In a quick, stealth photo shoot, Pepsi made it appear the statues were about to clink glasses of their respective colas.
Pepsi tweeted “Hey @CocaCola thanks for being such gracious hosts for #SBLIII this week. We agree #TogetherIsBeautiful so we’d like to get our founders together for a celebratory cheers to declare a temporary #ColaTruce for the day. See you at @WorldofCocaCola soon!”
Hey @CocaCola thanks for being such gracious hosts for #SBLIII this week. We agree #TogetherIsBeautiful so we’d like to get our founders together for a celebratory cheers to declare a temporary #ColaTruce for the day. See you at @WorldofCocaCola soon! pic.twitter.com/LX3oyqCB5A
— Pepsi™ (@pepsi) January 30, 2019
Coke, which hadn’t been given advance notice, apparently played along with its archrival.
“We are going to welcome them with a Coke and a smile,” Coca-Cola spokeswoman Kate Hartman said.
By then the statue had been removed. On a return run, Pepsi apparently felt as if it had gotten the cold shoulder. It tweeted: “Hey @CocaCola we swung by but it looks like you weren’t into having us over today…that doesn’t feel very #TogetherIsBeautiful.”
Hey @CocaCola we swung by but it looks like you weren’t into having us over today…that doesn’t feel very #TogetherIsBeautiful. Too bad since it seems like our founders thought it was a good idea when we came by to see you this morning. 😉 pic.twitter.com/engF70okKh
— Pepsi™ (@pepsi) January 30, 2019
The hashtag is a reference to a new Coke TV commercial; in which different animated people come together. It is slated to air just before Sunday's game.
New York-based PepsiCo Inc. is an official Super Bowl sponsor; Atlanta-based Coke isn't. In recent weeks, Pepsi unleashed a blue wave of advertising in Coke's Big Red hometown. Coke responded with a football-themed exhibit at the World of Coca-Cola, plans to light up its nearby headquarters in red and funding for free admission for a month at the nearby National Center for Civil and Human Rights.
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