Pop Fans Pour It on in the Morning
Posted on: Monday, 15 January 2007, 18:00 CST
By John Schmeltzer
It's not unusual for Dee McKinsey to have three cans of Coke before she leaves the house each morning for her job as the regional director of boards and volunteerism at the American Cancer Society in Chicago.
"There is nothing better than the feel of Coke on the back of your throat in the morning," said McKinsey, a morning pop drinker since the 1970s, savoring the cold, stinging sensation that coffee drinkers just don't get.
But these days, more people are enjoying that chilled morning jolt as they increasingly turn to soft drinks instead of coffee, flaunting mom's no-pop-for-breakfast rule many had in their youth.
Consumption of soft drinks at breakfast eaten outside the home has nearly doubled in the past 15 years, while coffee consumption with breakfast outside the home has fallen nearly 25 percent, according to data compiled by New-York based consumer research firm NPD Group, which has offices in Rosemont.
The data is specific to drinks with meals and does not, for example, address the Starbucks phenomenon.
Breakfast consumers order a soft drink with their breakfast 15.1 percent of the time, compared with 7.9 percent of the time in 1990, said Harry Balzer, an NPD executive vice president who has studied American eating habits for more than 25 years. At the same time, Balzer said, coffee was being ordered 38 percent of the time, compared with 48.7 percent 15 years ago.
It probably is not surprising that soft drinks are a growing choice at breakfast considering that nearly half of the U.S. population older than age 4 consumes soft drinks on any given day, according a study commissioned by a milk group.
And consumers are drinking soda for breakfast at home more frequently, too, though not in the same numbers.
Balzer said 2.4 percent of the people who ate breakfast at home in 2006 consumed a soft drink with breakfast, compared with 0.5 percent in 1985.
Most morning consumers prefer fully sugared regular pop, but diet soda consumption continues to grow in the mornings. In 2006, 5.3 percent of those eating breakfast away from home had a diet pop, while 9.8 percent had a regular soda. Diet pop accompanied 1.7 percent of breakfasts in 1990, according to NPD.
Megan Hebenstreit, 24, a law student at Indiana University in Indianapolis, drinks Diet Coke early in the day because she can, now that she's gone away to school.
"My mom did not allow Coke in the morning when we were growing up," she said. "They had it in the dining hall, and it was easy to get."
Hebenstreit said she gets headaches if she doesn't drink a Diet Coke.
A typical soft drink contains about 35 milligrams of caffeine per 8-ounce serving, while a similar size cup of coffee has an average of 75 milligrams. But the caffeine content of a cup of coffee can be more than 100 milligrams depending upon the type of coffee and the manner in which it is brewed.
Stephen Shapiro, a former Accenture consultant who is now a motivational speaker and owner of the consulting company 24/7 Innovation, said his morning soda ritual is not just about the caffeine.
"I find that first Diet Coke in the morning is so refreshing," he said in an e-mail message, noting that he has never worked for a soft drink company. "I sometimes drink caffeine-free and still get the same feeling."
Jeanne Hurlbert, professor of sociology at Louisiana State University, said some of the interest in carbonated soft drinks for breakfast may stem from Southern influences.
"Coke has been 'Southern coffee' at breakfast for some Southerners for a long time," she said. "It's really not unusual to see Southern women, particularly, clutching a Diet Coke for breakfast."
Shapiro said that may stem in part from a marketing campaign Coke ran during the late 1980s in which it encouraged consumers to "Have a Coke in the Morning."
"During the height of the campaign, the woman who sold coffee in our office told me that more people were drinking Coke than coffee. This is when I started drinking Diet Coke for breakfast," Shapiro said.
Balzer said the growth of pop for breakfast is probably due to soft-drink consumption by young adults, because the heaviest consumption is in the 18-to-25-year-old group.
"This is a young adult phenomenon," he said. "This is all about what is the easiest way to get caffeine into your body."
Despite the growing popularity of traditional soft drinks for breakfast, both Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo Inc., parent company of Pepsi Cola, are covering their bets by forming alliances with coffeehouses.
