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Tag: Pepsi

  • Twitter Partners with Pepsi to Launch Promoted #Stickers

    Twitter Partners with Pepsi to Launch Promoted #Stickers

    Twitter announced the launch of Promoted #Stickers as a new marketing tool for brands. Twitter launched #Stickers for users back in June for those wanting to add some fun to their tweets.

    “Starting today, brands can create and promote custom stickers for anyone on Twitter to use,” posted Twitter’s Head of Product, Brand & Video Ads, Ilya Brown. “A brand’s stickers will be featured in the #Stickers library and offer a form of creative expression that makes a person’s photos more fun and engaging. Promoted #Stickers represents a huge opportunity for brands to drive brand affinity and raise awareness of their message at scale.”

    “Brands can design four or eight stickers — like accessories and other props — for users to add to their own photos,” says Brown. “Photos with a brand’s stickers are shared with all of a user’s followers, allowing brands to be featured by their fans in a truly authentic way. #Stickers act as a visual hashtag, meaning that photos with your brand’s sticker will be connected and discoverable to anyone who taps your brand’s sticker. This allows a brand to see and engage with the people who are using their stickers in creative ways.”

    Brown says that Pepsi will be Twitter’s exclusive launch partner of their Promoted #Stickers, creating and sharing around 50 unique stickers across 10 of their markets. They are hoping to jumpstart their global PepsiMoji campaign into a fan-driven viral marketing push. Pepsi will not only be pushing their campaign, but also will help educate Twitter users on how to use their #Stickers. It’s unknown what Pepsi paid Twitter, if anything, to be their first Promoted #Stickers advertising partner.

    The proprietary Pepsi emoji designs were created, according to Pepis, “to help consumers around the world “Say it With Pepsi” and will bring the program to life like never before by combining two of the most popular means of visual communication – emojis and photos.”

    “#Stickers have been hugely popular with consumers, and we are thrilled to now include brands in that conversation, starting with Pepsi,” said Adam Bain, chief operating officer at Twitter, @adambain. “Now, people around the world can all share their universal passion for Pepsi and make the brand come alive in a powerful new way on Twitter.”

    “The ‘Say It With Pepsi’ campaign has helped consumers around the world express themselves using our proprietary set of Pepsi emojis and we’re truly taking it to the next level with this partnership with Twitter,” said Brad Jakeman, president PepsiCo Global Beverage Group, @bradjakeman. “By allowing people to add our emojis directly to their photos, we’re giving fans a whole new way to engage. If a picture is worth a thousand words, a picture with Pepsi stickers can really spark a conversation.”

  • Kelly Rowland: “The Game” Leaked Online

    Kelly Rowland: “The Game” Leaked Online

    Kelly Rowland was one of several artists tapped by Pepsi earlier this year to take part in a unique “visual album” to celebrate the World Cup, and her song “The Game” is included on a new LP which will be released on June 10. However, the video for the track was leaked online earlier today and was promptly taken down due to copyright infringement.

    “I was immediately attracted to ‘The Game’ because I can identify with its theme of overcoming challenges and finding your voice. It’s a very important message and I’m honored to partner with Pepsi on a project that brings the worlds of music, sports and film together. As an artist – and a huge film and sports fan – it’s been an incredible experience,” Rowland said.

    Titled Beats Of The Beautiful Game, the LP also features songs by Timbaland and Janelle Monae, whose track “Heroes” is already available online. Rowland’s video is reportedly directed by Spike Lee.

    Rowland married her longtime manager, Tim Witherspoon, last month in a quiet ceremony in Costa Rica

    “I really plan on it being a very special day between me and my sweetheart,” Rowland said in February. “Whatever we do we just want it to be special and between he and I and just make it something that we both remember and just for us. It’s our gift to ourselves.”

    Destiny’s Child bandmate Beyonce was on hand for the nuptials just days after her sister and husband got into the fight heard ’round the world in an elevator at the Met Gala; however, the newlyweds managed to keep the wedding a secret until after it was over, inviting only about 50 people.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Pepsi Sugar Soda Introduced This Summer

    Pepsi Sugar Soda Introduced This Summer

    “It’s like replacing a cigarette with a cigar.”

    Though, according to scientists, there may not be much of a difference health-wise between using sugar and high fructose corn syrup in sodas, it has become the new trend – and soda companies are hurting because of it.

