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Rich People Prefer Coke

201106_coke.jpg
(LensJockey'sflickr).

Poor Pepsi. The giant New York-based soda company may be increasingly looking out for our best interests, or saying it is, but its flagship product has been surpassed by Diet Coke and apparently the "super-rich" don't like it. At least that is what Johnson and Johnson heir and professional Richy Rich Jamie Johnson writes in Vanity Fair.

Johnson says that outside of big cities "Affluent devotees of the original cola like its history, its pedigree, and its aesthetics—especially the quintessentially American drink’s glass-bottle version. It’s part taste, part snobbery: rich people genuinely believe the cane-sugar Coke in bottles, often made in Mexico, is more delectable and satisfying than the U.S.’s corn-syrup version in the cans." Ah, so that is why David Chang was charging $5 a bottle for the stuff. Meanwhile, the wealthy apparently prefer to drink Diet Coke when in town.

Johnson doesn't offer any unified reason why Coke is cooler for the wealthy, but he does offer a few amusing anecdotes on the topic:

What isn’t so clearly defined is the origin of the bias against Pepsi. The rich don’t seem to like it, but when I asked people why, I received wildly varying explanations for its second-class status. One guy said it’s because Pepsi implies pedestrian Midwestern tastes (even though the drink hails from upstate New York). Another said he didn’t know why Pepsi is considered déclassé, but then confidently observed that top Pepsi executives themselves feel that it is. They don’t even want to suffer the embarrassment of ordering it in front of their well-to-do friends. Finally, another fellow explained that he felt the story of the South American billionaires, the Cisneros family, highlighted the point best. This powerful clan had the largest Pepsi bottling plant in Venezuela for years, and with it an overwhelming competitive edge in the regional market. But in a moment, they switched allegiances, privately signed a deal to bottle Coke, and knocked Pepsi, the resulting stepchild, entirely out of the market. In terms of reputation, he insinuated, it’s Coke that always seems to have the upper hand.

But maybe the answer lies in the fact that the blue bloods Johnson mingles with are from relatively older money. Pepsi is, after all, the choice of the new generation.

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Comments [rss]

  • Peanut_Butter

    What's that on top of the can of coke?

  • sommelier

    Have you ever heard a person order "Rum and Pepsi, please" in a bar?

  • I have always preferred Coke over Pepsi, the former has a stronger blunt taste and the latter is too sweet and mellow.

  • Love coke, hate diet coke.  Love Diet Pepsi, hate Pepsi.  Can't explain it.  Coke Zero is good but it has to be consumed super-cold. 

  • krinklecutfires

    Rich people love all things named coke

  • Trustafarian

    pepsi is too sweet and isn't carbonated enough.

  • Guest

    First off you get your ass kicked for ordering a Pepsi

    So I'd have to say rich people like Pepsi better

    because as we all know - they are most deserving of getting their ass kicked

    Sound logic to me

    Now for a smoke and a coke

  • TimeDown

    Personally, I like the way Coke tastes better but I think Coke's unbelievable success in advertising and embracing every market in every country possible, even at a loss sometimes, has really kept it propelled ahead of Pepsi.

  • MermaidFornicator

    a lot of people say Pepsi is sweeter than coke, hence it's considered more childish, pedestrian.

  • TheOtherBob

    That seems the most likely explanation to me, too.  Coke is more sophisticated.

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