Coca-Cola is a
carbonated soft drink
sold in stores, restaurants, and
vending
machines internationally.
The
Coca-Cola Company claims that the beverage is sold in more than
200 countries.
It is produced by The Coca-Cola Company in
Atlanta,
Georgia
, and is often referred to simply as
Coke (a now genericized trademark) or (in European
and American countries) as cola or
pop. Originally intended as a
patent medicine when it was invented in the
late 19th century by
John Pemberton,
Coca-Cola was bought out by businessman
Asa Griggs Candler, whose marketing
tactics led Coke to its dominance of the world soft-drink market
throughout the 20th century.
The company produces
concentrate, which
is then sold to licensed Coca-Cola bottlers throughout the world.
The bottlers, who hold territorially exclusive contracts with the
company, produce finished product in cans and bottles from the
concentrate in combination with filtered water and sweeteners. The
bottlers then sell, distribute and merchandise Coca-Cola to retail
stores and vending machines. Such bottlers include
Coca-Cola Enterprises, which is the
largest single Coca-Cola bottler in North America and western
Europe. The Coca-Cola Company also sells concentrate for soda
fountains to major restaurants and
food
service distributors.
The Coca-Cola Company has, on occasion, introduced other cola
drinks under the Coke brand name. The most common of these is
Diet Coke, with others including
Caffeine-Free Coca-Cola,
Diet
Coke Caffeine-Free,
Coca-Cola
Cherry,
Coca-Cola Zero,
Coca-Cola Vanilla, and special editions
with lemon, lime or coffee.
In response to consumer insistence on a more natural product, the
company is in the process of phasing out E211, or
sodium benzoate, the controversial additive
used in Diet Coke and linked to DNA damage to yeast cells and
hyperactivity in children. The company has stated that it plans to
remove E211 from its other products, including
Sprite and
Oasis, as soon as a satisfactory alternative
is found.
History
The first
Coca-Cola recipe was invented in a drugstore in Columbus
, Georgia
by John Pemberton,
originally as a cocawine called Pemberton's French Wine Coca in
1885. He may have been inspired by the formidable success of
Vin Mariani, a
European cocawine.
In 1886,
when Atlanta
and Fulton
County
passed prohibition
legislation, Pemberton responded by developing Coca-Cola,
essentially a non-alcoholic version of French Wine
Cola.The first sales were at Jacob's Pharmacy in
Atlanta
, Georgia
, on May 8, 1886. It was initially sold
as a patent medicine for five cents
a glass at soda fountains, which were
popular in the United
States
at the time due to the belief that carbonated water was good for the
health. Pemberton claimed Coca-Cola cured many diseases,
including
morphine addiction,
dyspepsia,
neurasthenia,
headache,
and
impotence. Pemberton ran the first
advertisement for the beverage on May 29 of the same year in the
Atlanta Journal.
By 1888, three versions of Coca-Cola — sold by three separate
businesses — were on the market.
Asa
Griggs Candler acquired a stake in Pemberton's company in 1887
and incorporated it as the
Coca
Cola Company in 1888. The same year, while suffering from an
ongoing addiction to
morphine, Pemberton
sold the rights a second time to four more businessmen:
J.C. Mayfield,
A.O. Murphey, C.O. Mullahy and E.H. Bloodworth. Meanwhile,
Pemberton's alcoholic son
Charley
Pemberton began selling his own version of the product.
John Pemberton declared that the
name "Coca-Cola" belonged
to Charley, but the other two manufacturers could continue to use
the
formula. So, in the summer of 1888, Candler sold his
beverage under the names Yum Yum and Koke. After both failed to
catch on, Candler set out to establish a legal claim to Coca-Cola
in late 1888, in order to force his two competitors out of the
business. Candler purchased
exclusive
rights to the formula from John Pemberton,
Margaret Dozier and
Woolfolk Walker. However, in 1914, Dozier
came forward to claim her signature on the bill of sale had been
forged, and subsequent analysis has indicated John Pemberton's
signature was most likely a forgery as well.
In 1892 Candler incorporated a second company,
The Coca-Cola Company (the
current corporation), and in 1910 Candler had the earliest records
of the company burned, further obscuring its legal origins. By the
time of its 50th anniversary, the drink had reached the status of a
national icon in the USA. In 1935, it was certified
kosher by Rabbi
Tobias
Geffen, after the company made minor changes in the sourcing of
some ingredients.
Coca-Cola was sold in
bottles for the first
time on March 12, 1894.
The first outdoor wall advertisement was
painted in the same year as well in Cartersville,
Georgia
. Cans of Coke
first appeared in 1955.
The first bottling of Coca-Cola occurred in
Vicksburg
, Mississippi
, at the Biedenharn Candy Company in 1891.
