Less Than Zero

Will Truman

Will Truman is the Editor-in-Chief of Ordinary Times. He is also on Twitter.

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31 Responses

  1. Jaybird says:

    I used to make jokes about how I wanted my Diet Pepsi to be made without real sugar instead of merely being made without HFCS and as soon as I saw “Coke Zero Sugar”, I thought “My God. The Madmen have done it.”

    On a more provincial level, I think that all Coke is doing is trying to come up with a naming convention that they can use worldwide. “Coke Zero Sugar” is likely a name that makes 100% sense in English-speaking countries that aren’t the US. Time for the US to get with the program.Report

    • Marchmaine in reply to Jaybird says:

      Coca-Cola is a customer of my company (not my account)… and you are right, they spend many hours, dollars, and flowers [needed a third] to get their naming conventions right – globally.

      In fact, a fruit fly dies every time someone refers to their product as Coke and not Coca-cola (with the hyphen, thank you).

      {Diet Coke is the exception that proves the rule… and someone somewhere is probably in Coca-cola jail for making Diet Coke a brand they can’t walk back}Report

  2. fillyjonk says:

    Use it for cleaning the chrome on your car? I’ve heard the phosphoric acid in it is good for that.

    But yeah, I agree with the name not making a lot of sense. Parentheses would have helped, perhaps.Report

  3. Doctor Jay says:

    I am actually confused by why two different products – Diet Coke and Coke Zero (Sugar) – exist. Perhaps it’s as Marchmaine suggests and they are unhappy with the brand name of “Diet Coke” because it doesn’t translate well somewhere or another.

    Still, why are there two taps at self-serve fountain for diet colas?Report

    • Kolohe in reply to Doctor Jay says:

      Coke Zero and Diet Coke did have different formulas and different tastes.

      My quick impression of the European market is that Diet Coke is called “Coke Light” (almost always untranslated too) but Coke Zero (where it was) was still Coke Zero (I think, I’m not sure now).Report

    • Morat20 in reply to Doctor Jay says:

      Diet Coke and Coke Zero

      As I understand it, and this may be absolutely false, Diet Coke is derived from the “New Coke” formula (which was Coca-Cola’s most famous attempt to be more Pepsi than Pepsi), and thus tastes like…Diet Pepsi. Coke Zero, on the other hand, was derived from the Original Coca-Cola recipe, and thus tastes somewhat like…Coke.

      Of course the real problem is Coca-Cola feels they have a superior version of Pepsi (which seems to win blind taste tests against Pepsi) they that really want to use to eat into the Pepsi market, and does not seem to grasp that people have built in expectations of how Coke should taste, and “Not like Pepsi” is top of the list.

      (Specifically, they wanted to try to compete with Pepsi but didn’t want to spin off a new brand name, they wanted to keep their Coke drinkers, use the brand name, and leverage their way into the Pepsi side of the market. Didn’t work, for obvious reasons.)Report

      • Alan Scott in reply to Morat20 says:

        Morat20: Diet Coke is derived from the “New Coke” formula (which was Coca-Cola’s most famous attempt to be more Pepsi than Pepsi), and thus tastes like…Diet Pepsi.

        My Understanding is that it was the other way around.

        Diet Coke was developed first. It was intentionally developed as a sweeter, smoother drink because that’s what appealed to the diet-pepsi-drinking women whose business they were trying to gain. Then the high popularity of Diet Coke combined with the waning popularity of Coca Cola is what inspired the release of New Coke.Report

        • Morat20 in reply to Alan Scott says:

          Eh, same-same. Diet Coke doesn’t taste like non-diet Coke. Coke Zero tastes (or tasted at least) like a diet version of Coke.

          And Coca-Cola still hates the fact that people drink Pepsi and can’t understand why they can’t force their drinkers to love the sweeter taste so they can have their current market AND some of Pepsi’s.Report

          • Alan Scott in reply to Morat20 says:

            The whole “New Coke” episode is mind-boggling to me as a millennial, because the whole thing was caused by the Coke company being unwilling to come out with different cola flavors to appeal to customers with a different taste–to the extent to which they literally discontinued the best-selling soda beverage in the world.

            Meanwhile, i can go to the store and find separate packages of “Cherry Coke”, “Vanilla Coke”, and “Cherry Vanilla Coke”. I legit do not understand what the world was like in 1985.Report

  4. One of my blessings is that I dislike all sweet drinks. My preferred form of caffeine intake is coffee or tea. Tea in particular is very affordable. I order a pound of the stuff online a few times a year. I don’t have to lug cases of mostly-water from the store, much less pay for said mostly-water. The only downside is the difficulty of getting a beverage at a time of day when I don’t want caffeine.Report

  5. Kolohe says:

    One thing I sometimes forget is that unlike regular soft drinks, diet soft drinks go bad. They take on a bitter or acidic taste. This can happen over time, or whether stored in heat. Something to do with NutraSweet, my wife says.