    That is why Pepsi has just announced that they will roll out three new types of their cola this summer that kick high fructose corn syrup to the curb: Pepsi Made With Real Sugar, Pepsi Vanilla Made With Real Sugar, and Pepsi Wild Cherry Made With Real Sugar.

    But Vani Hari, a consumer activist, says, “Consumers shouldn’t only be worried about high fructose corn syrup, they need to investigate the entire label. For example, most people don’t know that consuming the ingredient ‘caramel coloring’ in Pepsi could be worse for them than the high fructose corn syrup.”

    The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics said, “There’s little evidence that HFCS differs uniquely from table sugar and other nutritive sweeteners in metabolic effects, subjective effects and adverse effects such as risk of weight gain.”

    Nonetheless, American consumers continue to show concern about products that use HFCS.

    Another popular soda trend lately has been the SodaStream device, a home carbonation product, which can be paired with over 100 different types of concentrated syrups and flavorings. A few independent vendors even offer specialty flavors with real cane sugar, which has been used in all of the popular Jones Soda varieties since 1995.

    Pepsi hopes this new line of colas, which will be released in June, will reverse sales declines that have continued to drop over the past decade.

    But that isn’t the only thing the 121-year old company has up their sticky-sweet sleeve. They are also leaning toward reducing the sugar and calorie content of their products by partnering with Senomyx, a biotechnology company that markets an ingredient called Sweetmyx. Sweetmyx, much like MSG, is said to “trick” the tongue into thinking things are sweeter or saltier than they really are.

    In the meantime, Pepsi fans can look forward to sipping a cold icy glass of their favorite beverages this summer, real sugar and all.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Janelle Monáe Wants To Change The Meaning Of Sexy

    Janelle Monáe Wants To Change The Meaning Of Sexy

    Brazil and Janelle Monáe. What a perfect combination.

    Both are physically stunning, they both produce a warm and inviting energy, and they both give off a good feeling that you’d like to pocket and carry around with you forever.

    Which is probably why Pepsi made Monáe its featured artist for its global 2014 futbol campaign entitled Now is What You Make It. Monáe covered David Bowie’s popular song Heroes for the campaign.

    The eclectic singer said she never played organized soccer, but she does have an appreciation for it, and compares what she does in music to sports, since both center around teamwork.

    “I wasn’t on a team, but I do value soccer, and sports in general, because it deals with teamwork,” said Monáe.

    “I have my own label, I have my own band, and we’re a team, and in order for me to succeed I have to work with other people. I love sharing my experiences and my successes with so many people. I see it in soccer players, how we can all work together to reach a goal and make each other happy once that goal is reached.”

    Unless you haven’t noticed yet, Monáe usually wears the same thing. A black pantsuit with a white shirt, and she hardly ever shows any skin.

    In past interviews Monáe says she sticks with this look because she wants people to focus on her music, not her appearance. But she doesn’t want to judge anyone, she just wants girls to find other ways to be sexy besides taking their clothes off.

    “I’m not qualified to judge anyone,” said the singer, after a reporter asked her if people appreciate a woman’s looks over her artistic output.

    “Are we in control of our bodies? Are we trying to make money and bring attention using our bodies? What types of things can we do to promote more or less misogyny, or less sexism? How can we really fight against those stereotypes and those shackles that men and women have placed on us?”

    “What can we do to help the next generation of young girls?” Monáe continued asking. “How can we redefine what it means to be sexy?….I want to fight against sexism and to help nurture the female and the female body.”

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Sofia Vergara Makes Us Laugh With Ellen

    Sofia Vergara Makes Us Laugh With Ellen

    Sofia Vergara is a charmer. Whether she’s making us laugh on Modern Family or making us really want a Pepsi, the 41-year-old bombshell has us hooked.

    Yesterday, Vergara was the guest spot for The Ellen Show. (Talk about a funny pair!)

    She immediately had us in knots with her pronunciation of the word “Giants.” Referring to the football team, Vergara tried her best to say their name but with no luck. Instead, the name she mouthed was “Yiants.” In disbelief that she couldn’t say their name, DeGeneres tried her best to coach the Colombian beauty. Instead, laughter erupted and we all instantly fell in love with the actress once more.

    While DeGeneres and Vergara share a similar sense of humor, the two ladies have something else in common. Both are CoverGirl spokeswomen, appearing in magazine and television ads for the cosmetic line.

    The two even embarked on creating their own “CoverGirl” commercial that had the audience and viewers at home cracking up.