Its proprietor was Joseph A. Biedenharn. The original bottles were
Biedenharn bottles, very different from the much later hobble-skirt
design that is now so familiar. Asa Candler was tentative about
bottling the drink, but two entrepreneurs from Chattanooga,
Tennessee, Benjamin F. Thomas and Joseph B. Whitehead, proposed the
idea and were so persuasive that Candler signed a contract giving
them control of the procedure for only one dollar. Candler never
collected his dollar, but in 1899 Chattanooga became the site of
the first Coca-Cola bottling company. The loosely termed contract
proved to be problematic for the company for decades to come. Legal
matters were not helped by the decision of the bottlers to
subcontract to other companies, effectively becoming parent
bottlers.
Coke concentrate, or Coke syrup, was and is sold separately at
pharmacies in small quantities, as an over-the-counter remedy for
nausea or mildly upset stomach.
New Coke
On April 23, 1985, Coca-Cola, amid much publicity, attempted to
change the
formula of the drink
with "New Coke". Follow-up taste tests revealed that most consumers
preferred the taste of New Coke to both Coke and Pepsi, but
Coca-Cola management was unprepared for the public's
nostalgia for the old drink, leading to a
backlash. The company gave in to
protests and returned to a variation of the
old formula, with high-fructose replacing
cane sugar, under the name Coca-Cola Classic on July 10,
1985.
21st Century
On February 7, 2005, the Coca-Cola Company announced that in the
second quarter of 2005 they planned to launch a
Diet Coke product sweetened with the
artificial sweetener sucralose ("Splenda"), the same sweetener
currently used in
Pepsi One. On March 21,
2005, it announced another diet product,
Coca-Cola Zero, sweetened partly with a blend
of
aspartame and
acesulfame potassium. In 2007,
Coca-Cola began to sell a new "healthy soda": Diet Coke with
vitamins B
6, B
12, magnesium, niacin, and
zinc, marketed as "Diet Coke Plus."
On July 5,
2005, it was revealed that Coca-Cola would resume operations in
Iraq
for the first time since the Arab League boycotted the company in
1968.
In April 2007, in Canada, the name "Coca-Cola Classic" was changed
back to "Coca-Cola." The word "Classic" was truncated because "New
Coke" was no longer in production, eliminating the need to
differentiate between the two. The formula remained
unchanged.
In January 2009, Coca-Cola stopped printing the word "Classic" on
the labels of 16-ounce bottles sold in parts of the
southeastern United States. The
change is part of a larger strategy to rejuvenate the product's
image.
In November 2009, due to a dispute over wholesale prices of
Coca-Cola products,
Costco stopped restocking
its shelves with Coke and Diet Coke.
Use of stimulants in formula
When launched Coca-Cola's two key ingredients were
cocaine (benzoylmethyl ecgonine) and
caffeine. The cocaine was derived from the
coca leaf and the caffeine from
kola nut, leading to the name Coca-Cola (the "K" in
Kola was replaced with a "C" for marketing purposes).
Coca — cocaine
Pemberton called for five
ounces of coca leaf
per gallon of syrup, a significant dose; in 1891, Candler claimed
his formula (altered extensively from Pemberton's original)
contained only a tenth of this amount. Coca-Cola did once contain
an estimated nine
milligrams of
cocaine per glass, but in 1903 it was removed.
Coca-Cola still contains coca flavoring.
After 1904, instead of using fresh leaves, Coca-Cola started using
"spent" leaves — the leftovers of the
cocaine-extraction process with
cocaine trace levels left over at a molecular level.
To this
day, Coca-Cola uses as an ingredient a cocaine-free coca leaf extract
prepared at a Stepan Company plant in
Maywood, New
Jersey
.
In the
United States, Stepan Company is the
only manufacturing plant authorized by the Federal Government to
import and process the coca plant, which it
obtains mainly from Peru
and, to a
lesser extent, Bolivia
. Besides producing the coca flavoring agent
for Coca-Cola, Stepan Company
extracts cocaine from the coca leaves, which it sells to Mallinckrodt, a St. Louis, Missouri
pharmaceutical
manufacturer that is the only company in the United States licensed
to purify cocaine for medicinal use. Stepan Company buys
about 100 metric tons of dried Peruvian coca leaves each year,
according to Marco Castillo, spokesman for Peru's state-owned
National Coca Co.
Kola nuts — caffeine
Kola nuts act as a flavoring and the source
of
caffeine in Coca-Cola. In Britain, for
example, the ingredient label states "Flavourings (Including
Caffeine)." Kola nuts contain about 2 percent to 3.5 percent
caffeine, are of bitter flavor and are commonly used in
cola soft drinks. In 1911,
the U.S. government initiated
United
States v. Forty
Barrels and Twenty Kegs of Coca-Cola, hoping to force Coca-Cola
to remove caffeine from its formula. The case was decided in favor
of Coca-Cola. Subsequently, in 1912 the U.S. Pure Food and Drug Act
was amended, adding
caffeine to the list of
"habit-forming" and "deleterious" substances which must be listed
on a product's label.
