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An early 1980s "Pepsi Challenge" 12 oz. (355 ml.) promotional can, and a metal tab button publicizing the challenge. The challenge originally took the form of a single blind taste test . At malls, shopping centers, and other public locations, a Pepsi representative sets up a table with two white cups: one containing Pepsi and one with Coca-Cola ...
However, before the promotion was extended to add new winning numbers, [7] 800,000 regular bottle caps had already been printed with the number 349 but without the security code. [3] [6] Theoretically, these bottle caps were cumulatively worth US$32 billion. [4] Thousands of Filipinos rushed to Pepsi bottling plants to claim their prizes. [11]
Pepsico, Inc., 88 F. Supp. 2d 116, (S.D.N.Y. 1999), aff'd 210 F.3d 88 (2d Cir. 2000), more widely known as the Pepsi Points case, is an American contract law case regarding offer and acceptance. The case was brought in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in 1999; its judgment was written by Kimba Wood .
Both Coca-Cola and Pepsi can trace their origins back to the 1890s, and the two sodas seemed to be able to peacefully co-exist until nearly a century later. But in the 1980s, the companies began...
Bottles seem to be the internet's go-to tool for viral challenges.A couple of years ago, it was all about bottle flipping -- a simple trick that accelerated to the dizzy heights of online fame ...
Pepsi Stuff was a major loyalty program launched by PepsiCo, first in North America on March 28, 1996 [1] and then around the world, [citation needed] featuring premiums — such as T-shirts, hats, denim and leather jackets, bags, and mountain bikes [1] — that could be purchased with Pepsi Points through the Pepsi Stuff Catalog or online.
Pepsi, Where's My Jet? is an American Netflix original docuseries directed by Andrew Renzi. Its story explores the Leonard v. Pepsico, Inc. court case. It premiered on Netflix on November 17, 2022. [1]
An illustration of that bottle cap became Pepsi's primary logo around 1945, and remained even when the script wordmark was replaced with a modern sans-serif wordmark in 1962. The literal depiction of the bottle cap was retired in favor of a simplified representation in 1973, at which point the wordmark was made smaller to fit fully within the ...