(no subject)
Apr. 27th, 2006 10:33 amTo answer an eternal question I've always wondered... From the Highly Unofficial Dr. Pepper FAQ
3.3 Who owns Dr Pepper? I heard it was owned by Coke/Pepsi/7-Up/etc.?
"Awoodbeach" put it succinctly when he posted this answer to alt.fan.dr-pepper on 10/24/97:
"Dr Pepper is owned by Dr Pepper / Seven Up Inc a subsidiary of the Cadbury PLC trading on the NYSE [as CSG -- Chris F.]. Dr Pepper is distributed throughout the country by a variety of some very dedicated bottlers who without them, the Dr Pepper brand would not be where it is today. Coke, Pepsi, and RC bottlers sell Dr Pepper; it all depends on who owns the franchise in a specific geographic area. The breakdown is about 30% Coke, 40% Pepsi, 20% [other? He didn't say -- Chris F.] and some who just sell Dr Pepper......like our friends in Dublin."
In December, 1998, Coca-Cola caused a stir by paying Cadbury-Schweppes $1.85 billion for the right to distribute Cadbury-Schweppes sodas (including Dr Pepper) in 120 countries, but the United States was not one of them (neither were France or South Africa). So, in the U.S., Dr Pepper will still be distributed by whoever has the local franchise rights, meaning that there will still be places where Coke doesn't own the franchise and will continue to sell Mr. Pibb (and possibly another brand--see question 2.4) to compete. And--just so no one gets confused--Cadbury Schweppes still owns Dr Pepper. You'd be surprised how quickly rumors get started from news like this.
3.3 Who owns Dr Pepper? I heard it was owned by Coke/Pepsi/7-Up/etc.?
"Awoodbeach" put it succinctly when he posted this answer to alt.fan.dr-pepper on 10/24/97:
"Dr Pepper is owned by Dr Pepper / Seven Up Inc a subsidiary of the Cadbury PLC trading on the NYSE [as CSG -- Chris F.]. Dr Pepper is distributed throughout the country by a variety of some very dedicated bottlers who without them, the Dr Pepper brand would not be where it is today. Coke, Pepsi, and RC bottlers sell Dr Pepper; it all depends on who owns the franchise in a specific geographic area. The breakdown is about 30% Coke, 40% Pepsi, 20% [other? He didn't say -- Chris F.] and some who just sell Dr Pepper......like our friends in Dublin."
In December, 1998, Coca-Cola caused a stir by paying Cadbury-Schweppes $1.85 billion for the right to distribute Cadbury-Schweppes sodas (including Dr Pepper) in 120 countries, but the United States was not one of them (neither were France or South Africa). So, in the U.S., Dr Pepper will still be distributed by whoever has the local franchise rights, meaning that there will still be places where Coke doesn't own the franchise and will continue to sell Mr. Pibb (and possibly another brand--see question 2.4) to compete. And--just so no one gets confused--Cadbury Schweppes still owns Dr Pepper. You'd be surprised how quickly rumors get started from news like this.
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Date: 2006-04-27 03:46 pm (UTC)now i can sleep better at night knowing the truth
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Date: 2006-04-27 05:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-27 05:23 pm (UTC)then i catch on fire
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Date: 2006-04-27 05:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-27 03:53 pm (UTC)When ur at the grocery store and see Canada Dry on Sale they also have Sunkist and A&W on sale.
Same for Pepsi and Serria Mist etc etc
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Date: 2006-04-27 04:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-27 05:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-27 03:56 pm (UTC)i have never seen mr. pib here
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Date: 2006-04-27 04:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-27 05:21 pm (UTC)