Discontinued – Listorati https://listorati.com Fascinating facts and lists, bizarre, wonderful, and fun Sun, 23 Nov 2025 03:50:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://listorati.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/listorati-512x512-1.png Discontinued – Listorati https://listorati.com 32 32 215494684 Top 10 Forgotten Soda Classics That Were Discontinued https://listorati.com/top-10-discontinued-forgotten-soda-classics/ https://listorati.com/top-10-discontinued-forgotten-soda-classics/#respond Thu, 30 Oct 2025 08:38:30 +0000 https://listorati.com/top-10-discontinued-sodas-listverse/

Here’s the top 10 discontinued soda lineup that once fizzed its way into our childhood memories. I lived for pop long before I could indulge in beer. I was a soda aficionado, trying every fizzy flavor I could get my hands on. Many of my beloved pops have vanished like the dodo, disappearing into oblivion. Occasionally a few resurface, but the ten listed here have mostly faded, surviving only on eBay and nostalgic forums. Enjoy the rundown while you can.

Top 10 Discontinued Soda Legends

10. Coke II

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So, back when Coca Cola started to slump a little in sales to its fiercest competitor, Pepsi Cola, someone made the executive decision to dink around with Coke’s secret formula thereby making it taste more like, well, PEPSI. It wasn’t bad, per se, but it sure as hell wasn’t Coke. I remember consuming mass quantities of this stuff by can and, the newest form of container: 2 liters. This was an early eighties disaster and it always managed to make an appearance at our sleep‑overs and it did a fine job of keeping us wired for hours. I think it had more sugar as well. I really do miss this stuff, but sadly, when Coke went back to its ‘Classic’ formula permanently, Coke II disappeared into soda oblivion.

9. Hubba Bubba

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The strongest memory I have of Hubba Bubba Soda is from high school. We, in the ass‑backward, dirt‑water, shit‑hole that is Paw Paw Michigan, used to hold school‑wide contests involving all manner of self‑deprecation. One of the ‘games’ was the infamous ‘Pop Chug’. The teaching staff that came up with this gem were sick and evil sadists of the highest degree. Everyone would stand over a beach towel with a ‘spotter’ on one side and commence to gulping as much warm Hubba Bubba Soda as humanly possible. Loads of fun. I was never a big fan of this gum‑flavored pop, but it does hold certain high esteem in my clogged memory bank.

8. Pepsi’s Wild Bunch

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Just in case the images aren’t clear, we’ve got: Raging Razzberry, Tropical Chill, and Strawberry Burst. I love how Raspberry is cleverly misspelled into ‘cool’ territory with the two ‘Z’s. Very nice. Anyway, The deepest remembrances I have of this particular trio was the chilling innards of my grandparent’s ancient refrigerator in their garage. It was one of those ‘chill chest’ types with the giant metal walk‑in‑restaurant‑freezer style of handle and enough wattage to cause neighborhood brown outs. Yeah, that thing was always chock full of every conceivable beverage from beer to Bosco. Every time we’d visit we’d try to find the most odd drink we could dig out of there and I quite fondly remember tossing back a few of these guys. Dead and gone now. No, not my Grandparents, but the fridge and the soda, for sure.

7. Surge

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Though not out of circulation as long as some of these, Surge has still become a classic to many a pining American. Coca Cola distributed this green soda for quite some time. I can remember it coming in to its own right around 1995 or so, and really building up steam for a few years before succumbing to the popularity of other, weaker, beverages. It had a citrus‑like flavor to it but there was something almost lime‑Jell‑O‑ish in the back ground that would always leave a little tang phlegm at the back of my throat. But it was pretty tasty and I could knock back a 2 liter in a sitting no problem. Almost, but not quite, melted candy.

6. Leed

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Leed was a carbonated lemonade drink sold in some parts of the world during the middle to late 20th century. It was produced and distributed by Coca‑Cola Amatil only in New Zealand and Australia. Leed was one of the staple drinks among New Zealand retailers during the 1980s and was probably the most common lemonade drink distributed by Coca‑Cola Amatil during its life. In 1984, Leed was discontinued and replaced by the more widely known Sprite brand. Accompanying this change was also a new recipe.

