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What it’s about: Fudge! For a long stretch of movie history, profanity was banned by the Hays Code, so it wasn’t until 1970 that
M A S H became the first (non-pornographic) American film to use the word “fuck.” Even then, the word was considered taboo and used sparingly. But here in the 21st century, we say whatever the fuck we want, and Wikipedia lists 138 movies that use the F-word 150 times or more (and tracks “fucks per minute,” ranging from .92 to ten times that amount (in fairness, that 9.2 score comes from
Fuck, a documentary about the word itself and its place in the culture).
Here s why Ted Cruz (and others) are talking about Coca-Cola
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The GOP is choosing Pepsi over Coke, at least for a while.
Several GOP lawmakers are calling for a boycott of Coca-Cola after the Atlanta-based soda giant spoke out against Georgia s Senate Bill 202.
SB 202 requires absentee voters in Georgia to use their driver s license, state ID, voter card or last four digits of their social security number to verify their identity when returning an absentee ballot. Voters also have to request an absentee ballot by 11 days before an election most counties allowed requests up until the Friday before Election Day. The bill also limits the use of ballot drop-off boxes and prohibits passing out water or food to those waiting in line to vote.
Posted By Nina Rangel on Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 3:24 PM click to enlarge Shutterstock Sen. Ted Cruz has hopped on another bandwagon, this time against Georgia-based Coca-Cola. If you’ve ever been faced with the Coke or Pepsi dilemma, you’re not alone. Latest to be posed with the question is Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who for now, at least is choosing Pepsi. Atlanta-based soda giant Coca-Cola recently spoke out against Georgia s Senate Bill 202, which severely tightened restrictions on absentee voters in the The Peach State, mySA reports. The bill, denouncers purport, is designed to make it harder for people to vote particularly people of color.
QLD CM BIZ PEPSICO 18NOV19
Business by Gerard Cockburn 17th Mar 2021 3:07 PM Global drinks giant PepsiCo is rumoured to be flirting with the idea of selling off its Australian snack business that includes brands such as Smith s Chips and Nobby s nuts. The Australian s Data Room has reported the major drinks producer is looking to place its local snacks assets on the market for a potential new buyer. It has been reported PepsiCo has been scoping out consultants to look at the potential demerger of its Australian food operations. Pepsi has not publicly confirmed if it is intending to sell off The Smith s Snackfood Company.
As per their estimates, packaged snacks sales returned to pre-Covid levels in January-February period, while ice-cream sales increased 30% year-on-year during the same period and beverages are up by 10-11%.