    There was a theory/urban legend that this is the mechanism behind Gulf War Syndrome – container boxes filled with Diet Coke baking in the desert sun and then given to the troops.Report

  6. Zac Black says:

    For whatever it’s worth, Will, I’m a regular drinker of Coke Zero, and I can’t taste the difference between the new stuff and the old stuff at all. I know they say they’ve changed the recipe, but to my taste buds it’s exactly the same drink.Report

    • El Muneco in reply to Zac Black says:

      Same here. It’s a little less fizzy, and I can tell it’s not exactly the same, but I couldn’t tell you specifically what’s different.

      It makes sense that they’re globalizing the branding with it – if anything I’d say they’re also doing it with the flavor profile. That it’s the same basic product just less tuned to American tastes.

      I’m with Scalzi. Perfectly decent replacement, and soon enough you won’t even remember what the original Coke Zero tasted like.Report

    • North in reply to Zac Black says:

      It is smoother, less harsh, which to my palate is a step down. It tastes closer to core Coca Cola which is doubtlessly the goal. I am mightily displeased with the new iteration and am taking the opportunity to transition back to water as my recreational beverage.Report

  7. gregiank says:

    I’m fine with new stuff. It has tasted a bit different from a fountain but in a bottle it’s fine. At this point i’m at the ” was there ever a time before this was the normal taste” stage.Report

  8. Brandon Berg says:

    I wonder what concentrated artificial sweeteners taste like. Supposedly some of them are hundreds of times sweeter than sugar. This is measured by testing the level of dilution at which sweetness can still be detected; a gram of aspartame requires 200 times as much water to conceal the sweetness as sucrose. But if you just ate straight aspartame, or drank a highly concentrated aspartame solution, would it really taste 200 times as sweet as sugar, or is the human brain just not set up to perceive sweetness at an intensity much greater than we perceive from sucrose or fructose syrup?

    Maybe it’s logarithmic, like hearing, so it would only be perceived as a couple of times sweeter.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to Brandon Berg says:

      If you have a “Water Enhancer” within arm’s reach, you can run a test right now. A squirt of it can turn a 1 Liter Bottle of water into a flat soda.

      A single drop on the tongue?

      What’s the worst that could happen?Report

      • Brandon Berg in reply to Jaybird says:

        ‘Fraid not. I’ve never actually seen an artificial sweetener at a retail store that wasn’t cut with dextrose or some other kind of bulking agent.

        Edit: Also, I might get addicted. Maybe we were never meant to taste a sweetness so pure. Next thing you know, I’m living in the alley behind Denny’s, waiting for them to throw out some expired Sweet’N’Low packets.Report

        • dragonfrog in reply to Brandon Berg says:

          There’s the stevia based stuff – stevia’s not so insanely sweet it needs bulking up.

          Though I guess it’s not “artificial” as it’s just a plant extract, not chemically altered.

          (Edit: I guess the specific sweet tasting chemicals in stevia are in the same order as aspartame – 150 times as sweet as sucrose. The concentrated extract just has a bunch of other things, as it’s basically just dehydrated stevia tea.)Report

  9. You all are missing a step. The original Diet Coke drink was called Tab. Oldsters like me remember the confusion when Diet Coke came out. Wasn’t Tab Diet Coke?

    Diet drink history: first marketed for diabetics back in the 50s, Diet Rite was the first brand name diet drink sold for regular consumption, in 1958. Coca Cola followed with Tab shortly after, but didn’t brand it as a diet Coke because they didn’t want to hurt their brand. Shortly afterwards, Diet Pepsi came out and revealed that brand worries were a bit overstated. I’m not sure why it took Coca-Cola another 20 years to come out with Diet Coke–they did Fresca first, in the mid-60s.

    But as someone said, Diet Coke is not based in any way on the original Coke. I don’t care for Coke, but love Diet Coke–it was pretty much my only soft drink for 30 years or so. Its instant success was what led to the New Coke fiasco. I think what CC didn’t understand is that Diet Coke drinkers weren’t necessarily Coke drinkers.

    Coke Zero is the original brand without sugar. I don’t care for it at all. But then, I don’t care for Coke that much, either. I don’t mind Diet Pepsi, but it’s nowhere near as good as Diet Coke.

    By the way, while tastes differ, Diet Coke stomps all other diet drinks in sales. Its competition is Pepsi proper, as the two of them duke it out for 2nd or 3rd place. Diet Pepsi is in 7th, Coke Zero in 10th.

    Then there’s the whole hooha about sweeteners and which is used in what brand, but that’s overkill.Report

  10. I live in terror that they’ll take my delicious aspartame out of Diet Dr. Pepper since I can’t have Splenda.

    They are putting Splenda in a perfectly awful amount of things lately.Report

  11. Sels says:

    First I thought there was really a difference between Diet coke and coke Zero..
    Until I saw this : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyKaLl5MEVY
    it makes more sense now, also they both taste awful ! Still prefer Classic…Report