song "Lions" by Skip Marley. According to a statement from PepsiCo, the ad’s purpose was initially to reach millennials and “to project a global message of unity, peace, and understanding."
Two years later, Pepsi's attempts to make Madonna a new Pepsi spokesperson ended with the infamous "Like a Prayer" incident when Madonna's video brought charges of anti-Catholicism to the company. In August 2002, Pepsi pulled a national, 30-second commercial featuring multiplatinum rapper Ludacris from the air after Fox's Bill O'Reilly called ...
During the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards, which aired Tuesday, the cola company surprisingly resurrected the long-shelved commercial for the beverage’s 125th anniversary, and Madonna seemed ...
Prolific commercial and music video director Joe Pytka, who directed the original Pepsi spot, tells Yahoo Entertainment that many people have reached out to him about the reimagining. "Some people ...
The video for TikTok’s song of the summer, the ecstatically explicit “One Margarita,” features a cameo from supermodel Cindy Crawford downing some tequila in a nod to her 1992 Pepsi commercial.
Pepsi Stuff; Pepsiman (video game) PilkandCookies; S. Step to Me; U. United (Robbie Williams song) Y. Yeh Dil Maange More! You Got the Right One, Baby
A portion of the song (namely, the portion involving the request for Pepsi) is famously sampled in the 1991 Cypress Hill song “How I Could Just Kill a Man”. The song is referenced during the second verse on the Limp Bizkit song “Stuck” off their 1997 debut album Three Dollar Bill, Y'all.