Coca-Cola contains 34 mg of
caffeine
per 12 fluid ounces, while
Diet
Coke Caffeine-Free contains 0 mg.
Production
Ingredients
- Carbonated water
- Sugar (sucrose or fructose depending on country of origin)
- Caffeine
- Phosphoric acid v. Caramel (E150d)
- Natural flavourings
A can of Coke (12 fl ounces/355ml) has 39 grams of carbohydrates
(all from sugar), 50 mg of sodium, 0 grams fat, 0 grams
potassium, and 140 calories.

150 px
Formula of natural flavorings
The exact formula of Coca-Cola's natural flavourings (but not its
other ingredients which are listed on the side of the bottle or
can) is a famous
trade secret.
The
original copy of the formula is held in SunTrust Bank's main vault in Atlanta
. Its
predecessor, the
Trust Company, was
the
underwriter for the Coca-Cola
Company's
initial public
offering in 1919. A popular myth states that only two
executives have access to the formula, with each executive having
only half the formula. The truth is that while Coca-Cola does have
a rule restricting access to only two executives, each knows the
entire formula and others, in addition to the prescribed duo, have
known the formulation process.
Franchised production model
The actual production and distribution of Coca-Cola follows a
franchising model. The Coca-Cola Company only produces a syrup
concentrate, which it sells to bottlers throughout the world, who
hold Coca-Cola franchises for one or more geographical areas. The
bottlers produce the final drink by mixing the syrup with filtered
water and sweeteners, and then carbonate it before putting it in
cans and bottles, which the bottlers then sell and distribute to
retail stores, vending machines, restaurants and food service
distributors.
The Coca-Cola Company owns minority shares in some of its largest
franchises, like
Coca-Cola
Enterprises,
Coca-Cola Amatil,
Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling
Company (CCHBC) and
Coca-Cola
FEMSA, but fully independent bottlers produce almost half of
the volume sold in the world.Independent bottlers are allowed to
sweeten the drink according to local tastes.
The
bottling plant in Skopje
, Macedonia
received the 2009 award for "Best Bottling
Company".
Brand portfolio
| Name |
Launched |
Discontinued |
Notes |
Picture |
| Coca-Cola |
1886 |
|
The original version of Coca-Cola. |
 |
| Caffeine-Free
Coca-Cola |
1983 |
|
|
 |
| Coca-Cola Cherry |
1985 |
|
Was available in Canada starting in 1996. Called "Cherry
Coca-Cola (Cherry Coke)" in North America until 2006. Zero-calorie
variant (Coca-Cola Cherry Zero) also currently available. |
 |
| New Coke/"Coca-Cola II" |
1985 |
2002 |
Still
available in Yap and American
Samoa |
|
| Coca-Cola with Lemon |
2001 |
2005 |
Still available in:American Samoa , Austria , Belgium , Brazil , China , Denmark , Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Finland , France , Germany , Hong
Kong , Iceland , Korea , Luxembourg , Macau , Malaysia , Mongolia , Netherlands , Norway , Réunion , Singapore , Spain , Switzerland , Taiwan , Tunisia , United
Kingdom , United
States , and West
Bank -Gaza |
 |
| Coca-Cola
Vanilla |
2002 |
2005 |
Still available in:Austria , Australia, China , Germany , Hong
Kong , New
Zealand (600ml only) Malaysia , Sweden (Imported)
and Russia . Was
called "Vanilla Coca-Cola (Vanilla Coke)" during initial U.S.
availability. |
 |
| 2007 |
|
It was reintroduced in June 2007 by popular demand |
| Coca-Cola C2 |
2003 |
2007 |
Was
only available in Japan , Canada , and the
United
States . |
 |
| Coca-Cola with Lime |
2005 |
|
Available in Belgium , Netherlands , Singapore ,Canada , and the
United
States . |
 |
| Coca-Cola Raspberry |
June 2005 |
End of 2005 |
Was
only available in New
Zealand . |
|
| Coca-Cola Zero |
2005 |
|
|
 |
| Coca-Cola M5 |
2005 |
|
Only
available in Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Germany , Italy , Spain , Mexico and
Brazil |
 |
| Coca-Cola Black
Cherry Vanilla |
2006 |
Middle of 2007 |
Was replaced by Vanilla Coke in June 2007 |
 |
| Coca-Cola Blāk |
2006 |
Beginning of 2008 |
Only
available in the United
States , France , Canada , Czech
Republic , Slovak
Republic , Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Bulgaria and Lithuania |
 |
| Coca-Cola Citra |
2006 |
|
Only
available in Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, New
Zealand and Japan . |
 |
| Coca-Cola Light Sango |
2006 |
|
Only
available in France and Belgium . |
 |
| Coca-Cola Orange |
2007 |
|
Only
available in the United
Kingdom and Gibraltar |
 |
| Coca-Cola Classic |
2008 |
|
Introduced in bottle form after Coke Classic in cans was made.
