Anonymous wrote:RC Cola
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think it means much in the US. However, when I have traveled around the world, I notice that the crappier, poorer countries all have prominent signs for Pepai and the wealthier countries have signs for Coke. You actually could tell a country was rising economically when you noticed Coke signs going up. I think it had something to do with production and licensing models.
Really? That’s the best word you could think of?
If I can’t drink the water, eat the fruits and vegetables, can’t walk around the streets without an armed escort, live in a closed compound, have to get loads of shots and take medicine to avoid getting dire illnesses, and am staring at refugees, malnourished children, and widespread extreme poverty, yes it’s a crappy country. Do you feel better for virtue signalling from the comfort of the US? Romanticizing poverty and distress doesn’t actually help.
You have just described Detroit.
Anonymous wrote:We call it pop, not soda, and it was always Pepsi in our house. I don't drink sugar anymore, but still think it tastes better than Coke, which I never liked. But I'm a sarsaparilla/rootbeer/birch beer person anyway.
I'm not aware of anyone, anywhere associating any brand of cola with class or race. That's silly.
Anonymous wrote:How is this soft drink perceived in your community?
Anonymous wrote:The recipe might have changed, but I know that I read about 20 years ago that the Pepsi recipe has more sugar than Coke. So some people might just prefer the slightly sweeter flavor.
Anonymous wrote:The company I work for holds training classes all over the US. When we're in the South for a class, Coke is mostly Coca Cola and the word 'Coke' is used in place of 'Soda'. However, Pepsi is a Pepsi and god help us all if you run a class down south and do not provide Pepsi and Mt. Dew. They also drink coffee like it's water but hardly ever take any of the bottled water provided.
For Northern areas, Diet Coke is what is restocked the most during the classes along with water and Keurig coffee.
Very few people actually drink plain Coke at any of our training classes.
I don't consider Pepsi a 'low class' drink but more a Southern drink like sweet tea.