Dark History - 55: Soft Drinks and Hard Drugs: Coca-Cola's Story is Soda-pressing
Episode Date: September 21, 2022Welcome to the Dark History podcast.  Did you know that fewer people know the recipe to Coca-Cola than know the nuclear code? Or that the few people who do know the recipe are not allowed to fly at ...the same time in case their flights go down. So how did Coca-Cola become such precious cargo? Well in today’s episode we get into Coke’s history, when did the cocaine get taken out and why, how it grew into the empire we know today, and what shady secrets they keep in their vault with the recipe.Â
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Hi friends, I hope you're having a wonderful day today.
My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to my study and to my podcast
our history.
Hello, hi.
If you don't know, this is a chance to tell the story like it is and to share the history
of stuff we would never think about.
So all I need you to do is sit back, relax, and just let me talk away, and I'm going to tell you some hot juicy history, goss. So, Paul, if you're watching over on YouTube, Paul had a rough night,
okay? He's wearing a wig, I don't know what happened. The last questions later. Okay, so what is it
with companies and their secrets, right?
Like every major company has vaults and vaults of stuff
they don't want the world to know.
I mean, that's fair.
We all have secrets and there's just some stuff
that people will never understand.
I get it, right?
But there's always this shady stuff.
I'm talking about like secret recipes and stuff.
Farma companies and like how they make their drugs
or how they make their money. KFC and like how they make their drugs or how they make their money,
KFC and like how that colonel guy makes that bomb ass chicken, and Coca-Cola with their
iconic soda.
I mean, you can't think about America without thinking about Coca-Cola, right?
So that got me wondering, has anyone ever gotten their hands on Coke's famous recipe?
Do they even have a famous recipe?
What's up with Coke?
Naturally, just like every other episode,
I got to googling and listen to this.
First of all, the recipe for Coke
is held behind the giant steel door of a multi-million-dollar vault.
Very dramatic, right?
And only two people on the whole entire planet
currently know the exact recipe for Coca-Cola.
And they are so special that they never fly together.
That way, if one of the planes go down
with one of the guys in it with the recipe,
I'll at least see other ones alive, you know?
They both can't die,
because then we're gonna be screwed.
Anyway, in 2006, a pissed off Coca-Cola employee
tried to steal the recipe and sell
it to their biggest competitor. Pepsi. Yeah, Pepsi. The whole story is like a spy novel full
of lies to seat and confidential documents. Eventually, that co-employee who tried selling
the recipe to who he thought was a Pepsi executive. Turns out that was a neff bei agent.
Whoops. Well, if you're gonna protect Coke as if it's some kind of national treasure,
they gotta have some other secrets hiding in their vaults, right? Any salacious scandals we should
know about Coca-Cola? Well, this story will shake up how you look at your favorite little innocent addiction,
soda.
From initially importing cocaine to creating an environmental horror show to doctors and
politicians taking money under the table, actually I don't know why I said that, it was straight
up over the table.
Yeah, Coca-Cola was giving them cash.
So it's safe to say Coca-Cola is not what you think it is.
It was crazy times, man.
I mean, the original Coca-Cola, you probably heard,
had straight up cocaine in it, and that's very much true.
No wonder America got so much shit done,
because cocaine was like literally and everything.
Cocaine was considered a wonder drug.
Now, doctors were using it to numb patients' eyes
and sinuses before surgeries.
Dentists were telling
people it could help cure toothaches.
It was believed to help with tons of other medical issues, including allergies, headaches,
nervousness, sore throats, depression, impotence, and alcoholism.
Cocaine helps with alcoholism.
And the details about what's really behind this
seemingly squeaky clean all American brand
will spoil our alert, they ain't good.
So let's go.
To understand the origin of Coca-Cola,
we first have to talk about a French beverage
that really sets the stage.
It all starts in 1863 when a French scientist
named Angelo Mariani has this wild idea to mix cocaine with red wine
and marketed as a fun, feel-good drink.
You see, in the Bordeaux region of France,
Mariani got this idea because where he lived,
he was surrounded by vineyards and lots and lots of wine.
Everyone in town was making and selling wine.
So he thought, you know, how can I make some money but stand out in the sea of wine? It had to be splashy,
had to be delicious, and it had to keep people coming back for more. That's when he gets this brilliant
idea to add a little fairy dust to his beverage. What was that? Cocaine. I know that's a big jump, bro. It's like, look, okay.