Available
in Australia and the United States . |
|
Logo design
The famous Coca-Cola
logo was created by John
Pemberton's bookkeeper,
Frank Mason
Robinson, in 1885. Robinson came up with the name and chose the
logo's distinctive cursive script.
The typeface
used, known as Spencerian script,
was developed in the mid 19th century and was the dominant form of
formal handwriting in the United States
during that period.
Robinson also played a significant role in early Coca-Cola
advertising.
His promotional suggestions to Pemberton
included giving away thousands of free drink coupons and plastering
the city of Atlanta
with publicity banners and streetcar signs.
Contour bottle design
The equally famous Coca-Cola bottle, called the "contour bottle"
within the company, but known to some as the "
hobble skirt" bottle, was created in 1915 by
bottle designer
Earl R. Dean. In 1915, the
Coca-Cola Company launched a competition
among its bottle suppliers to create a new bottle for the beverage
that would distinguish it from other beverage bottles, "a bottle
which a person could recognize even if they felt it in the dark,
and so shaped that, even if broken, a person could tell at a glance
what it was."
Chapman J. Root, president of
the Root Glass Company, turned the
project over to members of his supervisory staff, including company
auditor T. Clyde Edwards, plant superintendent Alexander
Samuelsson, and
Earl R. Dean, bottle designer and supervisor of the
bottle molding room. Root and his subordinates decided to base the
bottle's design on one of the soda's two ingredients, the
coca leaf or the
kola nut,
but were unaware of what either ingredient looked like. Dean and
Edwards went to the
Emeline Fairbanks Memorial
Library and were unable to find any information about coca or
kola. Instead, Dean was inspired by a picture of the gourd-shaped
cocoa pod in the
Encyclopedia Britannica. Dean made a
rough sketch of the pod and returned back to the plant to show Mr.
Root. He explained to Root how he could transform the shape of the
pod into a bottle. Chapman Root gave Dean his approval.
Faced with the upcoming scheduled maintenance of the mold-making
machinery, over the next 24 hours Dean sketched out a concept
drawing which was approved by Root the next morning. Dean then
proceeded to create a bottle mold and produced a small number of
bottles before the glass-molding machinery was turned off.
Chapman Root approved the prototype bottle and a
design patent was issued on the bottle in
November, 1915. The prototype never made it to production since its
middle diameter was larger than its base, making it unstable on
conveyor belts. Dean resolved this
issue by decreasing the bottle's middle diameter. During the 1916
bottler's convention, Dean's contour bottle was chosen over other
entries and was on the market the same year. By 1920, the contour
bottle became the standard for the
Coca-Cola Company. Today, the contour
Coca-Cola bottle is one of the most recognized packages on the
planet..."even in the dark!".
a reward for his efforts, Dean was offered a choice between a $500
bonus or a lifetime job at
the
Root Glass Company. He chose the lifetime job and kept it until
the
Owens-Illinois Glass
Company bought out
the Root
Glass Company in the mid-1930s. Dean went on to work in other
Midwestern glass factories.
Although endorsed by some , this version of events is not
considered authoritative by many who consider it implausible. One
alternative depiction has
Raymond
Loewy as the inventor of the unique design, but, while Loewy
did serve as a designer of Coke cans and bottles in later years, he
was in the
French Army the year the
bottle was invented and did not emigrate to the United States until
1919. Others have attributed inspiration for the design not to the
cocoa pod, but to a
Victorian
hooped dress.
In 1944, Associate Justice
Roger J.
Traynor of the Supreme
Court of California
took advantage of a case involving a waitress
injured by an exploding Coca-Cola bottle to articulate the doctrine
of strict liability for defective products. Traynor's
concurring opinion in
Escola v.
Coca-Cola Bottling
Co. is widely recognized as a landmark case in U.S. law
today.
In 1997,
Coca-Cola also introduced a "contour can," similar in shape to its
famous bottle, on a few test markets, including Terre
Haute
, Indiana
. The new can has never been widely
released.
A new slim and tall can began to appear in Australia as of December
20, 2006, it cost AU$1.95. The cans have a distinct resemblance to
energy drinks that are popular with
teenagers. The cans were commissioned by Domino's Pizza and are
available exclusively at their restaurants.