Pepsi has distributed Starbucks products for more than a year, and this month Coke announced that it would begin distributing in 2007 an iced coffee drink under the name of Caribou Coffee Co., the nation's second-largest coffeehouse chain.
Brent Curry, a vice president with Hill & Knowlton Inc., said Coke and Pepsi shouldn't bother.
"I have never a been a coffee drinker. I have already had two Diet Mountain Dews this morning. It is one of the first things I do in the morning when I get into my office," he said, adding that he refrains from drinking the soda with his breakfast.
But that could be subject to change.
Unlike the days when it took him just 10 minutes to get to work, he now commutes on the train, and it's a longer trip. As a result, he carries a can of Mountain Dew in his briefcase in case the train is delayed.
"If I get desperate, it is there," Curry said.
Source: Chicago Tribune
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User Comments (129)
| 29. |
Posted by Bill on 01/16/2007, 14:43 Good lord. What a bunch of wing nuts and idiots. National nannies telling us what to eat and what not to eat or drink. Pretty soon, the government will be protecting you from your own freedoms, and sitting at your dinner table making sure you eat your nuts and berries and don't do anything wrong by someone elses standards. Don't tread on me... |
| 28. |
Posted by Dee on 01/16/2007, 14:43 I've been drinking Coke in the morning for over 40 years...at first it was for the taste...now it helps me burp... |
| 27. |
Posted by mike risko on 01/16/2007, 14:42 I own and operate a diner ... coffee is out ... Coke is in ... what amazes me is folks who are very over weight drink diet Coke along with a full stack of pancakes with maple syrup ... and they also have a handicap parking sticker because they are so fat !!! |
| 26. |
Posted by Kevin in England on 01/16/2007, 14:36 This is so disgusting it makes me feel ill. |
| 25. |
Posted by cher on 01/16/2007, 14:31 champagne with a vodka chaser (just one) is the best way to start the day. The bubbly effect of the champagne (grape juice) wakes you up and the vodka calms you down. I've been doing this for 10 year. |
| 24. |
Posted by Jay Urish on 01/16/2007, 14:28 Has anyone seen what Coke does to a rusty nail? Do this exteriment.. Go out in the garage and find a rusty nail.. Make sure its real good and rusty. Put it in a small glass and add fresh cococola.. Let is sit over night.. Admire your clean shiny nail afterwords... |
| 23. |
Posted by bane on 01/16/2007, 14:26 tO those of youi smart mouthing the food police, there is no food value in a soft drink, orange juice contains different kinds of sugar+vitamins, and one more thing alot of you are going to be very sorry,sad and surprized one day when your doctor congratulates you on being a winner of the 50% of you that are going to get type 2 diabetes.. So drink up while you still can! |
| 22. |
Posted by John on 01/16/2007, 14:24 There is nothing like an ice cold Pepsi in the morning. Coffee is for people over 50. Are we to listen to the pesticide-vegetable eating nay-sayers who are all dying from cancer that sugar in the morning is going to kill you? Ridiculous! Join the Pepsi Generation and feel young and energetic! |
| 21. |
Posted by Peter on 01/16/2007, 14:22 No one has mentioned the phosphoric acid present in all the soft drinks, including sugar-free and caffeine-free, which leaches the calcium right out of your bones. Get ready for osteoporosis! |
| 20. |
Posted by Cactus on 01/16/2007, 14:19 #1, 7, 11: Shush with your "no wonder Americans are fat" comments... the 120 calories in a can of regular pop (Diet = 0) are no worse than any cup of coffee or glass of orange juice. Simple carbs through and through. Yes, the OJ actually brings you nutritional value - but none of those choices justify your high-and-mighty posturing, calorie-wise. |
| 19. |
Posted by Jim on 01/16/2007, 14:16 If you want that "buzz" in the morning..drink Club Coda...no shugar.. But soda? come on fokes..get real |
| 18. |
