I do refer to soft drinks as Pop and that is actually my main focus of the post. Believe it or not, there are a lot of people in this country who speak English, yet don't call soft drinks by their proper nickname, "Pop." We currently live in a backwards state when it comes to using English, you might be shocked to hear the preferred term in California is "Soda." Well it's certainly not the only thing this state has gotten wrong recently.
As you can see from the map, by the end of the first day of our trip when we plan to be in New Mexico, we will already be in a Coke state! Who knew this, that a whole hunk of the country, which coincidentally (or not) is red in this map, would call a Pepsi a Coke? So they would call a Sprite a Coke? A root beer a Coke? It truly sounds insane I know.So we might have to suspend the 'no corn syrup rule' for the sake of science once or twice just to see how this works. I currently can't even fathom this. So I'm trying to imagine the conversation with the waitress in the Texas diner.
Me, "I'll Have a Coke."Actually I have no intention of adapting to their odd ways and I will refuse to call soft drinks anything but Pop when I'm on this trip. If these foreigners don't know what I'm talking about then I'm afraid they will just lose a sale. More on the topic at popvssoda.com.
Waitress, "What kind of Coke would you like hon?"
Me, "I'll take a Hire's Root Beer."
You forgot to include cola in the results. Also there are still parts of the south where RC and Dr Pepper are still the drink of choice.I think it's in Georgia where you can order boiled peanuts in your Dr Pepper and most local diners.
ReplyDeleteWe didn't make the map, the kind folks at http://popvssoda.com/ did. The data they used is not scientific, it is just people who responded to their survey on the website I believe, so there are bound to be some inaccuracies here and there.
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