Man Claims to Have Found Long-Lost Coca-Cola Recipe
Maybe you can beat the real thing.
Maybe you can beat the real thing.
The town of Cody is getting name checked in connection with a Coca-Cola ad set to air Sunday during the Super Bowl.
Sure your dentist lectures you about it, but there's no denying that we all love a good sugary, carbonated beverage. The question is, which is your favorite?
Billboards are usually just meant to promote a product or Donny and Marie Osmond’s latest casino residency, but this sign in the Philippines is doing a lot more — it’s reducing air pollution, too.
Coca-Cola and the World Wide Fund for Nature (known Stateside as the World Wildlife Fund) collaborated on a 60-by-60 foot billboard made of 3,600 potted Fukien tea plants. The plants are potted in discarded bottles from Coca-Cola company products and specially modified to grow sideways with an efficient drip irrigation watering system. The billboard can absorb as much as 46,800 pounds of carbon dioxide a year.
You can't beat the real thing, but you can take credit for inventing it.
A man in the small Spanish town of Ayelo is taking credit for Coca-Cola, claiming his family is responsible for creating the world's most popular soft drink.