    DeGeneres took the liberty of throwing the guest a little bachelorette party-on the show. She tricked Vergara, serving her coffee and then cueing the attractive barista to take his clothes off (shirt and apron only) for a lap dance. Vergara excitedly played along, shoving the handful of cash DeGeneres handed her into the strippers pants.

    The Modern Family actress also shared with us some of her hot vacation pics. Can you believe she’s 41? We can’t either…

    Image Via Instagram

  • How Soda Can Seriously Harm Your Health

    How Soda Can Seriously Harm Your Health

    Most people are already aware that soda pop is not a health food and is probably not a good drink choice. Now, there is more proof that it isn’t – as a recent report by Food MythBusters has shown some disturbing health effects of this bubbly and sugary drink that might have you off soda for good.

    Food MythBusters is a consumer friendly organization that reports and exposes the truth, good or bad, about our food industry.

    Asthma:

    Disorders linked to soda include asthma, compliments of the sodium benzoate contained in the drink, which is used as a preservative to add shelf life. Although it is not proven a cause, it is said to contribute to the disease and its symptoms.

    A French medical journal recorded a case of asthma in a young girl who was in and out of the hospital monthly due to asthma attacks. After 12 months of avoiding benzoates in foods, drinks and medications, she became asthma-free.

    Type 2 Diabetes

    The MythBusters report claims: The risk of developing type 2 diabetes increases dramatically — 80 percent — for soda sippers. The effects of soda to the now common disease, Type 2 diabetes, is common knowledge, especially for those who listen to their doctors.

    According to Health line: Type 2 Diabetes is a common and increasingly prevalent illness that is largely preventable. Nearly 26 million people in the United States have diabetes.

    Heart Disease

    Heart disease is the number one killer in America, and drinking soda can contribute to obesity, which leads to heart disease. Seventy percent of cardiovascular disease is related to obesity. High fructose corn syrup is not only in our beverages, but also in the biggest percentage of processed foods, and it may be poisoning our health. It has been associated with heightening the risk of metabolic syndrome. According to experts, obesity and heart disease go hand in hand.

    Obesity

    Soda is one of the main causes of the obesity crisis in America, obviously, people love their soda. But, with obesity on the rise not only in adults but also in children, it is becoming an expensive medical crisis, at 21 percent of U.S. healthcare costs.

    And, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), obesity contributes to heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, certain cancers, hypertension, stroke, liver and gallbladder disease, sleep apnea and repertory problems, osteoarthritis and gynecological problems.

    Soda is not the sole culprit for many diseases and ailments, but it sure would be a good idea to understand that it is dangerous to human health.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Aspartame is Deemed Safe in Colas By Europe

    After Coca-Cola America president Steve Cahillane acknowledged that Diet Coke sales were down because of artificial sweeteners back in October, the European Food Safety Authority (ESFA) has announced that the use of aspartame to sweeten Diet Coke and other colas is absolutely safe. The FDA has deemed aspartame safe for a long time, but maybe people will be less concerned now that the EFSA has said aspartame isn’t harmful.

    According to the ESFA’s study, it’s safe for people to consume 40 milligrams of aspartame per kilogram of body weight. Since a 12 ounce can of Diet Coke contains about 180 milligrams of aspartame, this means that a 165 pound male could drink 16 cans of Diet Coke without having to worry about exceeding the safe level.

    “This opinion represents one of the most comprehensive risk assessments of aspartame ever undertaken,” Alicja Mortensen, chairwoman of EFSA’s Panel on Food Additives and Nutrient Sources Added to Foods (ANS Panel), said. “It’s a step forward in strengthening consumer confidence in the scientific underpinning of the EU food safety system and the regulation of food additives.”

    Many people have long suspected aspartame of causing a host of problems, ranging from headaches all the way to cancer. While some studies have proven that using aspartame and other sugar substitutes can lead to weight gain, it hasn’t been proven that aspartame use can cause cancer, diabetes or any other serious health issues. The American Cancer Society also says that aspartame isn’t carcinogenic.

    Even though Diet Coke is still the number two selling drink in the world, the company did see a drop in sales last year because of concerns with aspartame. Now that the ESFA has made their announcement deeming aspartame safe, perhaps Diet Coke will see their sales come up a bit.

    Do you think it’s safe to consume aspartame and other artificial sweeteners? Add your comments below. Quite a few Twitter users are celebrating the announcement:

    [Image via Twitter]

  • How Prohibition Made Soda the King of Beverages

    A new book by author Tristan Donovan called Fizz: How Soda Shook Up The World was excerpted this week in the Atlantic, and he argues that Coca-Cola has the 1920’s Prohibition movement to thank for its rise to glory.

