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5 DARK Secrets Brands Don't Want You To Know!

2017-06-15 2 Dailymotion

5 DARK Secrets Brands Don't Want You To Know! Over the years, several brands have demonstrated that are here to stay.

But war time survival isn’t the only dirty little secret being swept under the floor mats.

We bring you 5 DARK Secrets Brands Don't Want You To Know! Let’s begin!

5. Fanta

Fanta was invented in Germany in 1941.

Its German-born creator, Max Keith, was also director of Coca-Cola Deutschland, which was Coke’s most successful foreign operation by 1939.

It was rumored but never confirmed that Fanta joined and supported the Nazi party.

Due to embargoes and other sanctions Coca-Cola Deutschland was no longer able to acquire the ingredients to make Coca-Cola.

Instead of halting pr oduction, Coca-Cola Deutschland created a new drink with domestically available ingredients—Fanta Orange—and continued business operations.

After World War II was over, all Fanta profits were turned over to Coca-Cola, along with the Fanta product line.

4. Oreo

Averages of 3 billion consumers buy Oreo packages each year, making Oreo the top-selling cookie of the 20th century.

But have any of those billions of people ever noticed that they licked off the creamy white filling from the Knight Templar symbol, dipped the Cross Pattee sign into the glass of milk, or satisfied their hunger with the Nabisco logo? Life is just full of surprises.

A circle topped with a two-bar cross is a Nabisco logo that stands for a European symbol of quality.

Experts believe the design for the Nabisco symbol arose from the Cross of Lorraine, which was carried by the Knights Templar during the First Crusade in the 11th century.

The geometric pattern of a dot with four triangles radiating outward is a symbol that once again connects Oreos with the history of the First Crusade.

It closely resembles a Cross Pattee, a symbol the Knights Temples adopted by sewing the red or black crosses on their white robes and other pieces of clothing to distinguish themselves from soldiers of other religion.

3. Barbie

With her saccharine-sweet smile and impossibly long legs Barbie is the most famous doll in history.

More than a billion Barbies have been sold since the foot-tall plastic pin-up was first revealed to the world at the New York Toy Fair in March 1959.

Barbie was the creation of Jack Ryan, a five-times-married engineer with a passion for parties, prostitutes and drugs, and Ruth Handler, the entrepreneurial daughter of Polish immigrants, who stumbled across the Barbie blueprint - an adult, almost pornographic doll called Bild-Lilli - during a holiday in Europe in 1956.

Ryan, Mattel's chief designer, modelled Barbie on that sexy German doll, which he described as 'looking like a hooker between performances', but he knew American Barbie couldn't be so provocative.

2. DuPont

DuPont is an American chemical company and the world’s third largest producer of chemicals, agrochemicals, polymers, safety materials, electronics and genetically modified seeds.

By 1811, DuPont was the largest supplier of gunpowder for US military.

During WW1, 40% of explosive used by the world powers was supplied by DuPont.

DuPont also played an important role in Manhattan Project and production of the first atomic bomb that was later on dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

During the same war, DuPont produced 4.5 billion pounds of explosive for the military use and as a matter of fact, the horrors of war made DuPont a huge profit.

1. Kellogg's

Apparently, Dr. John Harvey Kellogg's intention for the cereal was not to fill hungry bellies.

Instead, he intended to rescue humanity from a plague of debauchery.

In more basic terms, he wanted people to stop having sex, including self-pleasure.

In the late 19th century, Dr. Kellogg made it his duty in life to stop sexual desire in its tracks and wrote several anti-sex books.

Doctor Kellogg believed masturbation, in particular, would bring about an onslaught of diseases.


Doctor Kellogg devised a list of different foods that the sexually-driven population could eat to stop themselves from feeling frisky.

"He thought that meat and certain flavorful or seasoned foods increased sexual desire, and that plainer food, especially cereals and nuts, could curb it.


Doctor Kellogg and his brother, Will, eventually came up with what we now munch on with our eyes half closed at the crack of dawn: Corn Flakes.

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