In January 2007, Coca-Cola Canada changed "Coca-Cola Classic"
labeling, removing the "Classic" designation, leaving only
"Coca-Cola." Coca-Cola stated this is merely a name change and the
product remains the same. The cans still bear the "Classic" logo in
the United States.

Coca-Cola in the new aluminum
bottle.
Coca-Cola is a registered trademark in most countries. The U.S.
trademark was registered in the
United States Patent Office on
January 31, 1893. In the UK, Coca-Cola was registered with the UK
Patent Office on July 11, 1922, under registration number
427817.
In 2007, Coca-Cola introduced an aluminum can designed to look like
the original glass Coca-Cola bottles.
In 2007, the company's logo on cans and bottles changed. The cans
and bottles retained the red color and familiar typeface, but the
design was simplified, leaving only the logo and a plain white
swirl (the "dynamic ribbon").
In 2008, in some parts of the world, the plastic bottles for all
Coke varieties (including the larger 1.25- and 2-liter bottles) was
changed to include a new plastic screw cap and a contoured bottle
shape designed to evoke the old glass bottles.
Local competitors
Pepsi is usually second to Coke in sales, but
outsells Coca-Cola in some markets. Around the world, some local
brands compete with Coke.
In South and
Central America Kola Real, known as Big
Cola in Mexico
, is a
fast-growing competitor to Coca-Cola. On the French island
of Corsica
, Corsica Cola, made by
brewers of the local Pietra beer, is a growing competitor to
Coca-Cola. In the French
region of
Bretagne, Breizh
Cola is available. In Peru,
Inca
Kola outsells Coca-Cola, which lead
The Coca-Cola Company to purchase the
brand in 1999.
In Sweden
, Julmust outsells Coca-Cola during the Christmas season. In Scotland
, the locally-produced Irn-Bru was more popular than Coca-Cola until 2005,
when Coca-Cola and Diet Coke began to outpace its sales.
In
India
, Coca-Cola ranked third behind the leader,
Pepsi-Cola, and local drink Thums
Up. The Coca-Cola
Company purchased
Thums Up in 1993. As
of 2004, Coca-Cola held a 60.9% market-share in India.
Tropicola, a domestic drink, is served in Cuba
instead of
Coca-Cola, due to a United States embargo. French brand
Mecca Cola and British brand
Qibla Cola, popular in the
Middle East, are competitors to Coca-Cola.
In
Turkey
, Cola Turka is a major competitor to
Coca-Cola. In Iran
and many
countries of Middle East, Zam Zam Cola
and Parsi Cola are major competitors to
Coca-Cola. In some parts of China
Future cola is a competitor. In Slovenia
, the locally-produced Cockta
is a major competitor to Coca-Cola, as is the inexpensive Mercator
Cola, which is sold only in the country's biggest supermarket chain, Mercator. In Israel
, RC Cola
is an inexpensive competitor. Classiko Cola, made
by Tiko Group, the largest manufacturing company in Madagascar
, is a serious competitor to Coca-Cola in many
regions. Laranjada is the
top-selling soft drink on the Portuguese
island of Madeira
. Coca-Cola has stated that Pepsi was not its
main rival in the UK
, but rather
Robinsons drinks.
Advertising
Coca-Cola's advertising has significantly affected
American culture, and it is
frequently credited with inventing the modern image of
Santa Claus as an old man in a red-and-white
suit. Although the company did start using the red-and-white Santa
image in the 1930s, with its winter advertising campaigns
illustrated by
Haddon Sundblom, the
motif was already common. Coca-Cola was not even the first soft
drink company to use the modern image of Santa Claus in its
advertising:
White Rock
Beverages used Santa in advertisements for its
ginger ale in 1923, after first using him to sell
mineral water in 1915.
Before Santa Claus, Coca-Cola relied on images of smartly-dressed
young women to sell its beverages. Coca-Cola's first such
advertisement appeared in 1895, featuring the young Bostonian
actress
Hilda Clark as its
spokeswoman.
1941 saw the first use of the nickname "Coke" as an official
trademark for the product, with a series of advertisements
informing consumers that "Coke means Coca-Cola".
In 1971, a song from a Coca-Cola commercial called "
I'd Like to Teach the World
to Sing," produced by
Billy
Davis, became a
hit single.
Coke's advertising is pervasive, as one of Woodruff's stated goals
was to ensure that everyone on Earth drank Coca-Cola as their
preferred beverage.
This is especially true in southern areas of
the United
States
, such as Atlanta
, where Coke was born.
Some of
the memorable Coca-Cola television commercials between 1960
through 1986 were written and produced by former Atlanta radio
veteran Don Naylor (WGST
1936–1950,
WAGA
1951–1959)
during his career as a producer for the McCann Erickson advertising agency. Many of these
early television commercials for Coca-Cola featured
movie stars, sports heroes and popular
singers.
