Jordan's Page of Useless Babble



Can soda really make you healthier?

March 17th 2010 - Lindsay, Ontario

It was a heady time here at Babble Labs. I was rapidly recovering from exposure to nearly lethal cheesecake substitutes and was putting the finishing touches on my praise to the greatest movie of all time ever - no exceptions. But then, the bad news came: Elan Games was going to be shutting its doors for good in three days.

Jordan upon hearing the bad news.
Jordan upon hearing the bad news.

This posed somewhat of a problem for me. First: Elan was a place I visited to get away from the burden of family and friends. Second: I would no longer have something to bitch about in late night blog-posts. Third: I had scheduled to do an experiment there in August.

Pause, freeze-frame and rewind back to late 2009. While hunting around a soda shop for new finds, Chippy Sunshine and I came out with five bottles of Nutrisoda. It looked like any other soda, but it claimed to imbue the drinker with special properties, like some kind of magical potion.

50 gold pieces for a freaking potion of cure light wounds?  Fuck that, I'm going to get some soda!
50 gold pieces for a freaking potion of cure light wounds?
Fuck that, I'm going to get some soda!

So, on the car ride back, we devised a tasting, just like the Great Crush Tasting (the first article evar). If Nutrisoda claims that it can make people energetic or boost their immune systems, well then we're going to test it and see if there's any truth to the claim damnit! The idea was to get a group of people together, have them drink Nutrisoda and after a while, see what the effects were, or rather, what the drinkers believed the effects were.

But we can't just tell people what they're drinking. That might ruin the shaky scientific validity of the exam. So, we devised a group of rules to help us maintain anonymity between the sodas and allow us to get a non-biased result.

  1. None of the testers will know which soda they are drinking at the time and the order of the sodas will be chosen randomly.
  2. Three "ringers", non-Nutrisoda drinks, will be introduced at random into the line-up.
  3. The testers will pick from a list of 10 different qualities that they believe the soda they have drank has provided them:
    1. Confidence 6. Radiance
    2. Calmness 7. Intelligence
    3. Energy 8. Focus
    4. Anti-Cancer 9. Immunity
    5. Happiness 10. No Effect

We also ensured that there was a visual barrier separating the testers from the samples, and that the final results of each test were kept secret until the end of the testing period. Even James Randi can't argue with testing guidelines like that. At Babble Labs, we're scien-tastic!

Babble Labs employs some of the finest scientific minds of our time.
Babble Labs employs some of the finest scientific minds of our time.

In order to keep this interesting, it was decided to let each tester rate the flavor on a scale of 0 to 10, and make comments about the taste.

So, fast-forward back to March. With three days to schedule, setup and execute the experiment, we worked fast: gathering eight testers from the bowels of Elan to assist. As a good-faith measure to ensure that I wasn't trying to poison them, I agreed to partake in the test too, but only as far as rating the flavor of each soda. They would be the only ones testing out the claims on the bottle.

And then, like that, it was March 20th, the final day of Elan Games, and the start of the experiment:


The Lineup:

Dayton Dayton:
He joined in because we told him that this would be completely painless and he would enjoy it very much. For the record, he was very disappointed in us.

Duffman Duffman:
Not a serial rapist. We think.

Dylan Dylan:
Possibly the only gamer in existence who is not in need of a bath. He's very clean.

Evan Evan:
From the Great Crush Tasting. He returned to Earth after ascending to the Upper Planes as a minor deity in order to assist us and make kissy faces at the camera. Look at 'im go!

John John:
Soon-to-be former owner of Elan. He joined in on the promise that I would write something about people masturbating while looking at his picture. Furiously.

Josh Josh:
Most likely to become the president-for-life of a small equatorial nation through fear and systematic beatings.

Sam Sam:
Rocking out with some old-school specs.

Sara Sara:
Between here and the Great Crush Tasting, her photos have become masturbation fodder for a group of devotees who call themselves "the Saracens". Yeah, I don't get the name either.

Scott Scott:
He's only here because he was promised free Cheetoes. He has been lied to.

Jordan Jordan:
Battling indigestion in exchange for a few measly page-hits.

Chippy Sunshine:
She told us that there was no way in hell that she would taste any of the sodas, but she would work the camera and record the moment for posterity and cheap-laughs.


The Tests:


Focus
Mit iodine!
Mit iodine!

Nutrisoda Focus was the first flavor that we tested. It claimed to be "sparkling mango + peach" flavor, which actually sounds quite nice. The truth however, was far off.

Dayton
Score: 7/10
Effect: Focus
Comments: Tastes like fruity energy drink, then like diet pop.

Duffman
Score: 4/10
Effect: Immunity
Comments: Tastes like piss and pineapple.

Dylan
Score: 1/10
Effect: Radiance
Comments: That should not have been made. Feel like headachy.

Evan
Score: 3/10
Effect: Radiance
Comments: This doesn't taste like anything real. I don't know if it is curing my cancer or not, but it tastes terrible. +1 to badness.

