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Lileks, James (26 April 2006). "Even more progress!". Star Tribune (Opinion column). p.E2 . Retrieved 1 February 2023– via Newspapers.com. Kim, Gina (4 January 2023). "Kraft Heinz sued over citric acid in Capri Sun sold as natural". Law360. LexisNexis . Retrieved 1 February 2023. Karpan, Andrew (1 April 2022). "Capri Sun's pouches headed to a jury in TM saga". Law360. LexisNexis . Retrieved 28 January 2023. Laemmel 2018. "It's an open secret according to a former member of Coca-Cola's sales department: Sales of Capri-Sun are exploding in poor areas; elsewhere, they sometimes come up empty." French: "C'est un secret de Polichinelle pour un ancien membre du service commercial de Coca-Cola: les ventes de Capri-Sun explosent dans les quartiers pauvres; ailleurs, il fait parfois chou blanc." Kuwait Food & Drink Report Q2 2010 (Report). Business Monitor International. February 2010. ProQuest 189809603.
The Kraft Heinz Company's Capri Sun brand uses monk fruit to cut sugar across juice drink portfolio". Food Engineering. BNP Media. 2 August 2022. Archived from the original on 10 February 2023 . Retrieved 10 February 2023. Capri-Sun ( UK: / ˈ k æ p r i/, US: / k ə ˈ p r iː/) is a brand of juice concentrate drinks based in Germany and Switzerland. Invented by Rudolf Wild, it was introduced in West Germany in 1969 by his company as Capri-Sonne (a name retired in favor of the English name in 2017). It is now sold in over 100 countries, with licensees including Kraft Foods in the United States (as Capri Sun) [a] and Coca-Cola Europacific Partners in parts of Europe. As of 2016 [update], roughly 7billion pouches are sold per year, [1] making it one of the few globally prominent soft drinks not originating from the United States. [2] Burfeind, Sophie (22 February 2017). "Capri-Sonne heißt nun "Capri-Sun" "[Consumers are outraged by "Capri-Sun"]. Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Munich. Archived from the original on 17 February 2023 . Retrieved 17 February 2023. Onque, Renée (17 August 2022). "Thousands of pouches of Capri Sun are recalled due to possible contamination with cleaning solution". CNBC. Archived from the original on 6 September 2022 . Retrieved 1 February 2023. Taylor, Louise (14 September 1998). "Erlanger plant cooks up some Wild flavorings". Lexington Herald-Leader. BusinessMonday, pp.12–13 . Retrieved 29 January 2023– via Newspapers.com.At the initiative of Hans-Peter Wild, champion boxer Muhammad Ali began promoting the brand in 1978; it was his first endorsement deal. SiSi-Werke, the Wild subsidiary responsible for Capri-Sonne, said that the deal included one crate of the product a week for four years. The endorsement—in which Ali said Capri-Sonne was, like him, "the greatest of all time"—led to a significant increase in sales. [12] By 1982, Capri-Sun was sold in 23 countries and the most popular fruit juice in 19 of them. [13] Availability rose to 52 countries by 1991. [14] Santolaria, Nicolas (23 November 2020). "Le Capri-Sun, boisson addictive passée des cours de récré au gangsta rap"[Capri-Sun, the addictive beverage that has gone from schoolyards to gangsta rap]. Le Monde (in French). Paris. ProQuest 2462612432 . Retrieved 24 January 2023.
Sugarman, Carole (20 July 1988). "Bewildered over beverages". The Washington Post. ProQuest 307032919 . Retrieved 30 January 2023. Fauroux, Virginie (9 June 2018). "Les nutritionnistes alertent sur le Capri-Sun, la boisson redevenue tendance grâce au rap"[Nutritionists raise the alarm about Capri-Sun, the drink becoming trendy again thanks to rap]. La Chaîne Info (in French). Archived from the original on 30 December 2022 . Retrieved 2 February 2023. calories are included in one Capri Sun Tropical Punch Juice Drink. You can determine how much a nutrient contributes to your daily diet by looking at its Percent Daily Value (%DV). Capri Sun is a German juice concentrate product owned by the privately held corporation of Hans-Peter Wild, Capri Sun Group Holding, in Germany.Taylor 1998. "With Libella's success, Wild moved on to bigger enterprises:... [H]e created Capri-Sun[ sic]". Regarding name, see Spiegel 2017. The pouch is vacuum sealed immediately. The vitamin C in the fruit juice binds the oxygen – it's nature’s little way of ensuring our great fresh taste. Drinks producer Rosinka operated with a loss of UAH 143.6 million" Производитель напитков "Росинка" сработал с убытком в 143,6 млн грн. DELO (in Russian). Interfax-Ukraine. 24 March 2015. Archived from the original on 17 February 2023 . Retrieved 17 February 2023. Ekugo, Ngozi (11 December 2022). "The 6 largest Indian owned companies operating in Nigeria". Nairametrics. Archived from the original on 9 February 2023 . Retrieved 9 February 2023. Gump, Debbie (12 October 1979). "Is new fruit drink really 'natural'?". Tucson Citizen. Gannett News Service. p.8B . Retrieved 28 January 2023– via Newspapers.com.
Thompson, Susan C. (3 June 1980). "Panelists put an orange drink to the taste test". Consumer forum. St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Panel review). p.4B . Retrieved 29 January 2023– via Newspapers.com. Hodgell, Janet (29 March 1982). "Fruit drink in a pouch comes to McAllen". The Monitor. McAllen, Texas, U.S. p.7A . Retrieved 28 January 2023– via Newspapers.com. Capri-Sonne wird jetzt englisch"[Capri-Sonne is now becoming English]. Der Spiegel (in German). Hamburg. 22 February 2017. Archived from the original on 29 January 2023 . Retrieved 29 January 2023. Okun 1979, quoting a review panelist: "I also resent them using the word 'natural' on the label. It uses 12% fruit juice, the same as many Hi-C-like drinks". Gump 1979: "Capri Sun's marketing campaign emphasizes a 'natural fruit drink' with 'no preservatives' and 'nothing artificial'. But it's only 10% fruit juice, just like Hi-C and Hawaiian Punch." Sugarman 1988: "Capri Sun, a 'natural fruit drink' with 'no artificial ingredients'... also lists 'grape skin extract' as one of the ingredients in its raspberry apple beverage." Not all juices are created equal. However, Capri Sun is created entirely of natural ingredients, keeping the company’s philosophy of “natural fun.”Gibbs, Marley; Steele, Pablo (16 November 2018). Post Harvest Technology of Horticultural Crops. EDTECH. p.163. ISBN 9781839471933. Boyer, Mike (25 January 1998). "World gets a taste of Cincinnati daily". The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. E2 . Retrieved 29 January 2023– via Newspapers.com.