Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pepsi-Cola is the drink for you. [1] This 1939 jingle focused on the simple proposition that Pepsi was just as good as Coke, but better value. The Pepsi Generation campaign represented a major shift away from that line of thinking; rather than being just as good as Coke, Pepsi was different from Coke. The Pepsi Generation and its associated ...
Alan Pottasch changed and slightly tweaked Pepsi's slogan to "The Choice of a New Generation" in 1984. [1] The new theme was meant as a break from the past and show that Pepsi had something new to offer consumers, with an emphasis on music. [1] Pottasch developed famous 1980s Pepsi commercials starring Lionel Richie, David Bowie, and Madonna.
The first international popstar to become a spokesperson for the drink was Michael Jackson, who along with his brothers (The Jackson 5) advertised Pepsi for "the new generation" in an advertisement featuring a reworking of his song "Billie Jean". However, when filming a second advertisement in 1984, a pyrotechnics stunt went wrong and badly ...
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 ...
Madonna's banned commercial airs during MTV VMAs, 34 years later: 'Thank you, Pepsi, for finally realizing the genius of our collaboration' Lyndsey Parker September 13, 2023 at 2:19 PM
Cindy Crawford David Yarrow Photography Classic rewind. Far and few supermodel moments are more iconic than Cindy Crawford’s 1992 Pepsi commercial. The hair flip! Those short shorts! That soda can!
[2] [4] The commercial, which offered the jet for 7,000,000 Pepsi Points, caught the attention of John Leonard, a 21-year-old business student. In place of a label, the promotion allowed Pepsi Points to be directly purchased for 10¢ per point, a detail noticed by Leonard, who convinced five investors to lend him a total of $700,000. [2]
No sooner had Pepsi launched its shiny and expensive global campaign starring the effervescent Kendall Jenner in a very "woke" and zeitgeisty protest-themed commercial, it had to pull the ad in ...