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Kool-Aid

 
Hacker Slang: Kool-Aid

[from a kid's sugar-enriched drink in fruity flavors] When someone who should know better succumbs to marketing influences and actually begins to believe the propaganda being dished out by a vendor, they are said to have drunk the Kool-Aid. Usually the decortication process is slow and almost unnoticeable until one day the victim emerges as a True Believer and begins spreading the faith himself. The term originates in the suicide of 914 followers of Jim Jones's People's Temple cult in Guyana in 1978 (there are also resonances with Ken Kesey's Electric Kool-Aid Acid Tests from the 1960s). What the Jonestown victims actually drank was cyanide-laced Flavor-Aid, a cheap knockoff, rather than Kool-Aid itself. There is a FAQ on this topic.

This has live variants. When a suit is blithering on about their latest technology and how it will save the world, that's ‘pouring Kool-Aid’. When the suit does not violate the laws of physics, doesn't make impossible claims, and in fact says something reasonable and believable, that's pouring good Kool-Aid, usually used in the sentence “He pours good Kool-Aid, doesn't he?” This connotes that the speaker might be about to drink same.


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Wikipedia: Kool-Aid
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Kool-Aid
Kool-Aid.svg
Type Drink mix
Current owner Kraft Foods
Country of origin United States
Introduced 1927
Markets Worldwide

Kool-Aid is a brand of flavored drink mix owned by the Kraft Foods Company.

Contents

Invention and production

The building in Hastings, Nebraska, where Kool-Aid was invented

Kool-Aid was invented by Edwin Perkins and his wife Kitty in Hastings, Nebraska, United States. All of his experiments took place in his mother's kitchen.[1].Its predecessor was a liquid concentrate called Fruit Smack. To reduce shipping costs, in 1927, Perkins discovered a way to remove the liquid from Fruit Smack, leaving only a powder. This powder was named Kool-Aid. Perkins moved his production to Chicago in 1931 and Kool-Aid was sold to General Foods in 1953.[1]

Hastings still celebrates a yearly summer festival called Kool-Aid Days on the second weekend in August, in honor of their city's claim to fame. Kool Aid is known as Nebraska's "official soft drink". [2]

Flavors

Original 6 flavors[2] Cherry, Grape, Lemon-Lime,[3] Orange, Raspberry, Strawberry[4]
Singles flavors[5] Cherry, Grape, Orange, Tropical Punch
Sugar-Free flavors[citation needed] Double Double Cherry, Triple Awesome Grape, Lemonade, Soarin' Strawberry Lemonade, Tropical Punch, Blue Raspberry
Agua Frescas flavors[6] Jamaica, Mandarina-Tangerine, Mango, Tamarindo, Pina-Pineapple
Other flavors worldwide or previously available[6] Apple, Berry Blue, Black Cherry, Bunch Berry, Blastin' Berry Cherry, Cherry, Cherry Cracker, Chocolate, Cola, Eerie Orange, Frutas, Frutas Vermelhas, Golden Nectar, Grape, Grape Blackberry, Grape Tang, Marty Mango, Tang Splash, Grapeberry Splash, Great Bluedini, Groselha, Guaraná,Ice Blue Raspberry Lemonade, Incrediberry, Kickin-Kiwi-Lime, Kolita, Lemon, Lemonade, Lemonade Sparkle, Lemon-Lime, Man-o-Mangoberry, Mango, Mountainberry Punch, Oh-Yeah Orange-Pineapple, Orange, Orange Enerjewz, Pina-Pineapple, Pink Lemonade, Pink Swimmingo, Purplesaurus Rex, Rainbow Punch, Raspberry, Roarin' Raspberry Cranberry, Rock-a-Dile Red, Root Beer, The Grapeinator Grape, Scary Black Cherry, Scary Blackberry, Sharkleberry Fin, Slammin' Strawberry-Kiwi, Soarin' Strawberry-Lemonade, Strawberry, Strawberry Falls Punch, Strawberry Split, Strawberry-Raspberry, Sunshine Punch, Surfin' Berry Punch, Tangerine, Tropical Punch, Watermelon-Cherry, Shakin' Starfruit

Other products

  • Kool-Aid Twists Mt. Dew
  • Kool-Aid Ice Cream Bars
  • Kool-Aid Singles
  • Kool-Aid Bursts
  • Kool-Aid Jammers

References

  1. ^ "History of Kool-Aid". Hastings Museum of Culture and History. http://www.hastingsmuseum.org/koolaid/kahistory.htm. Retrieved 2008-05-16. 
  2. ^ Kool-Aid Days
  3. ^ Grosvenor, Charles R, Jr. (1995). "Food of the Eighties". In the 80s. http://www.inthe80s.com/food/limekoolaidandjello0.shtml. Retrieved 2009-04-03. 
  4. ^ "The History of Kool-Aid". Hastings Museum of Natural & Cultural History. 2008. http://www.hastingsmuseum.org/koolaid/kahistory.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-03. 
  5. ^ "Kool-Aid Powdered". http://www.kraftfoods.com/kf/Products/ProductInfoSearchResults.htm?CatalogType=1&BrandId=25&SearchText=Kool-Aid%20Powdered%20&PageNo=1. 
  6. ^ a b Shaw, Scott (October 8, 2006). "Kool-Aid Komics". Oddball Comics. http://www.oddballcomics.com/article.php?story=2006-10-09. Retrieved 2008-11-17. 

External links



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Hacker Slang. The Jargon File. Copyright © 2007.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kool-Aid" Read more