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Diet Coke

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Diet Coke
A can of Diet Coke
TypeDiet Cola
ManufacturerThe Coca-Cola Company
Country of origin  United States
Introduced1982
VariantsCaffeine Free Diet Coke, Diet Coke with Lemon, Diet Coke with Lime, Diet Raspberry Coke, Diet Black Cherry Vanilla Coke, Diet Coke sweetened with Splenda
Related productsCoca-Cola C2, Coca-Cola Zero
Websitewww.dietcoke.com Edit this on Wikidata

Diet Coke or Diet Coca-Cola is a sugar-free soft drink produced and distributed by The Coca-Cola Company. It was introduced in the United States in July 1982, and was the first new brand since 1886 to use the Coca-Cola trademark. The product quickly overtook Tab in sales. Outside Northern America and U.S. territories, Diet Coke is called Coca-Cola Light or Coke Light.

Overview

Diet Coke was sweetened with aspartame as soon as it became available in the U.S., 1983; however, to save money, this was originally in a blend with saccharin. After Diet Rite cola advertised its 100 percent use of aspartame, and the manufacturer of NutraSweet (then, G.D. Searle & Company) warned that the NutraSweet trademark would not be made available to a blend of sweeteners, Coca-Cola switched the formula to 100 percent NutraSweet, later switching back and doing without the NutraSweet trademark. Diet Coke from fountain dispensers still contains some saccharin (to extend shelf life)[1].

In other countries, where cyclamates were not banned, as they were in the U.S. and the United Kingdom in 1970, Diet Coke or Coca-Cola Light may be sweetened with a blend containing cyclamates, aspartame, and acesulfame potassium. Fans of the drink often express a strong preference for either the European formula or the American-British-Canadian version. Contrary to some reports, Coca-Cola Zero is not the European Coca-Cola Light formula.

In 2005, under pressure from retailer Wal-Mart (which was impressed with the popularity of Splenda sweetener), and despite their previous blunder with New Coke, the company released a new formulation called "Diet Coke sweetened with Splenda". Sucralose replaces aspartame in this version. Early sales reports for this version were not quite as strong as anticipated; however, Coca-Cola did little advertising for the brand, investing money and advertising in Coca-Cola Zero instead. The introduction of the Splenda sweetened version of Diet Coke saw complaints to bottlers, as store shelves would often go with very little of the normal version of Diet Coke.

Diet Coke does not utilize a modified form of the Coca-Cola recipe but is instead an entirely different formula. The controversial New Coke, introduced in 1985, used a version of the Diet Coke recipe that contained high fructose corn syrup and had a slightly different balance of ingredients. In 2004 Coca-Cola introduced Coca-Cola C2, which it claims tastes much closer to Coca-Cola but contains half the carbohydrates.

File:Coca cola light.jpg
Coca-Cola light logo

When Tab was released in 1963, the Coca-Cola Company refused to use the Coca-Cola brandname, fearing that its flagship brand might suffer by being used on another product, the long-term viability of which was uncertain. (Ironically, Tab is still available today, even though vastly outweighed by Diet Coke.) Its rival Pepsi had no such qualms, and after the long-term success of its sugar-free brand Diet Pepsi, launched in 1964, became clear, Coca-Cola decided to launch a new sugar-free brand under the Coca-Cola name to compete with Diet Pepsi. With the well-known name, it could be marketed more extensively than the more anonymously dubbed Tab.

Diet Coke and Diet Pepsi have capitalized on the markets of people who require low sugar regimens, such as diabetics and people with other health conditions, athletes, and people who want to lose weight. In the UK, a 330 ml can of Diet Coke contains around 1.3 Calories (5 kilojoules) compared to 142 Calories (595 kJ) for a regular can of Coca-Cola.

