Big Red (drink)

Big Red is a soft drink created in 1937 by Grover C. Thomsen and R.H. Roark in Waco, Texas and originally known as Sun Tang Red Cream Soda. It is generally classified as an American variety of cream soda which is almond in flavor, and it is the original "red cream soda." The name was changed to "Sun Tang Big Red Cream Soda" in 1959, and to "Big Red" in 1969 by Harold Jansing, then president of the San Antonio bottling plant, after hearing a golf caddy refer to the soda by that name.

Until the late 1970s, Big Red was marketed exclusively in Central and South Texas and around Louisville, Kentucky, including parts of Southern Indiana. The drink is highly popular in the Southern United States and is well known for its unique taste and red color. Its unique taste, though often thought to be bubble gum, is created by mixing orange and lemon oils with the traditional vanilla used in other cream sodas. Big Red is produced and distributed by various independent soft drink bottlers including Dr Pepper Snapple Group, CCE, and Pepsi Bottling Group under license from Big Red, Inc., based in Austin, Texas.

Big Red

Big Red may refer to:

Products

  • Big Red (gum), a cinnamon-flavored gum made by Wrigley's
  • Big Red (drink), a brand of citrus-flavored cream soda
  • A utility terrain vehicle produced by Honda
  • Media

  • Big Red (book), a book featuring the crew of the USS Nebraska
  • Big Red Tequila, a detective novel by Rick Riordan
  • Big Red, Jim Kjelgaard's first book about Irish Setters.
  • Big Red (film), a 1962 Walt Disney film
  • Big red (jellyfish) or Granrojo, a jellyfish of the family Ulmaridae
  • Alan Kalter, Late Show with David Letterman announcer
  • A fictional character played by Lindsay Sloane in Bring It On (film)
  • A fictional character played by Hawthorne James in the 1991 movie The Five Heartbeats
  • Title of a mobile by American artist Alexander Calder
  • Horses

  • Man o' War
  • Phar Lap
  • Secretariat (horse)
  • Bonecrusher (horse)
  • Sports

  • Big Red (Lamar University), Lamar Cardinals
  • Big Red (Cardinals mascot), Arizona Cardinals
  • Big Red (University of Arkansas), University of Arkansas
  • Big Red (Western Kentucky University),Western Kentucky University
  • Tiburonia

    Tiburonia granrojo is a jellyfish of the family Ulmaridae discovered in 2003, and the only member of its genus yet identified. It was discovered by a crew from MBARI led by George Matsumoto. Its genus name is Tiburonia because the ROV the crew were using was called Tiburon, meaning "shark" in Spanish. Its species name was originally to be called "Big Ugly", but Kirsten Matsumoto raised objections to this name, and renamed it granrojo, meaning "big red" in Spanish.

    Tiburonia granrojo is one of the largest sea jellies and unusual in a number of ways. They live at ocean depths of 600 to 1,500 metres (2,000 to 4,900 ft) and have been found across the Pacific Ocean in the Gulf of California, Monterey Bay, Hawaii and Japan. They can grow up to 76 centimetres (30 in) in diameter, according to the California Academy of Sciences, and have thick fleshy oral arms in place of the long tentacles found in most jellies. The entire jellyfish is deep red in color.

    To date, only 23 members of the species have been found and only one—a small specimen under 15 centimetres (6 in)—has been retrieved for further study. Several high resolution videos of granrojo have been taken by remote controlled submarines. The discovery was announced by Dr. Matsumoto and colleagues in Marine Biology in 2003.

    Big Red (sculpture)

    Big Red, also known as Red, is an outdoor 1974 steel sculpture by Bruce Beasley, installed at West 7th Avenue between Washington and Jefferson streets in Eugene, Oregon, United States.

    Description and history

    Bruce Beasley's Big Red is an outdoor sculpture installed at Washington Jefferson Park, located at West 7th Avenue between Washington and Jefferson, in Eugene. The red painted, abstract steel sculpture measures 12 feet (3.7 m), 9 inches (23 cm) x 11 feet (3.4 m), 6 inches (15 cm) x 36 feet (11 m), 5 inches (13 cm).

    The piece is among those created in June 1974, when the city held the Oregon International Sculpture Symposium, which attracted artists from around the country. According to the Smithsonian Institution, the purpose of the event was to provide attendees "an opportunity to observe the creation of a major art work, how it was constructed and what the artist meant to convey with it". Studio space was provided at the University of Oregon and at Lane Community College; Big Red was created at the latter location and was relocated to its present site by a large truck and crane. The work was funded by a National Endowment for the Arts, Art in Public Places grant that was given to the city in 1974. Other funding sources included the City of Eugene, Lane Community College, Lane County, Oregon Arts Commission, the Portland Art Museum, and the University of Oregon.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Big Red

    by: Frank Black

    Have you heard about big red?
    They even bought a beebread rig
    To help the flowers in the mean space
    They're trying to make that place green
    Hope the bees will take away the storm
    Hope the trees will take away the storm
    Don't know how this whole thing started
    There was a crowd and then we parted
    Don't know if I'll ever go back
    It's a long way across all of this black
    Here I am in my bucket today
    In the middle
    Here I am in my bucket today
    In the middle
    They got a mule they call Sal
    Bulldozing up canal walls
    They're gonna tap that icecap too
    When they do they're gonna make that green map blue
    The weather is finally getting warm
    And the weather is really getting warm
    Don't know how this whole thing started
    There was a cloud and then it parted
    Don't know if I'll ever go back
    That's how I felt when I left that tarmac
    Here I am in my bucket today
    In the middle
    Here I am in my bucket today




    Latest News for: diet big red

    Why Trump is paving over Jackie Kennedy’s White House garden

    The Times/The Sunday Times 20 Mar 2025
    In her sights was the rose garden, where a handful of crab apple trees had grown too big for their boots and were undemocratically casting shade on more sensitive plants ... Trump jabbed the big red button.
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