Sunday, December 5, 2010

Pepsi Commericals

1950 Pepsi Cola Commrcial


1960 Pepsi commerical


1980 Pepsi commerical
 1950 Coca Cola Commerical





1930's Coca Cola advertisment







1978 Coca Cola Commerical

Old Pepsi machine


Here are some old Pepsi Machine. Two of them are from the 50's and the other are 60's and 70's. if you look Pepsi has change the color of their blue on their machines. The name Pepsi went from the color white to red then to blue. The price went up too it starts off at 5 cent, then ten cent, then 40 cent. Today it cost $1.45 at school for any soda.



1950 Coca Cola soda machine


 




I don't know abou you but i think it cool looking at all this old soda machine. This machine around my mom time. I though would be neat to see how they back then. Here are some 1960 machine too.


The way can of soda have change though the years


                                                               This can where out when I was 5 years old and glass bottles. When I was kid we paid 50 cent for soda.



This show you the different design of the can and bottle though the years.

Different poster Pepsi Cola

<---- 1950 pepsi advertisment


 here are different advertisment for pepsi and one spoke person picture, who was the king of pop Micheal Jackson. This picture was taking after he got burned on stage doing something for pepsi. I don't really remember because I was 6 or 7 when it happen.

 <--------1954 Pepsi advertisment
<-------1955  Pepsi advertisment

<------1957  Pepsi advertisment
<------ 1959 Pepsi advertisment
<----- another advertisment don't know what year.
<--- Micheal after he was burned in the hospital talking to burn victim.

Different poster Coca Cola

Here are some Coca Cola posters form different years


Here are bottle cap tops : mountain dew is distributed by pepsi company. That is old pepsi and coca cola bottle caps. People collect bottle caps as hobbie.

Here are some old Coca Cola and Pepsi bottles

There are two Pepsi glass bottle, two coca cola and one coke. I don't know the other bottles. Look at thedifferent in the bottle in this picture and the next one. Coca cola has bigber size.
1982 Mountain Dew bottle

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Pepsi

By 1908 Pepsi-Cola becomes one of the first companies to modernize delivery from horse drawn carts to motor vehicles. Two hundred fifty bottlers in 24 states are under contract to make and sell Pepsi-Cola.Automobile race pioneer Barney Oldfield endorses Pepsi-Cola in newspaper ads as "A bully drink...refreshing, invigorating, a fine bracer before a race." The first Pepsi-Cola bottlers' convention is held in New Bern, North Carolina.

In the 1920's Pepsi theme line speaks to the consumer with "Drink Pepsi-Cola, it will satisfy you." Pepsi-Cola Company is declared bankrupt and its assets are sold to a North Carolina concern, Craven Holding Corporation, for $30,000. Roy C. Megargel, a Wall Street broker, buys the Pepsi trademark, business and good will from Craven Holding Corporation for $35,000, forming the Pepsi-Cola Corporation. After five continuous losing years, Megargel reorganizes his company as the National Pepsi-Cola Company, becoming the fourth parent company to own the Pepsi trademark. U.S. District Court for Eastern District Virginia declares the National Pepsi-Cola Company bankrupt, the second bankruptcy in Pepsi-Cola history. The Loft candy company acquires the National Pepsi-Cola Company. Charles G. Guth, president of Loft, assumes leadership of Pepsi and commands the reformulation of Pepsi-Cola syrup formula. By the end of the year, Guth's new Pepsi-Cola Company is insolvent. In a series of moves, he acquires Megargel's interest in the company, giving himself  91% ownership of Pepsi.


In1934 a landmark year for Pepsi-Cola. The drink is a hit and to attract even more sales, the company begins selling its 12-ounce drink for five cents (the same cost as six ounces of competitive colas). The 12-ounce bottle debuts in Baltimore, where it is an instant success. The cost savings proves irresistible to Depression-worn Americans and sales skyrocket nationally. Caleb Bradham, the founder of Pepsi-Cola and "Brad's Drink," dies at 66 (May 27th, 1867-February 19th, 1934). Guth moves the entire Pepsi-Cola operation to Long Island City, New York, and sets up national territorial boundries for the Pepsi bottler franchise system. Pepsi grants 94 new U.S. franchises and year-end profits reach $2,100,000.



By 1938 Walter S. Mack, Jr., V.P. of Phoenix Securities Corporation is elected President of the Pepsi-Cola Company. Mack, who considers advertising the keystone of the soft drink business, turns Pepsi into a modern marketing company.The "Pepsi & Pete" comic strip introduces the "Twice as much for a nickel" theme in newspapers. Pepsi-Cola Company names Mack as CEO.The Board of Directors removes Guth from the Pepsi payroll after he plans to personally acquire a competing cola.Pepsi-Cola Company makes advertising history with "Nickel, Nickel," the first advertising jingle ever broadcast nationwide on radio.The New York Stock Exchange trades Pepsi's stock for the first time. In support of the war effort, Pepsi's bottle crown colors change to red, white, and blue. Pepsi's theme line becomes "Bigger Drink, Better Taste."

Coca Cola First Automatic Fountain Drink's

In 1933 Coca cola had it first fountain automatic dispenser, in which carbonated water and the syrup is mix when it is poured. Before this soda fountain operator had to  dispensed Coca-Cola manually since its creation in 1886.  The International expansion began in the 1920 and 30 by longtime Company leader Robert W. Woodruff, chief executive officer and chairman of the Board, the Company began a major push to establish bottling operations outside the United States Plants. They plan to open Companies in France, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Belgium, Italy, Peru, Spain, Australia and South Africa. By the time World War II began, Coca-Cola was begin bottling in 44 countries. During the war, Coca cola open up 64 bottling plants were set up around the world to supply the troops. This followed an urgent request for bottling equipment and materials from General Eisenhower's base in North Africa. Many of these war-time plants were later converted to civilian use, permanently enlarging the bottling system and accelerating the growth of the Company's worldwide business.