Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a decent number of Mountain Dew-drinking multimillionaires but I am from Silicon Valley.
Not a Silicon Valley multimillionaire but we are more than comfortable and my husband drinks this every morning. I wish he'd stop for health reasons, but I've be unsuccessful in this mission to date. He hates coffee and tolerates tea only when sick. I do not know anyone else personally who drinks it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it fascinating. What accounts for why this one particular drink holds such an appeal for this specific demographic?
Do you also wonder why African Americans like Kool-aid, fruit punch, and orange sofa?
Let’s leave furniture choices out of this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s Dr Pepper for the lower class white people where I’m from and they call it “dodder pipper”
Remember the soda Mr. Pibb?
Anonymous wrote:I first heard of it when I was 14 (late 60s) at Bible camp. Not many sodas for kids in those days but we got to buy canteen snacks after activities and swimming in the late afternoon. It was a big thing.
I don't care for it now, but one observation: when running errands sometimes I will get thirsty for a cold root beer (specifically A&W). It is VERY hard to find a single cold root beer, let alone A&W in supermarket or Walmart or Target coolers. You're stuck with Pepsi, Coke, Mt. Dew, energy drinks, and bottles of Starbucks. I don't keep soda at home, it's a once in awhile thing.
Anonymous wrote:Why do upper middle class white people like eating salads?
Anonymous wrote:I heard that it was cheaper than water in some places.
Anonymous wrote:It’s full of bromine, so people suffer detox effects when they stop taking it. Plus it affects brain function.
Normal countries (where companies and lobbyists aren’t allowed so much influence over politics) banned it a long time ago.
Anonymous wrote:I know a decent number of Mountain Dew-drinking multimillionaires but I am from Silicon Valley.