    As most history buffs will tell you, the 1919 enactment of the Volstead Act (a product of the Temperance Union combined with the Anti-Saloon League) ushered the United States into an era of alcohol prohibition. Shortly after it was passed, the pharmacy/drug store became the first stop on the road to getting hammered.

    Donovan writes that “in 1921 alone, pharmacists withdrew more than eight million gallons of medicinal whiskey from federal warehouses, twenty times the amount they dispensed before Prohibition.”

    Prohibition agents quickly got wise to the scheme, and “suspect medicine” started being rapidly seized from local pharmacies. Donovan notes one 1929 raid in Meridian, MS that netted the feds a soda fountain liquor ring after reports of young men and women “getting hilarious” while drinking Coca-Cola.

    The fountains in question dispensed a mixture of Coke and something called “Jake,” a dangerous black-market alcohol concoction. Jake was made from fermented Jamaican ginger plants, but it contained a highly toxic adulterant that was supposed to fool the feds. After a couple weeks of selling Jake-laced cola, between 15,000 and 100,000 people were rendered impotent or crippled for life from the toxic effects (the way these people walked would be referred to as “Jake leg”).

    As any teenager could tell you, when adults say you shouldn’t have something, one often simply wants the forbidden fruit that much more. The Jazz Age appeal of drinking saw hundreds of people of both sexes and all ages booze their way through Prohibition using mixed drinks and chasers, which were uncommon until alcohol was illegal.

    Donovan wrote, “In speakeasies they would order “set ups” of cracked ice and ginger ale or club soda into which they could discreetly slip a measure of bathtub spirit from their handy and oh-so-chichi hip flasks. Cola may have overtaken ginger ale as America’s favorite fizz by the dawn of the Jazz Age, but the appeal of the latter as a mixer drove its sales to new highs in the 1920s.”

    Nobody knows exactly where ginger ale came from, but most attribute its origins to an American apothecary named Dr. Thomas Cantrell, who popularized a sweet, dark, yeast-fermented drink around 1850. A second beverage inspired by Cantrell’s, Vernor’s 1866 ginger ale, had created a reputation for being so fizzy that its consumers often sneezed. Vernor’s still exists today as America’s oldest soda brand.

    Neither of their ginger ales held a candle to the third brand, none other than Canada Dry. Created by a Canadian pharmacist named John McLaughlin, he promoted his ale as “the champagne of ginger ales” at the suggestion of his wife.

    Ginger ale became one of the most popular mixers. Indeed, it became so popular that in 1923, two businessmen from either side of the Canada-U.S. border decided to buy his business for a million in cash. They directly appealed their business to Prohibition-era drinkers, and in under 4 years, sales of 1.7 million bottles turned into 1926’s 50 million. Surveys of the era suggested three out of four ginger ale bottles were used by alcohol drinkers to mask the taste of bootleg liquor.

    None of the ginger ales, however, could compare with the empire that would become Coca-Cola. If you want to read more about the fantastic journey of soda pop, which includes many curious anecdotes about the beginnings of the Coca-Cola corporation’s modern advertising campaign, you should check it out here.

    [Image via Wikimedia Commons]

  • Pepsi Carcinogen: Dangerous or Not?

    Pepsi Carcinogen: Dangerous or Not?

    The Center for Environmental Health, an environmental watchdog group, has warned that the caramel coloring in Pepsi contains a dangerous level of a cancer-causing agent.

    The offending ingredient in question is 4-methylimidazole, which goes by the street name 4-Mel, and can be introduced into a product during the cooking process and can be found in many foods. The levels of 4-Mel at issue are prohibited in California, but not in other states.

    The group commissioned an analysis of ten drinks by Coca-Cola and ten by Pepsi. Eurofins Analytical Laboratory in Louisiana carried out the analysis on California products in May and products from the rest of the country in June. The lab found no 4-Mel in any of the California products from either brand, and in only one of the Coca-Cola products from outside California.

    But the lab also discovered levels of 4-Mel 4-to-8 times higher than the legal California limit in all 10 Pepsi products.

    Be that as it may, loyal Pepsi drinkers are probably not in any danger. The California list of prohibited carcinogens is based on one study that only looked at 4-Mel’s effect on mice and rats. No study has yet connected the substance to cancer in humans, and the Food and Drug Administration has stated that a person would have to drink over 1,000 cans per day to consume the level of the substance that has been shown to cause cancer in rodents.

