When it comes to making a selection of what to drink at a fast food or casual dining restaurant, you basically have two choices of products, Coca-Cola or Pepsi!
East Texas has its share of hidden treasures, and this is another intriguing link to history that's easy to miss. Can you spot the 'ghost mural' at this old soda bottling plant?
Internet spoilers ruin all the fun when they sneak up on you, so we'll give you time to study this. Look for a minute and see if you can spot the hidden message, and when you're ready we'll tell you more about what you'r
This video is up to 4.2 million views now on YouTube. My first thought was that things would probably get volatile and explode when milk and Coke are combined, but what actually happens is surprising. And kinda gross!
Since 1925, the secret recipe for Coca-Cola has been famously locked in a bank vault. But no more — to much fanfare, the coveted list of ingredients was moved Thursday to a new vault that’s on display at the World of Coca-Cola Museum at the company’s headquarters in downtown Atlanta.
Coca-Cola has once again learned that its customers don’t like change. Only unlike the New Coke debacle of the 1980s, this time it had nothing to do with the beverage itself, but rather the cans that hold the famous soda.
You can't beat the real thing, but you can take credit for inventing it.
A man in the small Spanish town of Ayelo is taking credit for Coca-Cola, claiming his family is responsible for creating the world's most popular soft drink.