Whoa, calm down. Cocaine isn't illegally yet and was making its way around the world. So
Mariani mixes the two together. Cocaine wine takes a sip. He's like, I'm on to something here.
I feel like Superman. I mean, he wasn't the first guy to figure this out for thousands of years. Indigenous people in the Andes chewed on the coca leaf to get a little buzz.
They also used it to suppress their appetite, and some cultures even used it in religious ceremonies.
Oh yeah, cocaine. Mm, fun. In the mid-1800s, scientists figured out how to extract that high feeling from the coca leaf,
purify it, and then boom.
That's cocaine, I mean, so easy.
Scientists were super excited about it,
and doctors were sure that this was like the new wonder drug.
Everyone was talking about how great cocaine was
and like all the benefits that it had,
including Mariani. People on that Hannah Montana were happy. They got a boost in energy
and they could think quicker. And not only this, but his drink made people feel
good because when cocaine and alcohol are consumed together, it produces
like another chemical in your body, but it gives you a sense of total euphoria.
So this scientist decides to name
the cocktail after himself, and it becomes known as Vin Mariani, and it contained a lot of cocaine
in it. So Mariani was thinking this could be pretty much a cure all, and by drinking his wine,
their health would get better. I mean, they'd become stronger and more energetic.
Anyone with any sort of issue should drink his special health beverage and watch as the magic of wine and cocaine brought
them back to life.
Mariani knows he needs to market his new product
in order for people to get out there and try it, right?
So he runs ads and newspapers and magazines
for his beverage.
And he even distributed little leaflets around town
about the health benefits of his drink.
With the smartest thing he probably did
was sending out free, Vin Maryani
to some liberties, artists, and politicians,
and in return asking for their feedback.
They tried his cocaine wine, they loved it,
and Maryani published their positive review
in his advertisements.
People loved it because they were getting shit done.
They were like, five stars.
I cleaned the whole house after drinking this.
Now, his biggest endorsement actually came from the Pope.
Yeah.
Pope Leo the 13th and Pope Pius the 10th loved Coco wine.
And you can't do much better than having Jesus' PR guy
as a spokesperson for your product.
I mean, come on.
Meanwhile, the drink ends up getting so popular,
so big that Mariani is like, you know what?
America, I should hit them up.
They love this shit.
So Mariani is shipped overseas to the good old US of A.
Now, a big problem in America at the time
was actually morphine addiction.
Yeah.
So morphine, it was an opium-based painkiller,
and it was used all the time to treat injured soldiers
during civil war.
So after all, the fighting was over.
Like a ton of soldiers came home,
not only with war wounds,
but also with really serious addictions.
This was such a common problem.
It became known as the soldier's disease.
I mean, there's a reason they don't give it out at CBS today.
If you've ever had it in the hospital, you know it's a dangerously good time.
It made me see air. It was wild. I could save that story for another day.
So one war veteran decides to do something about this like growing morphing problem.
And his name was John Pemperton. And he knew firsthand just how powerful a morphing
addiction could be because he had been addicted to his sense getting slashed with a sword in a battle.
John was a pharmacist, so he got to work figuring out a cure. Something opium-free that would help him and his
soldier friends like kick their bad habit or just get off the morphine. He does experiments in his backyard trying to find the perfect combo to create something
worth selling.
Now he was inspired by Vin Mariani, so Pempertin decides to try and like make his own cocaine
wine version.
He decides to add and see it from the colonut, which is like a fruit jam packed with caffeine.
Opium reaked havoc on on your stomach and the colonnut
was supposedly very good for your tummy,
so it was like a win-win.
And this colonnut is what gives his drink its signature flava.
Which is similar to the unique taste of Coca-Cola today.
Femberton was sure that the healthy properties of cocaine
could get everyone to
switch from morphine to cocaine and his little drink could do just that. So he carries
a bill jug of his new creation which he called Pempertons French wine coca down the street
to a place called Jacob's pharmacy. So once he goes down to this pharmacy he gives everyone
a sample and people are like, what? This is amazing.
We love this.
What is it?
And naturally, they buy a whole barrel.
And they start selling it for five cents a glass.
What a steal.
He's not just selling the string because it tastes good.
He starts telling his people, you got to try this.
They'll fix anything you got.
Pempertin said his little wine coca was especially good at invigorating the sexual organs.
And not only this, he called it a health tonic and said it cured headaches. Which sounds like
a medicine, right? Because of these health benefits, his drink starts taking off. He wants to bring
it to other pharmacies, but they're a little hesitant. I mean, they didn't know if the drink would be popular.
