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In his book, [[Blink (book)|''Blink'']], author [[Malcolm Gladwell]] ascribes the success of Pepsi over Coca-Cola in these tests to being a result of the nature of "sip tests", which would fail to account for the cloying effect of excessive sweetness and glutamate, and a complementary (but counter-intuitive) long-term preference for an item – disregarding situations such as the Pepsi Challenge, in which it would consistently lose in blind sip-test comparisons. That is, a blind-sip test may belie that a less-sweet drink tastes better in the long run.
In his book, [[Blink (book)|''Blink'']], author [[Malcolm Gladwell]] ascribes the success of Pepsi over Coca-Cola in these tests to being a result of the nature of "sip tests", which would fail to account for the cloying effect of excessive sweetness and glutamate, and a complementary (but counter-intuitive) long-term preference for an item – disregarding situations such as the Pepsi Challenge, in which it would consistently lose in blind sip-test comparisons. That is, a blind-sip test may belie that a less-sweet drink tastes better in the long run.


In his book ''Bad Habits'', humorist [[Dave Barry]] describes the Pepsi Challenge as "Pepsi's ongoing misguided attempt to convince the general public that Coke and Pepsi are not the same thing, which of course they are."gkjfjhj
In his book ''Bad Habits'', humorist [[Dave Barry]] describes the Pepsi Challenge as "Pepsi's ongoing misguided attempt to convince the general public that Coke and Pepsi are not the same thing, which of course they are."


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 18:33, 12 May 2009

The Pepsi Challenge has been an ongoing marketing promotion run by PepsiCo since 1975. It is also the name of a cross country ski race at Giant's Ridge Ski Area in Biwabik, Minnesota, an event sponsored by Pepsi.[1]

Method

Early '80s Promotional "Pepsi Challenge" 12 oz. can, and promotional button given for taking the challenge.

The challenge takes the form of a taste test. At malls, shopping centers and other public locations, a Pepsi representative sets up a table with two blank cups: one containing Pepsi and one with Coca-Cola. Shoppers are encouraged to taste both colas, and then select which drink they prefer. Then the representative reveals the two bottles so the taster can see whether they preferred Coke or Pepsi. The results of the test leaned toward a consensus that Pepsi was preferred by more Americans.[2]

In the early 1980s, Pepsi ran a contest which would hand out a large prize to anyone who could gather Pepsi bottle caps that spelled out "challenge". Each cap had a single letter beneath it. The letter "A" was the rarest, making it appropriately difficult to win the prize.

In 2001, ex-MTV VJ Ananda Lewis hosted that year's challenge.

Criticisms

In his book, Blink, author Malcolm Gladwell ascribes the success of Pepsi over Coca-Cola in these tests to being a result of the nature of "sip tests", which would fail to account for the cloying effect of excessive sweetness and glutamate, and a complementary (but counter-intuitive) long-term preference for an item – disregarding situations such as the Pepsi Challenge, in which it would consistently lose in blind sip-test comparisons. That is, a blind-sip test may belie that a less-sweet drink tastes better in the long run.

In his book Bad Habits, humorist Dave Barry describes the Pepsi Challenge as "Pepsi's ongoing misguided attempt to convince the general public that Coke and Pepsi are not the same thing, which of course they are."

See also

References

  1. ^ "Pepsi Challenge Cross Country Ski Race". Pepsi. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  2. ^ "Snopes.com". Snopes. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)