During the 1980s,
Pepsi-Cola ran a series
of television advertisements showing people participating in taste
tests demonstrating that, according to the commercials, "fifty
percent of the participants who said they preferred Coke
actually chose the Pepsi." Statisticians were quick to
point out the problematic nature of a 50/50 result: most likely,
all the taste tests really showed was that in blind tests, most
people simply
cannot tell the difference between Pepsi and
Coke. Coca-Cola ran ads to combat Pepsi's ads in an incident
sometimes referred to as the
cola
wars; one of Coke's ads compared the so-called
Pepsi challenge to two
chimpanzees deciding which
tennis ball was furrier. Thereafter, Coca-Cola
regained its leadership in the market.
Selena was a spokesperson for Coca-Cola from
1989 till the time of her death. She filmed three commercials for
the company. In 1994, to commemorate her five years with the
company, Coca-Cola issued special Selena coke bottles.
The Coca-Cola Company purchased
Columbia Pictures in 1982, and began
inserting Coke-product images in many of its films. After a few
early successes during Coca-Cola's ownership, Columbia began to
under-perform, and the studio was sold to
Sony
in 1989.
Coca-Cola has gone through a number of different
advertising slogans in its long history,
including "The pause that refreshes," "I'd like to buy the world a
Coke," and "Coke is it" (see
Coca-Cola
slogans).
In 2006, Coca-Cola introduced
My Coke
Rewards, a customer loyalty campaign where consumers earn
points by entering codes from specially-marked packages of
Coca-Cola products into a website. These points can be redeemed for
various prizes or sweepstakes entries.
Holiday campaigns
The "Holidays are coming!" advertisement features a train of red
delivery trucks, emblazoned with the Coca-Cola name and decorated
with electric lights, driving through a snowy landscape and causing
everything that they pass to light up and people to watch as they
pass through.
The advertisement fell into disuse in 2001, as the Coca-Cola
company restructured its advertising campaigns so that advertising
around the world was produced locally in each country, rather than
centrally in the company's headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia.
However, in 2007, the company brought back the campaign after,
according to the company, many consumers telephoned its information
center saying that they considered it to mark the beginning of
Christmas. The advertisement was created by U.S. advertising agency
Doner, and has been part of the company's global advertising
campaign for many years.
Keith Law, a producer and writer of commercials for
Belfast CityBeat, was not convinced by
Coca-Cola's reintroduction of the advertisement in 2007, saying
that "I don't think there's anything Christmassy about
HGVs and the commercial is too
generic."
In 2001, singer
Melanie Thornton
recorded the campaign's advertising jingle as a single,
Wonderful Dream (Holidays are Coming), which entered the
pop-music charts in Germany at no. 9. In 2005, Coca-Cola expanded
the advertising campaign to radio, employing several variations of
the jingle.
Sports sponsorship
Coca-Cola
was the first commercial sponsor of the Olympic games, at the 1928 games in Amsterdam
, and has been an Olympics sponsor ever
since. This corporate sponsorship included the
1996 Summer Olympics hosted in
Atlanta
, which allowed Coca-Cola to spotlight its
hometown. Since 1978, Coca-Cola has sponsored each
FIFA World Cup, and other competitions
organised by FIFA.
In fact, one FIFA
tournament
trophy, the FIFA World
Youth Championship from Tunisia
in 1977 to Malaysia
in 1997, was called "FIFA — Coca Cola
Cup". In addition, Coca-Cola sponsors the annual
Coca-Cola 600 and Coke Zero 400 for the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series at Lowe's Motor Speedway
in Charlotte, North Carolina
and Daytona International
Speedway
in Daytona, Florida. Coca-Cola has a long
history of sports marketing relationships, which over the years
have included
Major League
Baseball, the
National
Football League,
National Basketball
Association and the
National
Hockey League, as well as with many teams within those leagues.
Coca-Cola is the official soft drink of many
collegiate football teams throughout the
nation.
Coca-Cola was one of the official sponsors of the
1996 Cricket World Cup held on the
Indian subcontinent. Coca Cola
is also one of the associate sponsor of
Delhi Daredevils in
Indian Premier League.
In
England
, Coca-Cola is the main sponsor of The Football League, a name given to the
three professional divisions below the Premier League in football (soccer). It is also
responsible for the renaming of these divisions — until the
advent of Coca-Cola sponsorship, they were referred to as Divisions
One, Two and Three. Since 2004, the divisions have been known as
The Championship (equiv. of Division 1), League One (equiv. of Div.