Local pharmacists received customer coupons for one free glass of Pemberton's French wine
coca, telling them they could give them to their customers for free.
Pharmacists were like, yeah, yeah, okay, give me the stupid coupons.
And then it was like Black Friday, people were just rolling in.
They're like, they have all these coupons.
Give me that Coke, give me that Coke.
Have you had that Coke?
You gotta have that Coke.
Pharmacists in the area realized they could turn
a huge profit.
So they told Pemberton, we're in, we want more of it.
Make us a batch.
This is also when the French wine coca in soda fountain
start to take off.
Soda fountains were usually found in pharmacies,
so it was kind of like a one-stop shop.
You could get your prescriptions, your toothpaste, your floss, your soda,
and then also you can kind of chat and hang out with your friends.
So, French wine coca at soda fountains is doing well, but then it hits a little speed bump.
Pemberton lives in Atlanta, and just as his business is like really starting to take off,
a local prohibition goes into effect,
which means alcohol becomes illegal in Georgia. Waa, waa, but Pemberton, he's not a quitter.
He's like, that's okay. I can regroup. I can change the recipe. Yeah, I'm going to do that.
And he does. He ends up replacing the wine with sugar syrup. Yeah, much healthier.
He launches this revised recipe in 1886 and it's a total hit. But since the name is Pemberton's French
wine coca and there's no leg blues in it, he's got a rebrand. He's got to change the name.
And that's when Pemberton's business partner suggests a new brand name based on the two main
ingredients, cocaine and cola nuts. Mushem together, what do you get? Coca-Cola. Yay!
I was imagining we were all saying it together on our head.
Yeah, you know, okay, and I know what you're thinking. Bailey, Bailey, Bailey, Bailey. Shut up. Are you high?
Yes.
But cocaine was so common that you could just go to the store. You could go to Sears.
Okay, and you could get some cocaine tablets for like 50 cents
a box.
People thought it was just like tame, right?
It wasn't harmful.
It wasn't anything like cocaine we know today,
but it was a nice boost.
Years later, people would realize that the side effects
of cocaine were actually causing a lot of problems.
Damn it.
They were too hopped up on cheap cocaine tablets to care,
and probably too addicted. And that's actually a big theme of this episode, right?
Addiction. Because so far, if we do a recap, Coca-Cola was invented in America to cure an
OPM addiction, which leads to a bunch of people developing alcohol and cocaine addictions.
And then sugar gets thrown into the mix, which if you have a sweet tooth like me,
you know sugar is the shoo and it's very addictive.
One 2016, a bunch of scientists ran some study and ended up getting a bunch of rats
addicted to cocaine. And when the rats were given the choice between sugar and cocaine,
the rats always picked sugar. That's how strong the urge for sugar can be.
I guess more of the story is we we've got you more cocaine you guys.
But all this addiction is great news for the creator of Coca-Cola because if people are
addicted to your product, they're just going to keep on buying it.
So Coke is on its way to becoming America's favorite drink.
With the home base of operations in Atlanta, Hemberton gets his drink in front of some very important people,
and Coca-Cola goes from being like a delicious drink in Georgia to getting like
nation-wide buzz. So we've got cocaine, we've got sugar, and basically we have the beginning of what will become America's number one beverage.
And what's not to love, I mean, it's totally legal and makes you feel amazing, right?
Well, by 1888, Pemberton's concoction was making waves in Georgia.
I mean, people are buzzing about everyone's talking, okay, and you know what happens
when everyone talks? Everyone talks and things happen. And get this around this time. Coke got a big
endorsement. Not as big as the Pope, but pretty significant in the United States. Yeah, I mean,
the search in general of the United States Army, one of the nation's top doctors
gives a big little thumbs up to the medical use of cocaine.
Love to see it, number skating.
Everyone thinks I do drugs and I really don't, but I might as well at this point, everyone
thinks I do.
Being a perfect little angel is so boring.
Anyway, so people are like, look, if it's good for the soldiers,
and it's definitely good for us, right?
Hell yeah, brother.
Hell yeah, brother.
So this very official green light from the government
caught the attention of a slick businessman
who had Pemberton and his creation on his radar.
Sure did.
So let me introduce you to a man named Assa Candler Griggs.
This young man here, he loved Coca-Cola.
But more than that, he saw how much everyone around him
also loved Coca-Cola.
And he was like, this is very interesting information
I'm seeing right now.
Mm-hmm.
And this guy, he was a local business man
from a wealthy family.
So he had like a lot of connections and a lot of money.