Posted by Brian Schafer on 01/16/2007, 14:14 I gave up soft drinks cold and it was easy. I save myself a lot of calories and a lot of money. More people should try it, it's not that hard. Giving up beer would be difficulty, but not carbonated sugar water. |
| 17. |
Posted by Morgan on 01/16/2007, 14:13 Thanksfor the concerns, Moms, I can handle my own breakfast planning. If it disgusts you that's your problem. Coffee disgusts me AND it stinks up the building. I couldn't be happier that we're moving away from the stale coffee breathers and cup-huddlers. Unreal how much time people have to worry about what other people do in the morning. Get a life. |
| 16. |
Posted by KevinG on 01/16/2007, 14:13 Each day starts by popping open a can first thing in the morning. 6 cans of diet soda every day, no coffee, and losing weight. |
| 15. |
Posted by larry ames on 01/16/2007, 14:07 Hey! What about the weakening of bones in women recently reported to be the result of drinking colas? |
| 14. |
Posted by Chris on 01/16/2007, 14:04 To Jeff: Aspartame fear is FUD (fear / uncertainty / doom) - We have been hearing about this for ages. Where is the hard scientific evidence? They said the same thing about earlier sweeteners... but it was drivel. |
| 13. |
Posted by Kathleen on 01/16/2007, 14:04 The dentist LOVE you, keep washing your mouths in sugar all day, and you will keep our wallets fat! Come on America...we can do better! |
| 12. |
Posted by Craig on 01/16/2007, 14:04 The Food Police are at it again. Another ploy by the anti-everything group. If you carefully read the article you will see that 85 per cent of those surveyed did NOT have soda for breakfast and 97.6 per cent of those at home did NOT either. Plus, it states that most soft drinks have only about a third of the caffeine as coffee. And one more thing ... check the amount of sugar in your fruit drinks and see if the amount is not higher than in a soda. There is nothing wrong with a soda or any other food as long as you consume them responsibily. So get out of my breakfast, Big Brother! |
| 11. |
Posted by R. Adams on 01/16/2007, 14:03 No wondering Americans are 'wallowing' in their own fat. |
| 10. |
Posted by Chris on 01/16/2007, 14:02 Diet Soda here as well - every morning. Less calories than juice, less caffeine than coffee. And to Steven Alderly: get over yourself dude! To those that say it isn't healthy... thats why I drink diet. |
| 9. |
Posted by Jeff Schadoff on 01/16/2007, 14:01 God help everyone when they learn how bad the effects on the body are of drinking Aspartame which is the artificial sweetner in Diet Coke. |
| 8. |
Posted by Alex on 01/16/2007, 13:49 This is disgusting. |
| 7. |
Posted by Marleena McTavish on 01/16/2007, 13:45 The fattening of america continues..... |
| 6. |
Posted by Steven Alderly on 01/16/2007, 13:43 And I'm supposed to respect these people as my fellow co-workers, friends, family members, and Americans? Give me a break. |
| 5. |
Posted by Linda Leigh on 01/16/2007, 13:42 OMG! Well, the Dentists will be happy to get more work!!! Seriously tho - I don't have the reference readily available, but I did read several studies linking the carbonation/sugar/cola combo thing to be deadly to teeth. I do understand having to have your fix...I used to live on JOLT - but, it was putting on pounds, my face seemed puffier, and it was actuallly taking more and more of the product to feel anything except more tired. |
| 4. |
Posted by Adrienne on 01/16/2007, 13:41 Gross |
| 3. |
Posted by Richard on 01/16/2007, 13:34 I drink Diet Soda for breakfast because juice is too fattening! |
| 2. |
Posted by Kenny Ash on 01/16/2007, 13:31 I can fully relate... For some reason Coke is my perfect choice in the morning... A little zing, nice flavor, and of coruse the bubbly goodness over ice =).... I actually notice the different drinking it in different mediums, plastic cups, glass, styro-foam....kinda fascinating actually...probably works similar to how wine is delivered on your palate perhaps...Kenny and Official Coca-Cola Kid - 38 years later... |
| 1. |
Posted by Dan Penning on 01/16/2007, 13:27 This is another piece to the obesity epidemic in America. It can't possibly be healthy. |


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