Cherry Alka Seltzer dissolving in water
Alka-Seltzer is a brand name owned by the German Bayer
Corporation for a line of medications sold over the counter and taken by means of rapidly dissolving tablets that form an effervescent solution in water.
Product information
The original Alka-Seltzer is a remedy for headache, indigestion, hangover and gas . Sodium bicarbonate in Alka-Seltzer also
makes it effective in treating mild blood acidosis associated with allergy (see citation). Alka-Seltzer is a combination of aspirin
(acetylsalicylic acid, C9H8O4), baking soda (sodium bicarbonate, NaHCO3) and
citric acid (C6H8O7), designed to treat pain and simultaneously neutralize excess
stomach acid (the
"Alka" being derived from the word "alkali"). It is provided in the form of large effervescent
tablets, about 1 inch (25 mm) in diameter, which are dissolved
(two at a time for the usual adult dosage) in a glass of water. As the tablets dissolve, the acid and bicarbonate react
vigorously producing carbon dioxide gas (hence the "Seltzer"), which also produces enough agitation to allow the active ingredients to dissolve readily.
The patient then ingests the resulting solution.
The product has been extensively advertised since the beginning of the mass media era in the U.S. It was formerly marketed as something of a cure-all; at one time its ads even
suggested taking it for "the blahs." Subsequent regulation has taken into consideration that aspirin is a relatively powerful
drug which is not tolerated by everyone and should not generally be taken at all by children or adolescents due to its linkage to
Reye's syndrome; the product is no longer marketed in this fashion.
The product has suffered a decline in popularity in the U.S. in recent decades; there are apparently several factors involved
in this.
- The increasing medical awareness of the U.S. general public, most of whom now realize that it is not advisable to take a
multi-symptom treatment product unless one has all of the symptoms that it treats (i.e., in Alka-Seltzer's case, a headache
simultaneous with an upset stomach.)
- A general trend away in the U.S. from aspirin-based products to those based on other pain relievers, notably acetaminophen and ibuprofen.
- The product is believed to have a bland, chalky taste, rather off-putting to some; in recent decades, flavored versions have
been available as a concession to this fact.
At one time the product was available in both long glass tubes and foil packets; the latter is the primary way the product is
provided today, with two tablets in each packet.
Alka Seltzer Plus packaging and tablet
As the sale of the original product has declined, Bayer HealthCare (formerly Miles Laboratories) has put the famous brand onto
newer products, such as the Alka-Seltzer Plus line of remedies for the common cold.
Some of the newer products are now neither effervescent nor aspirin-based. This is because the years spent building the brand
through advertising are still yielding benefits; many Americans still remember catch
phrases from its ads such as "I can't believe I ate the whole thing!", "Mamma mia, that's-a spicy
meat-a-ball!", "Try it, you'll like it!" and "Plop, Plop, Fizz, Fizz, oh what a relief it is!"; a similar slogan in the
United Kingdom referred to "plunk, plunk, fizz-ics".
On March 28, 2006, Alka-Seltzer celebrated its 75th anniversary with a world record setting buffet at the Las Vegas Hilton. Over 500 dishes were featured at the buffet. The event was hosted by Kathy Griffin and was featured in the final episode of the second season of the Bravo reality show
Kathy Griffin: Life on The D-List. In late 2006, Griffin appeared
in another re-introduced Alka-Seltzer ad, the "Try it, you'll like it!" spot.
Chemistry of the effervescence
The aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) is not an active ingredient in the effervescent action of Alka-Seltzer, but the baking soda
(sodium bicarbonate) and citric acid are active.
The carbon dioxide is released as a gas.
TV commercials
- A well known icon was the "Speedy" character, an American advertising icon created by George
Pal of the Wade Ad Agency in 1951 as Sparky, then changed to Speedy by a sales manager to promote "speedy relief." Speedy
was either a little boy or an elf (opinions vary) whose body was primarily one Alka-Seltzer tablet
while he wore another as a hat; he proclaimed Alka-Seltzer's virtues and sang the "Plop, plop, fizz, fizz" song in his high,
squeaky voice (provided by voice actor Dick Beals).