The group gets the rundown.
The group gets the rundown.

John
Score: 6/10
Effect: Immunity
Comments: Bitter. This was effectively demonstrated by my immunity to reprisals. (We're not sure what reprisals he means, but we're hoping to find out before he strikes at us. - Ed.)

Josh
Score: 4/10
Effect: No effect
Comments: Strange after-taste: not unlike feet, before the taste of pineapple.

Sam
Score: 4/10
Effect: Calmness
Comments: Bad aftertaste.

And they're off!
And they're off!

Sara
Score: 0/10
Effect: No effect
Comments: Caused involuntary facial grimacing.

Scott
Score: 5/10
Effect: Focus
Comments: Bad aftertaste. Aspartame?

Jordan
Score: 4/10
Comments: Tastes like pineapple with a side of ass.

Results
Total Score: 3.8/10
Correct Responses: 2
Conclusion: Only two people guessed this one...less than 1/4. Strangely enough, more people thought that it tasted like pineapple, which coincidently, is not the flavor.


Energize
Energy?  Without caffeine, sugar or electrolytes?  Madness!
Energy? Without caffeine, sugar or electrolytes? Madness!

The second soda to be tested was Nutrisoda Energize, which was supposedly "sparkling mandarin & mint". I know that mandarins aren't really oranges, but the flavor is pretty close. Orange juice and toothpaste make for a terrible combination, I don't know why Nutrisoda decided to make a soda that features it prominently. Maybe it's like when Jones Soda makes ham-flavored soda or when Jelly Belly makes dirt-flavored jelly beans?

Dayton
Score: 4/10
Effect: Intelligence
Comments: Nasty. Bitter aftertaste. Tastes like a health store smells.

Duffman
Score: 6/10
Effect: No effect
Comments: Lime + berry + taurine.

Dylan
Score: 1/10
Effect: Energy
Comments: It's like a drink of death and Fresca.

Evan
Score: 1/10
Effect: Intelligence
Comments: It tastes like a health food store smells.

"You mean I actually have to drink this crap?"
"You mean I actually have to drink this crap?"

John
Score: 0/10
Effect: Calmness
Comments: The above is a typo. I feel "clamness". This beverage makes me want to hide in the sand and stick out my tongue - squirting at passersby.

Josh
Score: 2/10
Effect: Intelligence
Comments: Tastes like raspberry with large doses of aspartame.

Sam
Score: 0/10
Effect: Radiance
Comments: Tastes like the smells of a store.

Sara
Score: 0/10
Effect: No effect
Comments: Tastes like aborted babies.

Scott
Score: 4/10
Effect: Confidence
Comments: Bad aftertaste. Gives confidence to eat people.

Jordan
Score: 1/10
Comments: Tastes like the health food store smells. Numbed my throat.

Results
Total Score: 1.9/10
Correct Responses: 1
Conclusion: Duffman was able to correctly guess that this soda contained taurine, a chemical that is used in many energy drinks. Nobody has any idea how he was able to do that and still not guess the correct effect. Four people commented that the taste was similar to the smell inside a health food store.


Irn-Bru
If it isn't Scottish, it's very likely crap.
If it isn't Scottish, it's very likely crap.

The first curve-ball of the test: Irn-Bru. For those of you who aren't in the know, it's Scottish, and very good. The bottle represents the last of my stock: bought during a Scottish festival. I was very interested to see how people would react, or if they'd even notice.

Dayton
Score: 1/10
Effect: Anti-Cancer
Comments: Tastes like banana medicine. Abosolutely nasty.

Duffman
Score: 5/10
Effect: No effect
Comments: Banana + orange + ginger. Dizzying.

Dylan
Score: 3/10
Effect: Anti-Cancer
Comments: Tastes like that banana medicine you get as a child.

Evan
Score: 5/10
Effect: Banana medicine.
Comments:

That's it.  Drink.  Drink it all.
That's it. Drink. Drink it all.

John
Score: 6/10
Effect: Happiness
Comments: The flavor is reminiscent of boxed wine after sitting in an oven for three months.

Josh
Score: 7/10
Effect: Anti-Cancer
Comments: Tastes like banana, but not cancerous. Maybe even medicinal.

Sam
Score: 5/10
Effect: Anti-Cancer
Comments: Banana medicine.

Sara
Score: 9/10
Effect: Happiness
Comments: Cool beans.

Scott
Score: 6/10
Effect: Anti-Cancer
Comments: Banana medicine + old freezies + some Russian drink from Russia.

Jordan
Score: 7/10
Comments: Banana flavored and smooth. I like it!

Results
Total Score: 5.4/10
Correct Responses: 1
Conclusion: Most people thought that this was medicinal for some strange reason, and most of the testers actually used the word medicine or medicinal in their comments. Overwhelmingly, they thought it would prevent cancer. Do I smell a marketing strategy?

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