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Diet Coke – Diet Pepsi

Posted by myDailysunset | Fact or Fiction | Tuesday 18 September 2007 10:27 pm

Claim: Diet Coke and/or Diet Pepsi contain more calories than claimed, but their manufacturers get away with the deception by paying a yearly fine.

Status:
False.

Examples:

[Collected on the Internet, 2003]

There was an old rumour that stated that a particular diet soda company (Coke I believe) paid a fine to print their cans as stating that the soda had ‘just one calorie’. According to the rumour, companies who knowingly printed misinformation on the nutritional facts of their product would have to pay a fine. The company in question figured it could make more money by convincing people the product only had 1 calorie than it would cost to pay the fine, meaning a higher profit margin for them.

[Collected on the Internet, 2002]

I heard a rumor today that Diet Coke actually contains 40 calories, and the Coca-Cola company pays a huge fine to the FDA every year to keep “0 calories” on the can. Have you heard anything of this?

[Collected on the Internet, 2004]

Comment: Is it true that Pepsi One is really not one calorie and that Pepsi Co. pays a fine every year for false advertising (because the calorie count is a lot higher than that)?

Origins: How long this particular belief has been around is anyone’s guess, but we have recorded sightings of it dating back to 1990. We’ve encountered claims of Diet Coke, Diet Pepsi, or Pepsi One (which are listed as containing zero, zero, and one calories per 12-oz. can, respectively) actually containing 25, 50, 70, or 90 calories, in each case with the parent company’s paying an annual fine to continue falsely listing the beverage’s caloric content. (A can of non-diet cola typically contains about 100 calories.) The rumor associates most strongly with Diet Coke (which is known as Coca-Cola Light outside the U.S., Canada, Australia, and Great Britain).

In the U.S., laws governing the disclosure of nutritional and caloric content of ingestibles prevent the rumor from being true. The Federal Trade Commission serves as the watchdog in this area — under the Federal Trade Commission Act, it is empowered to “prevent persons, partnerships, or corporations” from using “unfair methods of competition in or affecting commerce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce.” At various times in its history it has fined corporations for their having made false or misleading nutritional claims about their products. Such fines are a reaction to what has already taken place; they are not grants of immunity against continued breaking of the rules. Consumers have legal remedy available to them against corporations that have deceived them through certain provisions of the Lanham Act. Many other countries have similar safeguards in place.

Common sense should also serve to rule out what the whispers say about an annual payoff. For health reasons, many potential consumers of diet drinks have to carefully monitor what they ingest. Were the rumor true, diabetics with a love of Diet Coke, for instance, would experience glucose levels spiralling out of control — imagine the lawsuits resulting from that!

This false belief enjoys a measure of popularity because of what it says about common perception of large companies and of the government agencies tasked with shielding consumers from harm: that one will bamboozle its customers for the sake of financial profit, the other will sell out those it is mandated to protect, and neither is to be trusted. Such misgivings also find voice in other rumors, such as the one about bananas imported from Costa Rica being infected with a flesh-eating bacteria.

If there is the tiniest bit of truth to this rumor, it’s that even though sodas such as Diet Coke and Diet Pepsi are advertised as having zero calories, they do have some caloric content from ingredients such as artificial sweeteners, citric acid, and caramel coloring. However, the number of calories per can is still less than one, and FDA regulations allow any food product that contains fewer than five calories per serving to be advertised as calorie-free.

the-good-the-bad -the ugly

Posted by myDailysunset | Jokes | Tuesday 18 September 2007 10:16 pm

Joke time!

The good, the bad and the ugly
Good: You’re pregnant. Bad: It’s triplets. Ugly: Your husband had a vasectomy five years ago.

Good: Your husband is not talking to you. Bad: He wants a divorce. Ugly: He’s a lawyer.

Good: Your son is finally maturing. Bad: He’s involved with the woman next door. Ugly: So are you.

Good: Your son studies a lot in his room. Bad: You find several pornographic movies hidden there. Ugly: You’re in them.

Good: Your husband understands fashion. Bad: He’s a cross-dresser. Ugly: He looks better than you.

Good: You give “the birds and the bees” talk to your 14-year-old daughter. Bad: She keeps interrupting. Ugly: With corrections.

Good: Your daughter got a new job. Bad: As a hooker. Ugly: Your co-workers are her best clients. Way Ugly: She makes more money than you do!

Riviera Maya Resort

Posted by myDailysunset | Mexico,Resorts | Tuesday 18 September 2007 10:04 pm

Mexico is the one of the list travel I wanted to visit. Its history and famous site excite me to visit right away. They are very pretty and I wanted to see them personally.

Well aside from the facts I learned in Mexico, I have learned also comfortable and luxury accommodation. I preferred to reserve in Riviera Maya Resort . Its exclusive luxury resorts that surely make my vacation a relaxing one, with its great facilities and amenities. The serenity, white beach and entertaining restaurants are a great deal in Divine – KARISMA hotel. I feel the romantic of the place and think of having my honeymoon there soon.

I’ll just need a few minutes deep breathed, then all my bags are ready to Mexico I am very sure of my best vacation could have in Riviera Maya Resort.

From the Tennis player

Posted by myDailysunset | Inspirational thoughts | Tuesday 18 September 2007 10:02 pm

Inspirational thoughts from Oprah

“Everybody around us really believed in us and motivated us and all the people that didn’t, we dropped them. You’ve got to know you’re a beautiful person inside and out and you shouldn’t let anyone tear that away.” – Tennis player Venus Williams on the struggles she and her sister Serena faced in their careers

A Workout Schedule

Posted by myDailysunset | Health Tips | Tuesday 18 September 2007 9:59 pm

How often, how long and how hard you exercise, and what kinds of exercises you do should be determined by what you are trying to accomplish. Your goals, your present fitness level, age, health, skills, interest and convenience are among the factors you should consider. For example, an athlete training for high-level competition would follow a different program than a person whose goals are good health and the ability to meet work and recreational needs.

Your exercise program should include something from each of the four basic fitness components described previously. Each workout should begin with a warmup and end with a cooldown. As a general rule, space your workouts throughout the week and avoid consecutive days of hard exercise.

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