- George Raft starred in the 1969 Alka-Seltzer commercial
"The Unfinished Lunch." It consists of Raft incarcerated and in the prison lunchroom. He takes a bite of the awful prison food
and recoils back. Suddenly he bangs his cup on the steel table loudly in the lunchroom. It ripple effects throughout the room. He
starts intoning "Alka Seltzer, Alka Seltzer..." Soon, the other hundreds of inmates do the same. The commercial is regarded as a
"classic", mostly because the product is never seen, and the brand name is the only word spoken. It is reminiscent of the old
radio ad for a similar product, Bromo-Seltzer, with its "freight train" rhythmic
repetition of the product's name.
- Alka-Seltzer had a series of commercials during the mid 1960s which utilized a song called "No
Matter What Shape Your Stomach's In," which was recorded by the T-Bones and was released as a single which became a hit in 1966. The ads were unique in that they featured only the mid-sections (no faces) of people of all shapes and
sizes.
- In an Alka-Seltzer commercial from 1970, an actor (he's referred to as "Jack") in a commercial
for the fictional product "Magdalini's Meatballs" has to eat a meatball and then say "Mamma mia, that's-a spicy
meat-a-ball!" in an Italian accent. Take after take is ruined by some comedic trial or another. By the commercial's end, "Jack"
has eaten so many meatballs that it's "Alka Seltzer to the rescue". With his stomach settled, Jack does a perfect take, except
the oven door falls off. The director (off-camera) sighs and says, "OK, let's break for lunch." (It has been said that this
commercial was dropped because it was allegedly demeaning to Italians.)
- Another 1970 commercial shows a young bride who has created a giant dumpling; the
implication is that her cooking skills are lacking. She has also offered her beleaguered husband a meat loaf in the shape of a heart (like a heart-shaped box of candy); he takes
some Alka-Seltzer. Then he hears her thinking up ideas for dinner the next night: "marshmallowed meatballs," and "poached oysters." He returns to the bathroom for more
Alka-Seltzer.
- Another Alka-Seltzer commercial from the same era is one concerning "The ultimate businessman's lunch". Seeking "revenge" on
his underlings for former bad suggestions, "The Boss" [aka "Mr. J.G.", played by character actor Milton Frome ] is taking his "boys" out to lunch in the most out-of-the-way place imaginable. In this
instance they are seen trudging through the snow in a howling windstorm towards their destination, a Chinese restaurant in the
mountains of Tibet. Once inside the restaurant and removing their parkas, J.G. and the boys are greeted by the proprietor, "Moo
Chee" [a thinly veiled reference to other oriental food], played by character actor and voice artist Marvin Miller [best-known for playing Michael Anthony, personal assistant to John Beresford Tipton
[III] on the 1950's TV series "The Millionaire", and the voice of "Robby the Robot" in the 1950's film Forbidden Planet ].
Moo Chee directs them into the dining room where J.G. orders all the food, including roast yak in a special hot sauce followed by
"chocolate moose". One of the boys complains "but J.G., that's a French dessert!". J.G. responds "No, this is a real moose!"
followed quickly by Moo Chee chiming in "with special hot chocolate sauce!" [as in hot peppers]. In the next scene J.G. and the
boys are eating and getting sick, when in comes Moo Chee announcing "Important phone call for Mr. J.G.!" In the next scene, the
hung-up telephone is seen [just a prop in the ruse to get away from the boys], and J.G. is finishing his Alka-Seltzer, thanking
Moo Chee for his timely "rescue" from the awful food. Relieved, the boss returns to the now-empty dining room with Moo Chee.
"Where are the boys?" asks J.G. The final remark is by Moo Chee "Maybe they too have important phone call, Mr. J.G." All of this
detail is conveyed in a 30-second spot.
- In late 2005, Alka Seltzer re-introduced the "I can't believe I ate the whole thing" ad with
Peter Boyle, apparently "in character" as Frank Barone
from the 1996–2005 TV sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond (his TV wife,
Doris Roberts as Marie Barone, appeared alongside
Boyle in some of these commercials). In one commercial, she gives him a piece of cake to eat, at the end; in true Marie Barone
fashion she adds, "drop one crumb and you're dead!"