    Pepsi has also issued a statement that it is working with suppliers to decrease the amount of 4-Mel resulting from its caramel coloring.

    The Center for Environmental Health’s consumer product division seeks to “protect families from toxic chemicals to promote products that are safe for public health and the environment.” Its website currently includes an email campaign to convince Pepsi to make a “safer soda, not Pepsi with a cancer-causing chemical!” [exclamation point in original], if you’re outraged.

  • New Pepsi Bottle Design Announced

    New Pepsi Bottle Design Announced

    Over the years, both Coke and Pepsi have gone through so many packaging redesigns that a new design (not to mention a new version of soda) is almost expected every 18 months. However, the shape of the bottles don’t change quite as often.

    This week, Pepsi announced its latest packaging redesign for its 20-ounce Pepsi bottles. According to an Associated Press report, the bottom half of the bottle will now have a contoured shape, and the label has been cropped. The new design will be adopted for Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, Pepsi Max, and Pepsi Next. The design will also be adopted for Pepsi’s 16-ounce bottles.

    The new bottles will reportedly begin showing up in gas stations and vending machines starting in April. A Pepsi spokesperson told the AP that the design of the Pepsi bottle shape hasn’t changed since 1996. Pepsi bottling plant manufacturing lines will have to be converted to produce the new shape.

  • Jeff Gordon Prank Ad Isn’t Real, But it is Fun

    This week, Pepsi released an ad designed for viral marketing online. It features Nascar driver Jeff Gordon dressing up with a fake beard and moustache, which is ridiculous enough on its own. He then proceeds to supposedly prank a used car salesman by taking a car for a very intense test drive while recording the man’s reactions using a camera hidden in a Pepsi can.

    Of course, the entire thing has been staged. Pepsi hasn’t come out and said so, but the used car salesman’s dialogue is cringeworthy. Saying the name Mike over and over to reinforce the notion he doesn’t suspect the driver is Gordon is particularly bad. Also, shots from some sort of dashboard camera can be seen during the video, and the fine print “CLOSED COURSE. PROFESSIONAL DRIVER. DO NOT ATTEMPT.” is a pretty big give away.

    Still, it’s a fun ad, and imagining that scenario in real life is even more fun. Except for the shouting and screaming that would no doubt take place.

  • Beyonce: “Disinvite” Petition Removed By White House

    Beyonce has seemingly done her part in the movement to get kids active and healthy, partnering with Michelle Obama to create a music video for the “Let’s Move!” campaign in 2011; however, some aren’t happy that she’s also partnered with Pepsi as the new face of their ad campaign and say she’s undoing all the hard work put into focusing America’s children towards a healthier lifestyle. They’re so unhappy, in fact, that a petition to “disinvite” her from performing the National Anthem at the president’s inauguration was recently posted on We The People.

    “Knowles is renting her image to a product that may one day be ranked with cigarettes as a killer we were too slow to rein in. From saying, as she once did in referring to Let’s Move, that she was “excited to be part of this effort that addresses a public health crisis,” she’s become part of an effort that promotes a public health crisis,” wrote New York Times columnist Mark Bittman.

    The petition, created by “The Family Dinner” author Laurie David, was pulled down three days after it was posted to We The People, a public site for government-related issues. The White House released a statement regarding their decision to pull the petition, saying that Beyonce’s performance is “not something the White House actually has jurisdiction over. Selecting performers is a function of the Presidential Inaugural Committee, not the White House. We the People’s terms of participation state that users cannot post “petitions that do not address the current or potential actions or policies of the federal government.”

    Beyonce’s deal with Pepsi is worth around $50 million, but some of that will go into her future creative endeavors rather than straight into her bank account. In exchange, she’ll appear in their ads, on the sides of Pepsi cans and bottles, and will appear in a Super Bowl performance.

  • Beyonce: $50 Million Deal To Sell Pepsi

    Beyonce: $50 Million Deal To Sell Pepsi

    In a collaboration that’s indicative of Pepsi’s youthful direction, the company has announced a partnership with mega-star Beyonce which will cost them around $50 million.

    The deal will see the singer appearing in ads for the soft drink and her image will be placed on special-edition cans early next year, all of which will coincide with her Super Bowl appearance and a promotional whirlwind for her upcoming album, which doesn’t have a release date yet. In return, Pepsi will give financial support to whatever projects she chooses to do over the next several years. The multi-million dollar budget will be split evenly between ad and promotional costs, Beyonce’s fee, and her creative endeavors.