2) and League 2 (equiv. of Division 3). This renaming has caused
unrest amongst some fans, who see it as farcical that the third
tier of
English Football is now
called "League One." In 2005, Coca-Cola launched a competition for
the 72 clubs of the football league — it was called "Win a
Player". This allowed fans to place 1 vote per day for their
beloved club, with 1 entry being chosen at random earning £250,000
for the club; this was repeated in 2006. The "Win A Player"
competition was very controversial, as at the end of the 2
competitions, Leeds United AFC had the most votes by more than
double, yet they did not win any money to spend on a new player for
the club. In 2007, the competition changed to "Buy a Player". This
competition allowed fans to buy a bottle of Coca-Cola Zero or
Coca-Cola and submit the code on the wrapper on the Coca-Cola
website {www.coca-colafootball.co.uk}. This code could then earn
anything from 50p to £100,000 for a club of their choice. This
competition was favored over the old "Win A Player" competition, as
it allowed all clubs to win some money.
In mass media
Coca-Cola has been prominently featured in countless films and
television programs. It was a major plot element in films such as
One, Two, Three,
The Coca-Cola Kid, and
The Gods Must Be
Crazy. It provides a setting for comical corporate
shenanigans in the novel
Syrup by
Maxx
Barry. And in music, in the Beatles' song, "
Come Together", the lyrics said, "Coca-Cola,
he say...".
Health effects
Since studies indicate "soda and sweetened drinks are the main
source of calories in [the] American diet," most
nutritionists advise that Coca-Cola and other soft
drinks can be harmful if consumed excessively, particularly to
young children whose soft drink consumption competes with, rather
than complements, a balanced diet. Studies have shown that regular
soft drink users have a lower intake of
calcium,
magnesium,
ascorbic acid,
riboflavin, and
vitamin
A. The drink has also aroused criticism for its use of
caffeine, which can cause
physical dependence. A link has been
shown between long-term regular
cola intake, of
which Coca-Cola is the most consumed brand worldwide, and
osteoporosis in older women (but not men). This
was thought to be due to the presence of
phosphoric acid, and the risk was found to
be same for caffeinated and noncaffeinated colas, as well as the
same for diet and sugared colas.
The use of Coca-Cola has also been associated with an increase of
tumors as found by the
Ramazzini
Foundation in 2006.
A common criticism of Coke based on its allegedly toxic acidity
levels has been found to be baseless by researchers;
lawsuits based on these notions have been dismissed
by several American courts for this reason. Although numerous court
cases have been filed against The Coca-Cola Company since the
1920s, alleging that the acidity of the drink is dangerous, no
evidence corroborating this claim has been found. Under normal
conditions,
scientific evidence
indicates Coca-Cola's acidity causes no immediate harm.
Since 1985 in the U.S., Coke has been made with
high fructose corn syrup instead of
the more expensive cane-sugar glucose or fructose. Some
nutritionists also caution against consumption of high fructose
corn syrup because it may aggravate obesity and type-2 diabetes
more than cane sugar. Also, a 2009 study found that almost half of
tested samples of commercial high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS)
contained
mercury, a toxic
substance.
In India, there is a major controversy whether there are
pesticides and other harmful chemicals in bottled
products, including Coca-Cola.
In 2003 the Centre for Science and
Environment , a non-governmental organization
in New
Delhi
, said aerated waters
produced by soft drinks manufacturers in India, including
multinational giants PepsiCo and Coca-Cola,
contained toxins including lindane, DDT, malathion and chlorpyrifos — pesticides that can contribute to cancer and a
breakdown of the immune system.
CSE found that the Indian produced Pepsi's soft drink products had
36 times the level of pesticide residues permitted under
European Union regulations; Coca-Cola's soft
drink was found to have 30 times the permitted amount. CSE said it
had tested the same products sold in the U.S. and found no such
residues. After the pesticide allegations were made in 2003,
Coca-Cola sales in India declined by 15 percent. In 2004 an Indian
parliamentary committee backed up CSE's findings and a
government-appointed committee was tasked with developing the
world's first pesticide standards for soft drinks. The Coca-Cola
Company has responded that its plants filter water to remove
potential contaminants and that its products are tested for
pesticides and must meet minimum health standards before they are
distributed.
In the Indian state of Kerala
sale and
production of Coca-Cola, along with other soft drinks, was
initially banned after the allegations, until the High Court in
Kerala overturned ruled that only the federal government can ban
food products. Coca-Cola has also been accused of excessive
water usage in India.
The 2008
Ig Nobel Prize (a
parody of the
Nobel
Prizes) in Chemistry was awarded to Sheree Umpierre, Joseph
Hill, and Deborah Anderson, for discovering that Coca-Cola is an
effective
spermicide, and to C.Y. Hong,
C.C. Shieh, P. Wu, and B.N. Chiang for proving it is not.
