Not actually a drink, this is a line from the film Deer Hunter. (See).
Youpay the same price as a drink for this, but you only get a Chupa Chups, (lollypop) so don't bother ordering one unless you are really drunk.

 

 Chupa Chups (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈtʃupaˈtʃups], English: /ˈtʃʌpətʃʌps/) is a lollipop company founded by the Catalan Enric Bernat in 1958, and currently owned by the Dutch-Italian multinational corporation Perfetti Van Melle. The name of the brand comes from the Spanish verb chupar, meaning "to suck."

 Marketing

The Chupa Chups logo was designed in 1969 by artist Salvador Dalí.[2] Its first marketing campaign was the logo with the slogan "És rodó i dura molt, Chupa Chups", which translates from Catalan as "It's round and long-lasting". Later, celebrities like Madonna were hired to advertise. In the 1980s, owing to falling birth rates,[citation needed] an anti-smoking slogan "Smoke Chupa Chups" was tried to attract further adult consumers. The company's current anti-smoking slogan is "Stop smoking, start sucking", with their packages parodying cigarette pack designs.

A 1970s campaign for Chupa Chups in Australia used the slogan "what a sweet half hour".

Chupa Chups ran an extremely successful promotion featuring the Spice Girls with their Fantasy Ball Lollipops and Crazy Dips in 1997 and 1998.

Chupa Chups had a promotion featuring the TV show Buffy the Vampire Slayer which included stickers and black sticks (replacing the white ones.)

The game Zool and its sequel Zool 2, originally produced for the Amiga, featured pervasive product placement by Chupa Chups.

They once sponsored Spanish MotoGP champion Jorge Lorenzo.

Chupa Chups were the official shirt sponsors of the English football team Sheffield Wednesday in 2002/2003.

 Shirley Temple Black (born April 23, 1928), born Shirley Jane Temple, is an American film and television actress, singer, dancer, autobiographer, and former U.S. Ambassador to Ghana and Czechoslovakia. She began her film career in 1932 at the age of four (thought by the public to be three)[citation needed], and in 1934, skyrocketed to superstardom in Bright Eyes, a feature film designed specifically for her talents

 Shirley Temples are often served to children dining with adults in lieu of real cocktails, as is the similar Roy Rogers.

 A Shirley Temple is a non-alcoholic mixed drink made with two parts Ginger ale, one part orange juice, and a splash of grenadine, garnished with a maraschino cherry. More recent recipes omit the orange juice and instead combine equal parts lemon-lime soda and ginger ale.[1]

 

 

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