hi everyone! i would like to introduce my new filtered, bottled water product, created with all of you bottled water drinkers in mind:
Diputs quick! everyone buy some now! it's so chic!!! | |
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XxAxX said: hi everyone! i would like to introduce my new filtered, bottled water product, created with all of you bottled water drinkers in mind:
Diputs quick! everyone buy some now! it's so chic!!! How much????? my mouth waters at the thought of clean, filtered Diputs... He was like a cock who thought the sun had risen to hear him crow.
(George Eliot) the video for the above... http://www.youtube.com/wa...re=related | |
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reneGade20 said: XxAxX said: hi everyone! i would like to introduce my new filtered, bottled water product, created with all of you bottled water drinkers in mind:
Diputs quick! everyone buy some now! it's so chic!!! How much????? my mouth waters at the thought of clean, filtered Diputs... here, it is only $5.00 per bottle!! buy some for your friends too! | |
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XxAxX said: i would just like to point out that "Evian" spelled backwards is "naive"
Do you have my posts blocked? | |
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JediTodd said: XxAxX said: i would just like to point out that "Evian" spelled backwards is "naive"
Do you have my posts blocked? sorry dear! i didn't notice, really, until you said that. it DOES say 'naive' i saw what i was expecting to see. here is an update from today's news: NEW YORK - So you thought that water in your Aquafina bottle came from some far-away spring bubbling deep in a glen?
Try the tap.PepsiCo Inc. is the latest company to offer some clarity about the source of its top-selling bottled water as it announced on Friday it would change the label on Aquafina water bottles to spell out that the drink comes from the same source as tap water. A group called Corporate Accountability International has been pressuring bottled water sellers to curb what it calls misleading marketing practices. The group has criticized PepsiCo over its blue Aquafina label with a mountain logo as perpetuating the misconception that the water comes from spring sources. Aquafina is the single biggest bottled water brand, and its bottles are now labeled “P.W.S.” The new labels will spell out “public water source.” “If this helps clarify the fact that the water originates from public sources, then it’s a reasonable thing to do,” PepsiCo spokeswoman Michelle Naughton said Friday. Aquafina water is taken from public sources then purified in a seven-step process. The corporate accountability group is also pressing for similar concessions from The Coca-Cola Co., which owns the Dasani water brand, and Nestle Waters North America, seller of Nestle Pure Life purified drinking water, which gets some of its water from municipal sources. Dasani’s Web site says that Dasani comes from local water supplies, is filtered using a process called reverse osmosis and enhanced with minerals. “We don’t believe that consumers are confused about the source of Dasani water,” Coca-Cola spokeswoman Diana Garza Ciarlante said. “The label clearly states that it is purified water.” Sales of bottled water has been a growing source of revenue for companies such as PepsiCo, based in Purchase, N.Y., and Atlanta-based Coca-Cola as they lessen their dependence on sales of traditional carbonated sodas, as consumer concern over health issues has weakened demand. Nestle said Friday it has been printing new labels for its Pure Life water that say whether the water comes from municipal supplies or ground water, and the labels will begin showing up later this year. Pure Life is the only Nestle bottled water that uses public water sources and the company did not have an estimate for how much of its supply originates from the tap. Wholesale sales of bottled water grew to $11 billion in 2006, according to the Beverage Marketing Corp., and the industry is expected to maintain growth rates of about 10 percent. The fastest growing segment of the industry is sales of bottles of less than 1.5 liters, which includes the individual serving sizes sold in many convenience and grocery stores. The decisions by Nestle and PepsiCo come as criticism grows over environmental concerns about the industry’s use of local water sources as well as consumption of resin and energy to package and ship the bottles. Last month alone, a barrage of news hit the industry: San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom banned city-funded purchases of bottled water; New York City launched an ad campaign called “Get Your Fill” to promote the benefits of tap water; and the U.S. Conference of Mayors adopted a resolution to bring attention to the importance of public water systems and the negative impact of bottled water. “I think it’s unfortunate we have gotten into this tap water vs. bottled water debate,” the CEO of the International Bottled Water Association, Joe Doss, said. “I do not think consumers are uniformly replacing tap water with bottled water.” PepsiCo shares fell 55 cents to $66.29 in afternoon trading Friday amid a broad market pullback. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19985269/ [Edited 7/27/07 12:02pm] | |
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Bottled water just seems like a scam to me. I've got a Brita pitcher that I keep changed regularly and that works well enough. I don't really like the thought of drinking the flouride, but it's hard to know where exactly the bottled water comes from. I mean, it SAYS spring water, but didn't they find out recently that some highly popular brand of bottled water was really just tap water with a fancy label? | |
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glorified tap water maybe | |
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ya know what? if i'm running around on a really hot day and i'm thirsty, i'm gonna buy a damn bottle of water if that's what i feel i need. as much as i see the whole wide spectrum of critiques on this thread, i find that i am hydrated much more successfully by water than by cynicism. not that i don't LOVE cynicism. lord knows i do. but yeah, water works better when i'm thirsty. | |
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Anxiety said: ya know what? if i'm running around on a really hot day and i'm thirsty, i'm gonna buy a damn bottle of water if that's what i feel i need. as much as i see the whole wide spectrum of critiques on this thread, i find that i am hydrated much more successfully by water than by cynicism. not that i don't LOVE cynicism. lord knows i do. but yeah, water works better when i'm thirsty.
Indeed Thirst can be a good motivator. | |
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yes!
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I remember reading that 90% of the cost of a product is spent on packaging.
The Most Important Thing In Life Is Sincerity....Once You Can Fake That, You Can Fake Anything. | |
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Anxiety said: XxAxX said: i would just like to point out that "Evian" spelled backwards is "naive"
and the opposite of NATO is OTAN | |
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Marketers of anti-aging products, the creator of the Pet Rock, and the Spice Girls couldn't agree more with your statement. | |
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