• TheActualDevil@sffa.community
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    9 months ago

    Fanta’s creation was a result of American companies cutting off business with Germany during WWII. Coca Cola stopped sending ingredients to the local bottling plant in Germany but the ones there still wanted to work and make money. They took the ingredients they still had access to and made a new drink, Fanta! Once the war was over and Coca Cola made contact with them again they liked the new drink and just made it part of their brand.

    I had to stop telling this normally as it tends to make people hate me for making them feel bad about drinking Fanta. I tell them it’s fine. I drive a Volkswagen. But they still feel gross about it so I stopped telling people or at least tell them that they may not want to drink Fanta anymore and give them the choice.

    • Hyperi0n@lemmy.film
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      9 months ago

      Coca-Cola never gave up thier german subsidiary Coca-Cola GmbH and they never willingly stopped sending syrup.

      Syrup was stopped by the allied blockades. They ran out of stockpiles in 1943 and so the owner created Fanta with apple cider scraps.

      The Dutch Coca-Cola plant had similar supply issues and they sent the Fanta branding up there as well but used elderberry.

      After the war Coca-Cola regained their subsidiaries and the Fanta branding.

      Fanta would be discontinued in 1949.

      The current Fanta we know today was created in Italy in 1955 to complete with an unknown Italian PepsiCo product.

    • CaptainBlagbird@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      This makes me want to drink Fanta more than Cola though.

      I don’t blame the workers for wanting to continue earning their money. I wonder whether they provided the new drink freely to Coke once the contact came back, or if Coke just took it…