In 2004, along with the Snaffle competition (May-July), Snapple ran the Lemons ‘R Lucky promotion (March-December), which allowed consumers to win prizes if they were able to collect five caps falling along the lines defined in the photo below. The caps were distributed on Snapple lemonade bottles and corresponded to the same numbers used for the yellow caps in the the Snaffle competition. The yellow Snaffle caps (distributed May-July) could be used towards this promotion. All of the facts were about lemons.
References
- Surging Snapple orders $12M refill for bottle ads. Brandweek. Kenneth Hein. February 2, 2004.
# | Real Fact |
242 | The nickname of President Hayes’s wife was “Lemonade Lucy.” |
250 | Mongolians invented lemonade around 1299 A.D. |
258 | Lemon wood is carved into chess pieces. |
285 | In ancient Rome, lemons were used as an antidote to all poisons. |
308 | Connecticut was the first state to pass a Lemon Law in 1982. |
317 | Lemon sharks can give birth to about 36 babies at one time. |
323 | The Lemon-Yellow Tree Frog is only active in the darkness of night. |
342 | California and Arizona grow approximately 95% of the fresh lemons in the U.S. |
349 | Most cats don’t like lemonade. |
357 | A baboon is a variety of lemon. |
368 | In 2003, a 6-year-old from Naples, FL was ticketed for not having a permit for her lemonade stand. |
373 | Endocarp is the edible pulp inside a lemon. |
379 | The “lemon yellow” crayon was introduced in 1949 and retired in 1990. |
391 | A sea lemon is a mollusk that feeds on sponges. |
402 | Christopher Columbus brought the first lemon seeds to America. |
409 | Approximately 16,500 people in the U.S. go by the last name Lemon. |
427 | Lemons ripen after you pick them, but oranges do not. |