When he sees the Coca-Cola stuff popping off,
he wants in on it, okay?
He knows this is gonna make him some money.
He's seen dollar signs.
So he ends up taking a meeting with Pemberton
and they hit it off.
The girls are laughing and giggling,
and it went so well that Griggs buys part
of the Coca-Cola company and becomes part owner.
But being part owner wasn't enough for greedy Griggs,
nay nay.
He actually buys the formula for Coca-Cola off of Pemberton
because he saw the huge potential.
And guess how much Pemberton
sold it for? Yes, you're never gonna use this. No, he sold it for $2,300. Yeah, which is about
like $75,000 today. And think about it, like that's it. You know, yeah.
And think of like what Coca-Cola is today.
Poor guy.
Anyways, Griggs, he made off.
He was stoked, right?
He got a hot diggy dog deal.
And Griggs became the owner of what would become
one of the most valuable brands the planet has ever seen.
Okay, so Pemberton was still involved in the company,
but sadly he developed a really horrible stomach illness
and his invention couldn't cure his morphine addiction
and he ended up passing away in like 1888.
Pemberton's body was still warm
when Griggs decided to come for everything.
I mean, he bought the remaining portion
of the company from Pemberton's family
and became the sole owner of Coca-Cola.
And in 1892, the Coca-Cola company was officially born.
Now before I move on, I bet you're wondering, am I still doing Coke when I drink Coke?
No, I'm sorry, you're not.
You see, because of all of that good press about its magical health benefits, cocaine wasn't
just in coke.
It was everywhere.
It was easily accessible, so I mean, it didn't take long for a whole bunch of people to get
hooked on it.
Literally.
By the early 1900s, some reports say that there were hundreds of thousands of cocaine
addicts all over the country.
Politicians and newspapers falsely blamed the crime in society on black Americans.
Now, we covered this in the crack versus cocaine episode,
but people were saying some crazy shit like cocaine made black men more murderous.
It's insanity, and this inspired a ton of racist laws,
but I bring it up here because it was one of the reasons Coca-Cola began removing cocaine from their drink in
1903 Coke without cocaine didn't kill the brand. I mean it actually took it to the next level
So this was kind of a good move, I guess. I don't know Griggs
He was a ruthless dirty ugly business man and because of this Coke
Thrived despite this recipe change now he ended up shutting down any
thrived despite this recipe change. Now he ended up shutting down any copycat cola beverages that would pop up. I mean did it taste like Coke? Coca-Cola is coming after you. Was the font similar to Coke?
Well yeah your ass was going to get sued real quick. They're going to come for me aren't they?
The reason they did this or they went so hard is because they wanted to make sure that there was only
one Coca-Cola out there.
This is when Coke gets smart with marketing. I mean, they were one of the first companies to have celebrities endorse their products. A famous singer-slash actress named Hilda Clark
became one of the most famous faces of the brand, and people loved it. By 1895, people were drinking
Coke in every state and territory in the United States.
And as the country started to move towards being alcohol-free, Griggs immediately started
marketing Coke as the perfect alternative to booze.
I mean, it was delicious.
It was refreshing, and it was American.
Every few years, the company rolled out a new slogan to keep the brand's image fresh,
which is pretty advanced for how long ago this was. And even though the slogan changed,
it's not like the recipe was being improved or anything. They were just really good at selling
this one thing, and they were really good at keeping it new and exciting to the consumer.
Even though the cocaine had been removed, people were still heavily addicted to it because
they're sugar in it.
Remember that rat study?
The rats went always back to the sugar.
And if you're not catching on, we're the rats.
So Coca-Cola pulls out all the stops when it comes to advertising.
And in 1901, they spent $100,000 on advertisements, which is like spending
3.5 million today. By 1911, they were spending more than a million dollars per year.
A guess what, baby? That sent sales through the damn roof.
By 1917, Americans were buying a total of 3 million bottles of coke per day.
three million bottles of coke per day.
Daim? They were everywhere.
And in all parts of people's lives,
to further advertise coke,
they would put it on like schoolhouse clocks.
So kids would see it every day when they looked at the time
because you know, kids are always looking at the time.
I wanna go home during a stay coke cola.
The company, they started taking out full page ads
and magazines and putting up like banners
at pharmacies.
They even partnered with the freaking Red Cross to make it seem like if you were chugging Coke,
you were helping America or something like that, you know? I don't know, you were just helping.
Yeah. Okay, so it's around this time that we start to see how the Coca-Cola spider
starts spitting its web across America, sucking natural resources dry.