According to the company's UK website as of 2004:

  • Diet Coke is the #1 selling sugar-free soda in the world;
  • Diet Coke is the third-largest brand at the company, and the fourth most-popular carbonated soft drink in the world;
  • Diet Coke is sold in 149 countries; in 46 of them, where diet has undesirable connotations, it is known as Coca-Cola Light;
  • The top five markets for the brand are the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Canada, and Brazil.
  • Some predict that Diet Coke will soon overtake Pepsi and Coca-Cola as the #1 soft drink in the USA because, over the last decade, both Pepsi and Coca-Cola Classic had lost market share and Diet Coke has gained market share (up to 9.8% in 2005)

Brand portfolio

File:Chinacokecans.jpg
Vanilla Coke and Diet Coke with Lemon cans in China (from left to right)
File:Diet-coke-arab-il.jpg
Arab and Israeli Diet Coke cans (left to right) at the Egypt-Israel border, 2006
Name Launched Discontinued Notes
Diet Coke 1982
Caffeine Free Diet Coke 1983
Diet Cherry Coke/Diet Coke Cherry 1986 Available in USA and United Kingdom.
Discontinued in Australia and Israel.
Diet Coke with Lemon 2001 2005 (USA) Still available in Austria, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Germany, Hong Kong, South Africa, Spain and the United Kingdom. The version sold in Continental Europe utilizes the Coca-Cola Light formula and is generally thought to match much better with the lemon flavoring than the Diet Coke formula.
Diet Vanilla Coke/Diet Coke Vanilla 2002 2006 Still available in Hong Kong and also Australia.
Diet Coke with Lime 2004
Diet Raspberry Coke June 1, 2005 2006 Available in New Zealand.
Diet Coke sweetened with Splenda 2005 Available in Norway.
Coca-Cola Zero 2005 In Austria Coca-Cola Zero is the succesor of Coca-Cola's Diet Coke. Coca-Cola Zero has an additional label "Neuer Geschmack" ("new taste") and a "0 kcal" symbol to differentiate it from the old diet coke.
Diet Coke Black Cherry Vanilla 2006
Coca-Cola Light Sango Mid-2006 Only available in Belgium, Luxembourg, and France.

But often referred to with 'Cola', a usage the Coca-Cola Company has tried hard to discourage, as cola is a generic word that refers to any such drink; likewise, the company has fought a long battle against the use of Cola instead of Coke. Commercials refer only to Coke Light or Coca-Cola Light.

  • In France the term Coca Light is normally used.
  • In French-speaking Canada it is called Coke Diète.
  • In Puerto Rico and Spanish-speaking United States it is called Coke Dieta (a literal translation of Diet Coke).
  • In Japan, the name Coca-Cola Light was used between 1984 and 1999, when it was replaced by Diet Coke.
  • In Israel, the name Diet Coca-Cola is used.
  • In Italy, the name Diet Coke was used until the late 1990s.
  • In Russia, it is called Koka-Kola Layt.
  • In Brazil, it is called Coca-Cola Light.

Advertising slogans

  • "The time is right" (1982, pre-launch slogan)
  • "Just for the taste of it!" (1982)
  • "Just for the taste" (1991)
  • "Taste it all!" (1993)
  • "Get the taste of it" (2000)
  • "Do what feels good" (2002)
  • "It's a Diet Coke thing" (2004)
  • "Life is how you take it" (2005)
  • "Light it up!" (2006)
  • "The Diet Coke side of life" (used in the UK)

Debate over health issues

One version of Diet Coke (and majority of beverages using artificial sweeteners) relies on Aspartame, which has been blamed by some scientists and medical professionals for possibly causing serious illnesses (such as brain tumors, brain lesions, and lymphoma) when consumed in large quantities. Other researchers have found no such link, or believe that the quantities in sodas such as Diet Coke are much too small to cause adverse effects. It should be noted that Coca-Cola has now released Diet Coke sweetened with sucralose (also known as Splenda)

Ingredients

  • water

stuff that makes u fat!!!!!!! even though its diet! Poisen!!!!!!!! Lemon juice! horse pee!

Trivia

  • It is possible to cause a sudden high-pressure release of carbon dioxide known as a Mentos eruption by inserting multiple Mentos into a container of Diet Coke. Mythbusters found this is caused because of nucleation as well as certain catalysts in the Diet Coke and Mentos themselves. The phenomenon is described in some detail by the General Chemistry Online! FAQ, which also attributes it to nucleation.[2]
  • Often referred to as a "DC Special" when ordering in Delaware taverns.

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