    “Pepsi embraces creativity and understands that artists evolve,” Beyoncé said in a statement. “As a businesswoman, this allows me to work with a lifestyle brand with no compromise and without sacrificing my creativity.”

    Of course, Pepsi is not the first brand to strike a deal with a musician or young performer in order to gain from their image, but to land an international superstar like Beyonce is quite a feat. And it isn’t just that she’ll be appearing in ads–which isn’t such a big deal–but the fact that there will be a partnership between the parties that is attracting so much attention.

    “It’s not easy to strike a deal with a celebrity of Beyoncé’s caliber,” David Schwab, head of Octagon First Call’s celebrity acquisition unit–which pairs celebrities and branding opportunities–said. “There’s a lot on the table and both sides have a lot of work to do.”

  • Coke And Pepsi Contain Small Amounts Of Alcohol

    Paris-based National Institute of Consumption (INC) has released a study saying that more than half of leading colas contain the minute traces of alcohol. The study found that even the big brands, like Coke and Pepsi, contain .0001 percent or 10mg in every liter. The amount is minuscule, but the figures will still be enough to upset the thousands of Muslims who regularly drink Cola because their religion forbids them from drinking alcohol.

    Of 19 colas tested, the nine which did not contain alcohol were made by brands including Auchan, Cora, Casino, Leader Price and Man U-Cola. Ten which had traces of alcohol in them included Coca-Cola, Pepsi Cola, Coca-Cola Classic Light and Coke Zero.

    Michel Pepin, scientific director for Coca-Cola France, said: ‘It is possible that traces of alcohol come from the process’ of making Coca Cola according to its secret recipe. He insisted, however, that Coca-Cola drinks were provably ‘soft’ and recognized as such ‘by the government authorities in which they are sold’. Mr Peppin went on to add that “the Paris Mosque has provided us with a certificate stating that our products can be consumed by the Muslim community in line with the religious opinions of the Committee of the Mosque of Paris.”

    Coca-Cola was invented in 1886 by the American John Pemberton and was originally patented as a medicine which could cure everything from headache to impotence. It has since gone on to dominate the international soft drinks market and is now a US icon sold in more than 200 countries.

    Art courtesy of coca-cola-art.com

  • Twitter and Pepsi Join Forces to Offer “Live for Now Music”

    PepsiCo is joining forces with Twitter to extend the reach of their current “Live for Now” promotion. “Live for Now” is a musical platform that resides at Pepsi.Com and offers live music from some of today’s biggest pop performers. Launched on May 7th, the platform also features breaking entertainment and pop culture news. The idea behind the behind the new promotion is to position Pepsi products alongside other popular culture icons.

    Twitter is one of those icons, and the new cross-brand promotion titled, “Live for Now Music”, represents an opportunity for both brands to further promote themselves as pop icons. Live via Twitter, Pepsi will deliver free pop-up concert events, exclusive videos, and free music downloads.

    Also, every wednesday for the next year, Twitter and Pepsi will provide a recap video of what artists, music and news was trending on Twitter in the preceding days.

    Here are the key elements from the partnership’s offering:

    * A new music-oriented video series: Pepsi and Twitter will help fans stay on top of music trends with “Live for Now Music,” a new short-form video series. Each Wednesday, over the course of 52 weeks, “Live for Now Music” will provide fans an instant overview of the artists, music and music news trending that week on Twitter.

    * Free music downloads: Each week, @pepsi will tweet about the exciting and current music that people who live for now are passionate about. Pepsi will also offer free music downloads from the Amazon.com MP3 Store to consumers who follow @pepsi and include the hashtag #PepsiMusicNOW in their Tweets.

    * Pepsi pop-up concert series: Pepsi will stage a series of pop-up concerts in the U.S. this summer and fall. These concerts — featuring major music artists — will be announced first on Twitter and streamed live on Twitter through Pepsi’s enhanced profile page and on PepsiPulse.com. The concerts will also be available on-demand afterwards for fans who want to watch later.

    Adam Bain, Twitter’s president of global revenue comments on the partnership with PepsiCo:

    “We’re happy to join Pepsi in giving people new ways to indulge their musical passions on Twitter,”

    “Music is an essential part of the Twitter experience. Together, we will bring fans closer to the artists they love and help them listen to, see and discover more music.”

