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The Diet Coke Break advertising campaign is a series of six television advertisements that ran from 1994 to 2013, used to promote the soft drink Diet Coke. Each advert centers around a group of women ogling an attractive man while he works, soundtracked to a version of " I Just Want to Make Love to You ".
Duffy formed a song writing partnership with Albert Hammond for the record. Endlessly was released in the United Kingdom on 29 November 2010 and placed at number 9 in the album charts of 5 December. The album's first single failed to achieve the success of previous singles, entering the UK charts at number 41 on 21 November. [80]
The second in 1987 sees Fox fight his way though traffic on a rainy night to get his new female neighbour a Diet Pepsi. This advert was also notable for its running time at being one minute and thirty seconds long and the music by Kenny Loggins. Fox's last Pepsi commercial was in 1990.
Taylor Swift Celebrates The Extraordinary Power Of Music In Her First Diet Coke Television Commercial Swift's new hit single "22" serves as centerpiece in first spot ATLANTA--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- As ...
Ads in The '80s. Ah, the '80s, a time some of us remember fondly or not at all. But if you remember anything beyond the brief, awful neon clothing trend, Izod shirts with designer jeans, and bad ...
Houston sang its theme song, "Just for the taste of it". [11] 1988 Coca-Cola Diet Coke (soft drink beverage) Houston sang the other version of its advertising slogan at the time, "Just for the taste of it". [12] Outside the United States, the second version of advertising was released, in which "Greatest Love of All" was used as background music.
Coca-Cola is launching a new multi-platform campaign in the US called 'Share a Coke and a Song.' The activation will roll out in mid-April , covering Coca-Cola, Diet Coke, Coke Zero and Coca-Cola ...
Zyman, then head of U.S. marketing, was coming off his enormously successful introduction of Diet Coke when he was assigned day-to-day responsibility for top-secret Project Kansas in 1984. The zealous Mexican insisted that Coca-Cola (or Co-Coola, as he pronounces it) must act boldly to reverse its 20-year market-share decline vs. Pepsi.