The company taps into nearby water sources,
gusling millions of gallons of water meant for local towns and people.
Why? Well, because the biggest ingredient, Coke, is carbonated water, right?
So Coke would like take local water already headed to the public,
then they would make it bubbly, add their secret ingredients, bottle it and sell it for profit.
So essentially like people were paying for water twice.
And to keep up with demand, Coca-Cola starts tapping into bigger sources to get all of their ingredients.
So you know like the water, the sugar, the Coca-Cola leaf extract, et cetera, et cetera. At first, Coca-Cola was going to smaller suppliers
and farms to get their ingredients,
but those smaller operations couldn't keep up
with coax growing demand.
I mean, think about it,
farms can only produce so many Coca-Leaves
and cola nuts a year.
So what would happen if Coke would basically take
everything those suppliers had?
I mean, they could like end up leaving those businesses
totally depleted before
moving on to someone bigger that could keep up. And that's essentially what they were
doing. Coke's business practices had a horrible effect on the environment and just really
ruined the lives of tons of farmers, not just in America, but in other countries like Peru
and Bolivia. So Coke just keeps winning and taking and taking and taking at everyone else's expense.
As you can imagine, their success starts to snowball in a very big way. The company gets bigger
and bigger and it needs more and more and more and soon it's just too big to fail and honestly
can't be tamed. Because of this, Coca-Cola turns to other huge corporations to put up the money for farms and factories to make the ingredients for their soda.
Now Coca-Cola historically has used two types of sweetener to make their trademark drink
tasty.
First, let's talk about something called saccharine.
Now this is an artificial sweetener that is cooked up by humans.
So what I'm saying is it doesn't grow like naturally, you know?
Someone needs to actually physically make it.
So the Coke Monster turns to a company,
maybe you've heard of them before.
A company that goes by the name of Monsanto.
Muah!
Uh, uh, uh, uh, uh.
Now I said Monsanto, all creepy like that
because this company is huge.
They're based in Missouri.
They've been involved in a whole bunch of drama on their own.
Okay, they're a very large corporation
that makes all sorts of chemicals like pesticides.
They also produced agent orange,
which was a chemical use as a weapon in the Vietnam war
that killed a bunch of people and caused cancer and others.
Long story short, I guess.
They're low key trying to kill us.
Well, in the early 1900s, Coca-Cola became the biggest buyer
of Monsanto's saccharine.
They bought so much of it that even Monsanto itself
says that if not for Coca-Cola,
their company would have gone under by 1905.
But they weren't the only household name Coke
made strategic partnerships with.
The list of their partners in the 20th century were like the biggest businesses in America.
I mean, they've worked with everybody.
General Foods, Craft, Pfizer, Hershey, Sileskos, On and On and On.
Koch relied on them.
They relied on Koch.
They were all high-fiving each other, circle jerking, human centipede.
You know what, you love it.
By the mid-1900s, Coca-Cola, the company, was the
biggest buyer of sugar on the planet here. They beat out candy companies. It was also the biggest
importer of Coca-Leaves, aluminum cans, and it used more caffeine than anyone else on the planet.
Coca-Cola was taking a bunch of natural resources to make profit, you know, and you just really screwed everyone else.
Basically, a ton of natural resources are required for Coca-Cola to make a profit,
and boy, are they profiting. And that snowball I mentioned earlier, well now, it's an avalanche.
So, in the 1950s, America was thriving! So this is when drinking Coca-Cola becomes something that's not only fun,
but something that's a symbol of American pride.
It's being sold as part of the American dream.
I mean, having a barbecue, having friends over,
cracking open a nice cold Coca-Cola, you know?
Ss.
People would gather up the kids
load them into the station wagon
and like go grab a bunch of sodas as a family.
I guess, essentially, this could be seen as the golden age of soda.
Advertising for it was everywhere.
Coca-Cola went full glam and became the first product to be featured on the cover of Time magazine in 1950.
Now, at this time, if you made it on the cover of Time, that means you made it, baby.
Like, officially made it. You know, you're a big deal.
But there was another form of media exploding at the time, and Coke was not going to be left
out.
Television.
Oh, yes, television became a staple of the American household.
And now Coke can make its way into your living room.
In 1950, Coke's first television commercial aired during a
Thanksgiving special broadcast across the entire country. So millions of eyes were on this advertisement.
This right here alone set the bar high for other companies. They all saw this and they were like,
oh man, we gotta get on that level, we gotta get on that Coca-Cola level. They had FOMO.
