How Pepsi Became The 6th Largest Military In The World - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

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This video is sponsored by War Thunder!
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Today we’re going to talk about how Pepsi became a mighty military force for a brief
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Now, let’s see what this Pepsi story is all about!
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We all know that feeling of anticipation as we reach for a cool, blue can.
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As our fingers press down and the aluminum gives way to a frothy explosion on a liquid
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amber surface.
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Then pure satisfaction as the cold, sweet beverage slides across our tongue and down
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our throat, leaving the tingling bite of carbonation in its wake.
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Delicious.
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Refreshing.
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Power.
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Enjoyed by Americans since 1898, Pepsi, it turns out, is a favorite among the Russians
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as well.
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Find out just how badly Khrushchev wanted a sip in this episode of The Infographics
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Show, How Pepsi Became the 6th largest Military in the World.
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While America of the 1800s was gulping down its Coke, pharmacist Caleb D. Bradham was
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watching.
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Hoping to create a similar beverage of his own, he made a sweet carbonated drink in 1898
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which he coined Pepsi-Cola.
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It was met with great success and by 1902 Pepsi-Cola Company, Incorporated was born.
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In the years that followed it underwent several changes in ownership, a tweak to its formulation,
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and extensive advertising and promotion.
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By the 1950’s it had successfully become Coca-Cola’s rival.
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The company would later merge with Frito-lay, Incorporated in the ‘60s, acquire the Tropicana
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and Dole brands in the ‘90s, and merge with the Quaker Oats company two years after that.
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Today, PepsiCo’s most successful brands include much more than Pepsi cola.
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It profits from Frito-Lay snacks, Lipton teas, Tropicana juices, Gatorade drinks, Quaker
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Oats cereals, and Rold Gold pretzels as well.
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A pharmacist from North Carolina’s dream from over a century ago has turned into a
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reality.
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His company with its humble beginnings has reached a level of success that he likely
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never believed possible.
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It even snagged a spot on the 2018 Forbes’ World’s Most Valuable Brands List.
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At number 29, Pepsi has an estimated worth of $18.4 billion.
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Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, and Pepsi Max alone each bring in over $1 billion in profits annually.
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Second only to Coca-Cola, Pepsi is among America’s top soda of choice.
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In Russia, Pepsi is second-to-none.
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In fact, while the brand’s history is without a doubt impressive, it is its relationship
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with Russia that allowed it to achieve what no soda company had ever achieved before.
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For a time, Russia made Pepsi a top military power with an arsenal greater than that of
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most countries world-wide.
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But, just how did a soda company manage that?
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It all started during the height of the Cold War when President Dwight Eisenhower and Soviet
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leader Nikita Khrushchev came to an agreement.
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The USSR wanted to open trade with the US and the US wanted to promote capitalism in
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the USSR, so they agreed on a form of cultural exchange.
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Each would design an exhibition highlighting the achievements of their country for display
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in the other’s.
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The Soviet exhibition portrayed its achievements in areas in which it was superior, namely
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in space, and it opened in New York City in June of 1959.
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America included examples from its own culture in which it was paving the way, such as with
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appliances of various sorts and soda.
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The “American National Exhibition” opened in Moscow in July of that same year and The
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United States sent Vice President Richard Nixon as its host.
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However, the Moscow-based event got off to a rather rocky start.
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Khrushchev was unimpressed with color TV.
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In fact, he was unimpressed with most everything on display, claiming that Russia would have
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the same technology itself in a matter of years.
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Further, he took advantage of the opportunity to talk shop, commenting angrily on the US
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government’s resolution against his presence in Eastern Europe.
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And, if that wasn’t enough, he gave his opinion that Nixon only feared communism because
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he couldn’t understand it.
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Nixon had a ready response.
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At some point as they argued, Khrushchev wiped his brow.
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This was when Donald Kendall saw his chance.
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The Pepsi representative gave Khrushchev a cool, refreshing drink.
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While the Soviet leader found the American exhibit lacking and the United States government
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meddlesome and uninformed, he could find no fault with the contents of his cup.
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And, just like that, Pepsi-Cola became the first capitalist product to be sold in the
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U.S.S.R.
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Pepsi was not the only one to find opportunity that day; the press was handed a front-page
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story as well.
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Pictures of the two leaders as they argued beside a kitchen were soon published across
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America.
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The exchange itself was given the rather catchy and fitting title of “the kitchen debate.”
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Due to the publicity of the event, Nixon enjoyed benefits of his own.
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Photos with him thrusting a finger at Khrushchev were thought to demonstrate leadership and,
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some believe, helped him in his future bid for the presidency.
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But, between the soda company, the press, and the vice-president, Pepsi’s success
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following America’s exhibition in Moscow was inarguably the greatest and longest-lasting.
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Now, the arrangement to sell Pepsi in Russia was not made without a few glitches here and
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there.
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Though the Russians wanted permanent access to the drink, there was the somewhat significant
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problem of its payment.
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Russian currency was not universally accepted, and so they needed to make an alternative
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arrangement.
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They turned to their other beverage of choice as a solution.
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The Russians gave PepsiCo the exclusive distribution rights for their Stolichnaya vodka.
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In turn, Pepsi became the only soda that could be legally sold to the Soviet population.
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This worked out well until the 1980s, when vodka was no longer high enough in value to
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cover the costs of the Soviet’s Pepsi.
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So, Russia proposed a different type of exchange and traded Pepsi some boats and submarines
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instead.
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Three billion dollars’ worth.
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For the price of 17 submarines and a cruiser, frigate, and destroyer, the Russian population
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could continue to enjoy its soda.
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As for Pepsi, it had just become the sixth most powerful military world-wide.
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This is a distinction not shared by any other beverage-making companies either before or
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after this remarkable event as far as we are aware.
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However, as their specialty is drinks and snacks and not maintaining a maritime fleet,
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Pepsi eventually sold the lot for reuse of its materials.
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Mr. Kendall, who had made history that day by giving Khrushchev some happiness in a cup,
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later joked that his company was better at disarming the Soviet Union than our government.
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However, Coca-Cola was less than amused.
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Cut out of the Soviet market due to the exclusive agreement between Russia’s government and
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PepsiCo representatives, the competing brand was only allowed to sell its Fanta and Minute
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Maid products instead.
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They were far from the only ones upset about the arrangement.
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Other skeptics to the deal suggested that Pepsi purchases funded the manufacturing of
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Russian nuclear missiles.
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One could only hope that, if this were true, the joy the beverage gave both the Russian
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population and its leadership made it less likely that they would be tempted to use them.
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