The fruit punch, lemon-lime and orange varieties of the Gatorade Thirst Quencher and Gatorade Zero drinks will no longer contain artificial colors.
A fierce debate over the color of lemon-lime Gatorade has people seeing red. Well, actually it has some people seeing yellow and others seeing green. The whole brouhaha began when players on the ...
The University of Tennessee's football team has started a fierce debate online over the color of lemon-lime Gatorade. While some swear it’s yellow, others say it can’t be anything other than ...
Today: People are torn over the true color of lemon-lime Gatorade: Green or yellow?
People are torn over the true color of lemon-lime Gatorade: Green or yellow?
USA TODAY: Here's how maker of Gatorade plans to change its drink colors
Blue's Best Life on MSN: Gatorade eliminates artificial colors from bestselling flavors in major brand refresh
New York Post: Gatorade color optical illusion stumps: ‘It’s yellow — you’re psychotic’
Food Dive: Gatorade to remove artificial colors from top flavors in brand refresh
PepsiCo will remove artificial colors from three of its top Gatorade flavors this fall, as part of a larger refresh that positions the brand beyond sports performance, the company said Thursday. The ...
Diagnosis If you have trouble seeing certain colors, an eye care professional can test for a color deficiency. Testing likely involves a thorough eye exam and looking at specially designed pictures. These pictures are made of colored dots that have numbers or shapes in a different color hidden in them.
Overview Regular urine color ranges from clear to pale yellow. But certain things can change the color. Foods such as beets, blackberries and fava beans can turn urine pink or red, for example. And some medicines can give urine vivid tones, such as orange or greenish-blue. An unusual urine color also can be a sign of a health problem. For instance, some urinary tract infections can turn urine ...