    Brad Jakeman, president of the Global Beverage Group at Pepsi comments on the new promotions with Twitter:

    “The Pepsi partnership with Twitter is awesome on so many levels. Twitter is the quintessential ‘now-time’ media, which is a natural fit with our ‘Live for Now’ global campaign,”

    “Combine that with Pepsi’s long association with music and the result makes for a cool and innovative experience for music fans everywhere.”

    Simon Lowden, chief marketing officer at Pepsi Beverages for North America also comments on the partnership:

    “Pepsi has been recognized as one of the leading brands in social media,”

    “By partnering with Twitter, we are providing fans exclusive content and engaging millions of people around the world through one of their key passion points — music.”

    Look for the “Live for Now Music” series to kick-off at the end of June and continue through the summer and into the Fall. Check back for more news on the partnership between Twitter and PepsiCo here at Webpronews.

  • Scumbag Steve Goes From Meme To Spokesperson

    Scumbag Steve Goes From Meme To Spokesperson

    While you know him better as Scumbag Steve, Blake Boston is a living example of how to exchange Internet fame (infamy?) into real world financial gain. After finding his Internet fame via the Reddit collective, Scumbag Steve is about to appear in an ad campaign for Pepsi’s Brisk iced tea. It should be noted that the ad campaign finds Pepsi not only partnering with the popular meme figure, the company is also leveraging the Imgur image hosting service.

    According to Agency Spy, promoted images of Scumbag Steve’s Brisk campaign will appear on Imgur, which will no doubt make use of the meme images that made Boston such a popular figure on the Internet. While there’s been no discussion of Steve’s financial reward for the ad campaign, it’s not a stretch to think it will be fairly lucrative.

    For those of you who aren’t familiar with the Scumbag Steve meme, Know Your Meme is all over it, complete with examples of the images that led to his notoriety. Then there’s the videos Blake/Steve has created, demonstrating he, too, is having fun with his Internet fame:


    And no, those videos are not for the same song. Sure, they sound alike, but then again, so does every song ever recorded by Katy Perry, and she doesn’t get knocked for her hustle. With that in mind, neither should Steve/Blake. Naturally, Twitter noticed Steve’s good fortune:

    Brisk Tea teams up with Scumbag Steve (yes, that Scumbag Steve) to make banner ads you might actually notice: http://t.co/9EsyD37I
    33 minutes ago via Buffer · powered by @socialditto
     Reply  · Retweet  · Favorite

    Stop it Internet RT @copyranter: Scumbag Steve is now a SpokesScumbag for Pepsi: http://t.co/s8nWRdyF #EndTimes
    2 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto
     Reply  · Retweet  · Favorite

    Shouldn’t that be “stop it Pepsi?”

    Work That Matters: “Scumbag Steve” #meme the latest victim of product placement http://t.co/kKLUnXer
    2 hours ago via Tweet Button · powered by @socialditto
     Reply  · Retweet  · Favorite

    Victim? I think our definitions differ… While it appears as if the Scumbag Steve/Brisk Iced Tea ads will be image-based, I’m not going to let that stop me from featuring a couple of my favorite Brisk ads from years past:


    Let’s just hope Scumbag Steve’s image ads are as cool as a claymation Bruce Lee.

  • Michael Jackson, Pepsi To Partner Once Again

    Pop legend Michael Jackson is about to reach a posthumous milestone; his album “Bad” is turning 25 this year. In conjunction with the anniversary, Pepsi has announced they will be partnering with the singer’s estate to gain the rights to his image and music for a huge marketing campaign.

    The promotion–set to roll out into over two dozen countries by this fall–will feature a television ad and a very famous image of Jackson on limited-edition cans, as well as the chance for consumers to download songs from the album by scanning the cans’ special codes with their phones. Nicki Minaj is also part of their new plan and the company recently announced a partnership with Twitter to stream live concerts online. While the marketing strategy will vary between different countries–some will have contests to win memorabilia and concert tickets–one thing is clear: Pepsi is stepping up their game against Coca-Cola.

    Pepsi has been reaching toward a younger audience for a while now, trying to integrate their business with the growing social media and technology market. Last year saw them unveil their “Social Vending System“, an interactive soda machine, and earlier this year they announced a plan for Pepsi NEXT, a diet drink targeted at young males to compete with Coke Zero, a similar soda.

    Of course, most people of a certain age can’t help but be reminded of the infamous Pepsi/Jackson debacle in 1984, when sparks from pyrotechnics set up for a commercial severely burned Jackson’s face. Many of those closest to him attributed his addiction to pain pills to the accident. It will be interesting to see how the public reacts to the new campaign, and whether they’ll let those negative memories affect their decisions.