They all saw this and they were like, oh man, we gotta get on that level, we gotta get on that Coca-Cola level.
They had FOMO.
So like, all American kids with a dream, Coca-Cola wants to get into the movie theaters.
So in 1961, Coke ends up striking a very big deal with a director at the time and makes
it stay-bue in a super big time Hollywood movie called 1-2-3.
1-2-3 in and then take night, me.
Oh my God.
One, two, three.
Oh my God, you guys, we should do a little dance.
I'm sorry.
123.
Oh, the main character of this movie,
his character, literally, was a Coca-Cola executive.
So it was like, it's just one big Coke advertisement.
The movie was a hit.
There was like a little under six million people
who went and saw it.
Yeah.
Then Coke goes on to sponsor one of the biggest TV events
of all time.
I'm talking about the premiere of Charlie Brown Christmas.
Yeah, if you don't know, if you've never seen it,
it's an animated movie that you should hide
and watch, well, if you want.
So Coca-Cola is sponsoring Charlie Brown Christmas.
They're getting a farm children,
targeting ads towards the kids,
get them when they're young.
That's what they're doing.
During the 1950s and 60s,
Coke was on top of the world.
I'm king of the world!
That's Coke.
And by 1959, people were drinking Coke
in over 100 countries worldwide.
They should rename Coke Pitbull because he's Mr. Worldwide.
Look, listen, hi.
There's a lot to say about advertising, marketing, branding, right?
Don't worry, I got an episode coming up on that.
But what I am going to say is that Coca-Cola, they knew what they were doing when it came
to advertising and marketing, like they're really ahead of their game.
And for that, I guess snaps.
Gotta give them props for that.
But what I'm getting at is, you know, Coca-Cola, they got a lot of power.
And to keep the power, they need to identify their weaknesses and their enemies.
But that's when Coke realizes it's biggest enemy is itself.
Emo. It's biggest enemy is itself. Email.
And the 1980s, Diet Culture in America starts to really take off and people are starting to get concerned or just maybe pay more attention to their sugar intake.
Now this was a new thing because before the 80s people thought that it was fat. That made you fat. Not sugar.
This pushed the American FDA to change health guidelines to suggest
that you should not have more than six teaspoons of sugar a day. Aren't you? Six teaspoons
does not sound like a lot. I know I'm consuming at least like three cups, you know. But in
one can of coke, there were seven teaspoons of sugar. Whoa.
So if you had one can of Coke,
which at the time had seven teaspoons of sugar,
you're already well over your daily amount.
So Coke is like, oh no, like, what do we do?
What do we do?
Oh no, they're panicking, right?
They're like, hold up.
Hey, man, like, no, sugar, that's not bad.
Sugar, everyone loves sugar.
Rats love sugar, sugar.
You know, but coax, they can't change their recipe.
So where are they gonna do?
Well, they got a bunch of money.
You know what they can do?
Change your mind.
That's what they can do.
So co-create's this big PR campaign out of thin air
to change the way that people saw their brand.
And it seemed like one big like magic trick like, ooh, look over here.
Don't look over there. The sugar, look over here. Kids laughing smiling things.
But they drink coke. Don't you love it? How can it be bad?
Ah. And a big part of that distraction campaign was marketing.
This is when Coke makes a huge shift. Not only are they selling
Coke, the product, but now they're selling Coke, the brand, and the lifestyle. And boy, did they
sell that brand? In the 80s, Coke had an advertising budget of over $100 million. The product is on
billboards. It's in magazines. They're on TV. They're in movies. You can't go anywhere without seeing Coca-Cola.
Bleep, blot, bloop. Drink Coke, you thirst sluts. You know, you want it. Shut up. Down your throat.
Goddamn, chill out. Coke, you're everywhere. They still are.
Final drink of Coke. You know, it's like, damn. So like, think about Coca-Cola when you're childhood and you see that polar bear
chugging the Coca-Cola or like Santa
drinking a Coca-Cola and his suit during the holidays
It wasn't about the soda anymore. It was about creating this
family friendly brand
Memories happiness joy. I don't know, they were creating it. And people started
to forget about the whole like, don't each sugar thing, especially when it came to Coke.
Then, in 1997, the World Health Organization came out and declared a obesity as the newest
global epidemic.
What? It isn't looking good for you Coca-Cola. What are you going to do?
Coca-Cola could have just let people read those studies
and make like their own decisions,
as far as, you know, should I keep drinking this?
Should I not?
