OK Soda has been remembered more for its unique
advertising campaign than for its fruity flavor. The name and advertising campaign attempted to poke fun at the "''
I'm OK – You're OK''"
pop-psychology of the early 1970s. OK Soda was intentionally marketed at the difficult
Generation X markets, and attempted to cash in on the group's existing cynicism, disillusionment and disaffection with standard advertising campaigns. OK Soda's own advertisements went so far as to disparage the beverage's taste comparing it to things like "carbonated tree sap". The general public did not respond to the offbeat campaign, and most critics point out that the campaigning was too overt in its courting of the youth and teen market.
Can design Both the cans and the print advertisements for the soft drink, created by
Wieden+Kennedy creative director
Charlotte Moore, conceptual artist
Peter Wegner, and designer
Todd Waterbury, featured work by popular "alternative" cartoonists
Daniel Clowes (
Eightball,
Ghost World) and
Charles Burns (
Black Hole,
The Believer), Though skeptical of the campaign, Clowes took the job because his work illustrating a couple of cans and a few posters paid more than publishing five books of comics. In an act of subverting OK Soda's already subversive marketing scheme, Clowes gave his OK Soda mascot the facial features of
Charles Manson, saying that none of the contracts he signed said, "Don't put a mass murderer on the can." Unlike the brightly colored Coca-Cola cans, they were decorated in drab shades of gray, with occasional red text. In addition to the primarily two-tone illustrations, the cans featured a special code that could be entered at the
toll-free number "1-800-I-FEEL-OK" that led callers through a series of true-or-false prompts inspired by the
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Cans also sported a "Coincidence" in the form of an odd OK Soda-themed
urban legend set in various towns around the United States, each anecdote ending with the statement, "This is a coincidence." OK Soda's marketing team also mailed out these "Coincidences" in the form of
chain letters to promote the soda, and in turn these chain letters were read on TV spots for OK Soda. • OK Soda emphatically rejects anything that is not OK, and fully supports anything that is. • The better you understand something, the more OK it turns out to be. • OK Soda says, "Don't be fooled into thinking there has to be a reason for everything." • OK Soda reveals the surprising truth about people and situations. • OK Soda does not subscribe to any religion, or endorse any political party, or do anything other than feel OK. • There is no real secret to feeling OK. • OK Soda may be the preferred drink of other people such as yourself. • Never overestimate the remarkable abilities of "OK" brand soda. • Please wake up every morning knowing that things are going to be OK. ==Composition and taste==