    PepsiCo has posted a photo of a can prototype on their Twitter account. Let us know what you think of the campaign in the comments section.

  • Pepsi Gears Up Campaign For Pepsi NEXT

    Pepsi Gears Up Campaign For Pepsi NEXT

    Starting March 26th, Pepsi will be launching a new product called Pepsi Next, a soft drink that has “real cola taste with 60% less sugar than Pepsi Cola”. The campaign comes after research that the company says shows consumers’ resistance to either full-sugar or diet drinks.

    Pepsi Next

    The product launch will include:

    • A Walmart sampling program which will hit 800 Walmart Supercenter stores across the country, beginning March 26 through the end of April.
    • In-market sampling for consumers to try Pepsi NEXT for free across 40+ cities nationwide between the end of March and August 2012.
    • A TV ad spot, created by TBWA/Chiat/Day, featuring an excited young couple recording their first interaction with Pepsi NEXT, meanwhile missing the “unbelievable acts” of their baby in the background, from dancing to handstands. This 30-second spot will begin airing nationwide on March 26 on prime-time and cable networks, and will be complemented with online and radio advertising.
    • A digital application on facebook.com/pepsinext inviting users to “taste” Pepsi NEXT online.
    • Multi-city PR events in which a few famous faces will surprise lucky fans with their first sip of Pepsi NEXT.

    The product’s commercial is now available to view online:

    Pepsi’s biggest competitor, Coca-Cola, introduced a similar product called Coke Zero in 2007 which is low-calorie and low-sugar. The soft drink’s ad campaign was aimed at young males, who were found to be typically resistant to try a beverage labeled as “diet” in research studies.

  • Melanie Amaro Earns “Respect” For Elton John/Pepsi Commercial For Super Bowl

    Since winning X-factor, singer Melanie Amaro has really entered onto the scene, while the show itself isn’t doing so well. Amaro is jovial after recently shooting a Pepsi Super Bowl ad with the music giant and piano man Elton John.

    The commercial itself is set in a royal court in what looks to be during the renaissance times. The almighty king is played by Sir Elton John himself and the kindly king seems to be holding a talent contest of some sort. The king files through failure after failure only to find the woman played my Amaro who only wants to present herself before the king for “treasure” (Pepsi) after that she proceeds to sing a dance remix of Aretha Franklin’s smash hit “Respect”

    http://youtu.be/dRs-pLNW6cY

    Reportedly, Elton John had this to say about Amaro:

    “She oozes personality, you can see it by talking to her. She’s very voluptuous. She’s cheeky and fun.”

  • Pepsi Goes Social

    Pepsi Goes Social

    PepsiCo is introducing a prototype for a fully interactive new vending machine at the National Automatic Merchandising Association’s One Show in Chicago this week.  It is called the “Social Vending System” and I gotta say, it looks pretty awesome.

    The new vending machine will contain a large touch screen from which thirsty travelers can purchase a soda (yes, soda… not pop or soft drink or cola).

    But the neat part is the “social” part.  Users will have the option to send and receive gifted sodas at the machine.  Say you want to get your friend back for buying you a mountain dew when you were parched at the concert and you only had credit cards and they only accepted cash (an absolutely plausible scenario).  You can buy them a soda at the digital vending machine.  Just enter their name and mobile phone number as well as a text message and they will receive the message along with a code to redeem their pre-purchased beverage.

    You can also record a 10-second video message to send to the lucky recipient.  Pepsi calls these “random acts of refreshment.”  The idea is awesome but work on that tagline part, what do you say PepsiCo?

    “Our vision is to use innovative technology to empower consumers and create new ways for them to engage with our brands, their social networks and each other at the point of purchase,” said Mikel Durham, Chief Innovation Officer at PepsiCo Foodservice. “Social Vending extends our consumers’ social networks beyond the confines of their own devices and transforms a static, transaction-oriented experience into something fun and exciting they’ll want to return to, again and again.”

    So about that social network part, one omission from the demo video is Facebook and Twitter integration.  If this crucial part is added, this “social vending” idea could really take off.  It sounds like that social network integration may be the next step as Pepsi says, “Further development of the Social Vending System platform is ongoing, and PepsiCo anticipates testing the concept with key strategic partners later this year.”

    I would love to be gifted a Mountain Dew and a bag of Cheetos in the future.  Would probably make my day.  How bout you?