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Caffeine-Free Coca-Cola. Caffeine-Free Pepsi is a version of the cola Pepsi that omits the caffeine that is customarily part of a cola. It was introduced under the brand name "Pepsi Free" in 1982 by PepsiCo. [ 1] It was 99.7 percent caffeine free. [ 2] A sugar -free variant was also introduced and known as "Diet Pepsi Free," [ 3] The "Pepsi ...
The Globe has its origins in the 1940s, when Pepsi unveiled a new bottle cap that featured the script Pepsi wordmark in the white field of a waving tricolor meant as a show of U.S. patriotism during World War II. An illustration of that bottle cap became Pepsi's primary logo around 1945, and remained even when the script wordmark was replaced ...
Caffeine-Free Pepsi: 1982 Pepsi without the caffeine. It was first introduced in 1982 as Pepsi Free but was changed to its current name in 1987. Pepsi Wild Cherry: 1988 Pepsi with cherry flavoring. It was known under the slightly different name of Wild Cherry Pepsi until 2005. It is available in the United States, Canada, and Russia. Pepsi AM: 1989
On March 28, PepsiCo announced that its flagship brand Pepsi will be using a new logo across its products, the first update to the logo in 14 years. ... the first update to the logo in 14 years.
Pepsi Stuff was a major loyalty program launched by PepsiCo, first in North America on March 28, 1996 [1] and then around the world, [citation needed] featuring premiums — such as T-shirts, hats, denim and leather jackets, bags, and mountain bikes [1] — that could be purchased with Pepsi Points through the Pepsi Stuff Catalog or online.
File:Pepsi logo 2014.svg. Size of this PNG preview of this SVG file: 442 × 600 pixels. Other resolutions: 177 × 240 pixels | 353 × 480 pixels | 566 × 768 pixels | 754 × 1,024 pixels | 1,509 × 2,048 pixels | 512 × 695 pixels. This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. Information from its description page there is shown below.
In 2014, Garden Ridge converted all stores to the At Home brand and floorplan. [7] The rebranding project changed the use of orange color for advertising to a soft grey and blue, and added a house symbol for the "o" in At Home. [8] The rebranding cost around $20 million. [8] At Home publicly filed an S-1 on September 4, 2015, to go public. [9]
The juice brand, a subsidiary of Pepsi from 1998 to 2021, removed its front-and-center logo in favor of a tall glass of orange juice. Social media, then in its early days, hated the design.