Criticism
Coca-Cola has been criticised for alleged adverse health effects
and its aggressive marketing to children.
Use as a political and corporate symbol
The Coca-Cola drink has a high degree of identification with the
United States, being considered by some an "American Brand" or as
an item representing America. The identification with the spread of
American culture has led to the pun "
Coca-Colanization". The drink is also often
a
metonym for the Coca-Cola Company.
There are some consumer boycotts of Coca-Cola in
Arab countries due to Coke's early investment in
Israel during the
Arab
League boycott of Israel (its competitor Pepsi stayed out of
Israel).
Mecca Cola and Pepsi have been
successful alternatives in the Middle East.
A Coca-Cola fountain dispenser (officially a Fluids Generic
Bioprocessing Apparatus-2 or FGBA-2) was developed for use on the
Space Shuttle as a "a test bed to
determine if carbonated beverages can be produced from separately
stored carbon dioxide, water and flavored syrups and determine if
the resulting fluids can be made available for consumption without
bubble nucleation and resulting foam formation." The unit flew in
1996 aboard
STS-77 and held 1.65 liters each
of Coca-Cola and Diet Coke.
Related topics
Notes
- Mark" Pendergrast (2000). For God, Country and
Coca-Cola. Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-05468-4.
- First painted wall sign to advertise Coca-Cola :
Cartersville, GA - Waymarking
- Cola wars as Coke moves on Baghdad - The
Guardian
- According to a Coca-Cola customer-service representative.
- Coca-cola
- Liebowitz, Michael, R. (1983). The Chemistry of Love.
Boston: Little, Brown, & Co.
- May, Clifford D. "How Coca-Cola Obtains Its Coca",
The New York Times, July 1, 1998.
Accessed December 4, 2007
- Coca-Cola Your Health - You and Your Family's GDA
Questions Answered
-
http://www.letsgettogether.co.uk/DetailQuestionAnswer/QuestionID=2-color=df0f0b
-
http://www.thedailyplate.com/nutrition-calories/food/coca-cola/coca-cola-classic-12oz-can
The Daily Plate
- Coca Cola: Macedonia makes the best Coke
- Snopes urban legend of the Coca-Cola bottle
shape.
- See, e.g., Lawrence M. Friedman, American Law in the 20th
Century (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004), 356-357, and
Jay M. Feinman, Law 101: Everything You Need to Know About the
American Legal System, rev. ed. (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2006), 165-168.
- "About Kristall Beverage". Retrieved June 14,
2006.
- Murden, Terry (January 30, 2005). Coke adds life to health drinks sector.
Scotland on Sunday. Retrieved February 14, 2006.
- Kripalani, Manjeet and Mark L. Clifford (February 10, 2003)
"Finally, Coke Gets It Right in India".
BusinessWeek. Retrieved August 9,
2006.
- "Fizzical Facts: Coke claims 60% mkt share in
India", Times News Network, August 5, 2005
- Barbara Mikkelson and David P. Mikkelson, " The
Claus That Refreshes," snopes.com, February 27, 2001 (accessed
June 10, 2005).
- The White Rock Collectors Association, " Did White Rock or The Coca-Cola Company create the modern
Santa Claus Advertisement?," whiterocking.org, 2001 (accessed
January 19, 2007).
- White Rock Beverages, " Coca-Cola's Santa Claus: Not The Real Thing!,"
BevNET.com, December 18, 2006 (accessed January 19, 2007).
- Coca-Cola Conversations: Coke means
Coca-Cola
- Orozco, Cynthia E. Quintanilla Perez, Selena. The Handbook of
Texas online. Retrieved on June 5, 2006
- My Coke
Rewards (Official Site)
- www.sciencedaily.com
- Jacobson, Michael F. (2005). " Liquid Candy: How Soft Drinks are Harming Americans'
Health". Retrieved June 10, 2005.
- Center for Science in the Public Interest (1997). " Label
Caffeine Content of Foods, Scientists Tell FDA." Retrieved June
10, 2005.
- Mikkelson, Barbara & Mikkelson, David P. (2004). " Acid
Slip". Retrieved June 10, 2005.
- "Single food ingredient the cause of obesity ? New
study has industry up in arms". (April 26, 2004).
FoodNavigator.com. Retrieved February 27, 2007.
- Washington Post (2009) "Study finds high-fructose corn syrup contains
mercury".Retrieved August 16, 2009.
- PTF (2003). "Pepsi, Coke contain pesticides: CSE". Retrieved June
12, 2006.
- Coca-Cola website (2006). "The Coca-Cola Company addresses allegations made about
our business in India". Retrieved June 12, 2006.
- Coca-Cola and Water - An Unsustainable
Relationship
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
accessdate 2009-06-13
External links