References in pop culture
- Jack Benny suggests it as a cure for hangover on his February 9, 1953 radio episode
"Steak Ride"
- Bernard Black (Dylan Moran) in the television
comedy Black Books refers to Alka-Seltzer as "fizzy-good-make-feel-nice."
- The 1970s commercial was also featured in the movie Dick. Another "Plop Plop,
Fizz Fizz" ad is featured in the 1976 comedy Silver Streak.
- FBI Agent Jack
Crawford frequently takes Alka-Seltzers in the Hannibal Lecter series of books by
Thomas Harris. .
- A con man with a weak stomach is seen taking Alka-Seltzer in the movie Ocean's Eleven.
- The band Oasis mention Alka-Seltzer in relation to a girl named 'Elsa' in their song
"Supersonic."
- In the 1976 Columbia Pictures theatrical release
"Taxi Driver," Travis Bickle (played by Robert De
Niro) puts Alka-Seltzer in his water, during a scene in a luncheonette . Oddly enough, De Niro shares this scene with
Peter Boyle, who appeared in a new ad campaign for Alka Seltzer beginning in late 2005 using
slightly altered dialogue taken from the 1970s original (see above).
- In the movie Body Shots, Trent suggests opening a package of Alka Seltzer in order to
feign putting on a condom.
- The Bloodhound Gang's song Shut Up features the lyrics
"I'm an Alka Seltzer, that's right you're a seagull", which is a reference to the urban myth that a seagull will explode if it
swallows an Alka Seltzer.
- The song No More Shoes, by Stephen Malkmus (from his album Face the Truth), ends, after a lengthy psychedelic jam, with the distorted voice of Malkmus
shouting at the top of his lungs "I want my Alka-Seltzer!"
- Alka Seltzer appeared in a strip of Calvin and Hobbes where Calvin likes to see his cereal crackle when he puts milk in it
probably referring to the effervescent property.
- The band Gym Class Heroes use a reference to Alka Seltzer in their song "Cupid's
Chokehold", the lyrics are "...i mean she even makes me pancakes, and alka seltzer when my tummy aches, if that ain't love then i
don't know what love is."
- In Shrek 2, Shrek, Donkey, and Puss in Boots snuck into the potion room to find a potion that would transform Shrek
into a handsome prince. Puss in Boots was able to leap from shelf to shelf in order to look for potions. One of the potions that
he found was Elfa-Seltzer (Alka-Seltzer).
- The German a cappella group "Wise Guys"
mentions Alka-Seltzer on their album Radio in the song Aber sonst gesund (Healthy otherwise)
- In the song Trilogie auf Frau Pohl by German singer-songwriter
Reinhard Mey, Mey's landlady invites him to a glass of Alka-Seltzer after he had an
alcoholic party where parts of her furniture were demolished.
- Alka-Seltzer's latest ad campaign, first showcased during Super Bowl XLI, features
child star Jack Johnson as an edgy concert-goer.
- In the Star Trek TNG episode Unification, Part I, there is a ship called the USS Alka-Selsior at Surplus Depot Z-15, a play
on the name Excelsior and Alka-Seltzer.
- In the Weekend Update segment of the September 25th, 1976 Saturday Night Live episode, it was announced that Speedy Alka-Seltzer "came out of the medicine cabinet this week, and admitted that he was a bicarbonate," and had subsequently committed
suicide by throwing himself into a bathtub, where he was "fatally effervesced."
- Conker the Squirrel uses Alka-Seltzer to get rid of his hangover in
Conker's Bad Fur Day
- In the 1988 film Elvira, Mistress of the Dark, a member of the
city council, played by Kurt Fuller, is seen taking Alka-Seltzer at a town meeting after
Elvira uses a magical casserole to turn everyone in town into "sex-addled maniacs".
- In an issue of the defunct magazine Coronet, a mother writes deploring the actions sometimes depicted in commercials, such as people deliberately spilling stuff
on a floor, since kids might copy that. But then she saw he young son confronted by a local bully.
The younger boy started singing "Plop, plop, fizz, dizz, oh, what a relief it is!" The bully's attitude changed and the two kids
walked down the street singing.
External links
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