Whatever.
They rounded up their troops
and decided to just go full blown to Pant
on everyone's ass.
The poison in the water!
So how does Coca-Cola take control of the sugar narrative?
Well, we should hire scientists who say sugar is good for you.
Yeah!
So the company ends up getting in bed with a bunch of colleges.
And what do universities always need?
Besides soda?
Money!
So Coke flips over some couch cushions, and they're like,
hey, we found a few million dollars lying around.
Maybe this could help you with your research,
proving to the people that, I don't know,
maybe Coke isn't causing obesity.
Wink, wink, right Bradley?
Don't you want a new Ferrari Bradley?
Don't you want that new science building Bradley?
Bradley? Bradley?
Anyways, so the academics are like, yeah,
I'll take the money, you know, you get it for school,
you get it for your programs, you get it, yeah,
they're gonna take the money.
So the academics are like, thank you very much,
I will accept this cash payment.
And we will have your pro-cocreports. I mean your unbiased reports very shortly.
Now I'm not kidding about the millions. Researchers admitted just one of the gifts from Coke
was as high as 1.5 million. Yeah I do it. You don't even got to ask me to. I would do it. Yep
bye great. Coke is good for you.
So these researchers are willing to do whatever
to keep the money flowing in.
And in just a few years, Coke funneled $120 million
to medical experts and health groups.
And they're mainly spending this money as an investment
because this money's gonna help them, you know,
because these researchers who wink, wink, are not on
Coke's payroll, happen to come out with their studies. And these studies make the Coke
executives very happy. These reports basically say exactly what Coke wanted them to say.
That Americans aren't exercising, and that's the real problem. Not Coke, you're the problem. You.
And the Coke executives want the world to know. So they end up inviting a bunch of journalists
to a conference also paid for a bicococola and shocker Coca-Cola friendly articles start coming
out on newspapers all over the country. But it stop there. A lot of the science kind of funded by Coca-Cola
is used to help create a nonprofit organization
to spread all this disinformation.
It was called the Global Balance Energy Network
and existed for just two years.
And I guess everyone found out that it was really
Coke and disguise.
It was just a front company exposed drama. So like there
was all these accusations flying around that Coca-Cola is messing with science.
They're wearing the data. They're just screwing with people's heads.
Ugh. There's just a lot circling back to the part where the scientists came
out and said like you need to exercise and whatnot. Because I know there's
gonna be debates in the comment section saying like, well, it is up to you,
the consumer to make choices, right?
Like healthy choices.
And I agree, yes, but companies need to be honest
as to how much sugar or fat or whatever is in their product
instead of bearing it and making it so complicated to understand.
Do you know what you're reading on those nutritional thingies?
Because it'll be like sugar,
and then it'll be like more sugar, added sugar, sugar sugar.
You know, it's like,
I don't know,
they just make it so complicated.
And we're just asking for more transparency
as we should ask from these companies.
So before anyone gets on Coca-Cola's side
and starts blaming the customers,
chill the fuck out.
Take a breather.
I'm like, let's just be transparent.
That's all we want.
That's it.
Thank you.
It's not just humans Coca-Cola is messing with.
They're also messing with the Earth.
They created a ton of garbage.
So I was wondering about all those plastic bottles, right?
Well Coca-Cola has been wreaking havoc on the environment for a freaking decades.
As a company, they produce about 3 million tons of plastic each year.
In case you're having a hard time fizzling that, it's about 200,000 plastic bottles a
minute.
And this episode is like 50 minutes long, so that's 10 million bottles, just while we've
been sitting here talking.
Now this makes Coke the world's biggest plastic polluter.
And that's not just my opinion, that's the cold-tired facts, brother.
And in addition to all the plastic Coke is putting into the world, the company uses about
305 billion liters of water every year because without water there would be no Coca-Cola.
It takes nearly three liters of water to make just one liter of Coca-Cola. So it makes sense that
in the 136 years that coca's been around, they've used a lot of water. In fact, they've used up storage supplies of water
called aquifers all around the world.
These are big underground chambers
that collect water slowly over time,
sometimes over hundreds of years.
In 1999, for example, Coca-Cola built a bottling plant
in a village in India called Caledera.
It's pre-dry, it's basically a desert,
and Coca-Cola totally drained their supply of groundwater village in India called Kalidera. It's pre-dry. It's basically a desert and
Coca-Cola totally drained their supply of groundwater over the last 20 years.
So now in Kalidera farmers can't irrigate their land or sustain their crops.
