POG

POG may mean:

  • POG FC (football team)
  • POG (drink), a passion-orange-guava beverage
  • Pogs, a 1990s fad game, as well as the game pieces used in that game
  • One of the two title characters in Pib and Pog, an animated short film made by Aardman Animations
  • POG is a three letter acronym (or three-letter abbreviation) that may stand for:

  • Pediatric Oncology Group, former U.S. and Canadian clinical trial cooperative group
  • Personnel Other than Grunts, pejorative military slang, also known as "pogue"
  • PHP Object Generator, type of object-relational mapping software
  • Pillars of Garendall, role-playing video game
  • Pittsburgh Organizing Group, former Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based anarchist organization
  • Planogram, visual representations of a store's products or services
  • Point of Grace, all-female Contemporary Christian music group from Arkansas
  • Polyphonic Octave Generator, a modulation pedal for a musical instrument
  • Price of Gold, benchmark for the price of the commodity
  • Pog (drink)

    POG is a tropical juice drink created in 1971 by a food product consultant named Mary Soon who worked for Haleakala Dairy on Maui, Hawaii. It consists of a blend of juices from passionfruit, orange, and guava (hence POG).

    POG is produced by Meadow Gold Dairy, a subsidiary of Dean Foods.

    Milkcaps

    The caps to milk bottles inspired the fad game "Pogs" (or "Milkcaps"), which became popular during the early-to-mid-1990s. The game of pogs possibly originated in Maui, Hawaii in the 1920s or 1930s. Contrary to popular belief, POG was never sold in glass bottles with cardboard caps. By the time POG was sold, glass bottles with caps were obsolete. The connection between POG juice and milkcaps can be credited to Charlie Nalepa. He was hired by Haleakala Dairy as a marketing and promotions manager. Because there was still a demand for the cardboard discs, he ordered milkcaps imprinted with the trademark POG to give away as a promotional item. The 1990s craze using these milk caps was initiated by Blossom Galbiso, a teacher in Hawaii in 1991. She started using the milkcaps in her classroom, and told her students about an old game she used to play, by flipping milkcaps to be the first one to get the cream off the bottom. Her students began flipping the milkcaps, and the resurgence of the game of pogs began.

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