And this puts entire families at risk of losing their farms or even starving.
The locals worry that this will soon become a dark zone,
which means an area that is totally abandoned
due to a lack of water supply.
It's turning it into essentially a ghost town.
Now, the annoying part, the part that drives me
freaking nuts, is like you'll see all these dumb commercials
by Coke, and they're like, you need to do your part
and recycle.
Oh yeah?
Have you ever heard of the term greenwashing?
I roll.
It's like what a company is like,
ooh, these products are great for the environment.
And it turns out that they're not,
because they're usually not,
they just stay,
and that's what we'll buy it.
This is like a classic example of that.
But then Coke is like,
if we all do our part,
we can save the planet.
And honestly, it's like you first, Coke.
You first.
Sources say that the Coca Cola, they suck.
They haven't achieved any environmental sustainability goal
it has ever set.
And anytime they make some big pledge,
but all the recycling they're gonna do,
it seems like they just move their goalposts,
you know, so it doesn't look like they failed.
They want us to keep America beautiful,
and that's great, I agree, we all wanna keep it beautiful,
but hey, Coca-Cola, why don't you stop polluting it?
Why don't you stop making plastic bottles?
Why don't you stop this huge production of all of this,
because you're the ones making the plastic bottles.
And whether or not we drink it or not, it's still made.
Okay, look, but every time they do like large some kind of new initiative to make things better,
it's some date that's super far in the future.
And tons of companies do this if you pay attention.
For example, like with Coke, they have a current recycling program.
It's called like world without waste
Initiative, which is cute and they're telling us by 2030
Coke's bottles will be made of 50% recycled material. Don't fall for this bullshit first of all
And I'll tell you why they're only moving the goalpost that far because they're not gonna make any changes
And then when 2030 comes around most likely there's going to be different laws, there's going to be
different people in charge, they'll deal with it then.
They're not going to make any changes and by 2030 we're all going to be on fire.
I mean, again, it's not about the year 2030.
It's about what they're actually doing in that time to make it happen.
I mean, if we're looking at their track record, let's be honest, they're not doing anything. Like, they're not going to do anything. Why would they? They own us.
So what did we learn today, friends? I don't even know. You guys told me, I would love to
hear what you learned. I feel very helpless in this situation, you know, because it's like,
sometimes I bring my reusable tote to the grocery store and then I use like my reusable water bottle
I drink I have those shitty paper straws because you can't have straw, right?
They dissolve
Socks anyways, what I'm getting at is like
Sometimes you feel I don't know if any of you at home can feel this but you just like in this endless hamster reel of
The blame is always put back on us to recycle to be better to do better blah blah blah.
But these companies also aren't doing their part.
And it's like, you could try your best, but, you know, what's the point?
If big companies are producing so much plastic, I'm not saying that you shouldn't recycle or anything.
Totally believe in that.
That's great.
Good for you.
But like Coca-Cola.
Oh no.
We as consumers have the power though, did you know that?
I don't feel like we don't a lot of the times, but we actually do.
When we buy products from Coca-Cola, you know, we keep the lights on for that company.
Instead of just being like, well, Bailey, I'm not going to stop drinking Coke.
It's literally the only thing that helps me with my hangover. Maybe instead of pointing the fingers at like one another, we should be
pointing the fingers at these brands and holding them accountable. If we keep them accountable,
they have to listen. Demand more. We deserve it. We don't need them. They literally need us.
We're thinking and doing. Poison us. it's too late, bitch. Get in line.
Well, everyone, thank you so much for learning with me today.
Remember, don't be afraid to ask questions, and don't be afraid to hold large corporations
accountable, because we deserve that.
They suck.
I'd love to hear your guys' reaction to today's story, so make sure to use the hashtag
darkhistory over on social media so I can follow along.
Also, join me over on my YouTube where you can watch these episodes on Thursday after the podcast airs,
and while you're there, check out my murder mystery makeup.
I hope you have a wonderful day today. You make good choices, and I'll be talking to you next week.
Goodbye!
Dark History is an audio boom original.
This podcast is executive produced by Bailey Sarian, Kimberly Jacobs,
Junior McNeely from Three Arts, Kevin Grush, and Claire Turner from Made in Network.
Writers, Katy Burrers, Alison Filoboz, Joey Skaluso, and me, Bailey Sarian.
Shot by Tafadzwa Nemarumdwe, research provided by Ashley Spurgeon.
A big special thank you to our expert, Mark Pendergast, and I'm your host, Bailey Sarian.
Thank you.