5. Josta

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This was a pretty recent extinction as well. I remember drinking a few of these back when Guarana was the new kid on the beverage block being marketed by Coke as the energy source of choice. Josta was so chock‑full of the stuff you could, in fact, taste it. It was a tad medicine‑y, but that flavor was nicely buried beneath the strong fruit and spice overtones that assaulted your taste buds moments before. This pop was far different taste wise than just about anything else out there, and it was pretty decent while it lasted.

4. Orbitz

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Oh yeah, soda with little chewy chunks in it. Outstanding. Somehow, the creators of this beverage managed to thwart the normalcies of science by allowing starch nuggets to suspend themselves ever so beautifully in a super‑sweet solution. It was really good, too. I remember Target selling the hell out of this stuff for quite a while. I enjoyed the drinking part, but somehow, coming to the little lumps floating there in was a lot like drinking a glass of gravy… except a lot sweeter. I do miss it.

3. Kick

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Kick was a lot like the bastard step‑son of Mountain Dew and Mello Yellow. It tasted really similar to both, but almost leaning a bit toward Mello Yellow with its citrus overtones. I actually preferred it over either and would go through a case of this stuff during my late night Dungeons and Dragons marathons. I think it may have made a bit of a come back lately, but not around here. Too bad.

2. Slice

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Slice was the precursor to Sierra Mist by the Pepsi corporation and for my buck, it tasted a whole lot better. My grandmother, in her massive fridge of holding, used to keep a constant supply of the Mandarin Orange flavor of this stuff. I hate mandarin oranges in any form, so I stuck to the lemon‑lime standard and all was good with the world. There was something less overpowering about Slice as compared to 7‑UP; not quite as crisp, not quite as effervescent, but certainly just as tasty.

1. Crystal Pepsi

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I was in college in 1993 and this soda was a huge hit up at Northern Michigan U. in Marquette, Michigan. My room mate and I loved the stuff. We could get it at the local Circle K for like $2 an eight‑pack of 20‑ouncers. I honestly loved this stuff, I would drink the HELL out of a few packs per week. I remember one time I tried to be cool by slashing open the plastic yolk that securely held together the octuplets with my X‑Acto knife. Bad idea. I ended up cutting two of the bottles and sprayed soda all over our dorm room. Not especially funny. Anyway, there was just something about the non‑caramel colored Pepsi that really appealed to me. I miss this the most of all.

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10 Odd Discontinued Sports That Made the Olympics Weird https://listorati.com/10-odd-discontinued-sports-olympics-weird/ https://listorati.com/10-odd-discontinued-sports-olympics-weird/#respond Sat, 04 Oct 2025 06:07:17 +0000 https://listorati.com/10-odd-discontinued-olympic-sports-listverse/

With softball and baseball having their last showing at this year’s Olympics, it’s the perfect moment to dive into the world of 10 odd discontinued Olympic events. Some of these competitions were downright bizarre, leaving us to wonder how they ever earned a spot on the world’s grandest sporting stage.

10 Odd Discontinued Sports Overview

10. Swimming Obstacle Race

Swimming Obstacle Race - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

A wildly inventive, 200‑meter dash that turned swimming into an obstacle course. Racers first sprint to a pole, scramble up and down it, then continue swimming, clamber over two small boats, duck beneath two more, and finally sprint to the finish line. The race made a solitary appearance at the 1900 Paris Games, where Australia’s Frederick Lane claimed victory.

9. Static Dive

Static Dive - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

A delightfully absurd contest that likely attracted equally quirky participants. Held only once, in 1904, competitors plunged into a pool and remained perfectly still for up to 60 seconds—or until their heads bobbed above the surface. After the timer stopped, officials measured how far each diver floated. American William Dickey emerged as the champion, a point of pride for a field that, unsurprisingly, consisted entirely of U.S. athletes. No authentic photographs of the event survive, so a generic picture of women diving has been used.

8. Game of Palm

Game of Palm - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

Known in French as “jeu de paume,” this ancestor of modern tennis replaced rackets with the hand or a small paddle. Though it still enjoys occasional play today, it was first showcased as an exhibition sport in 1900, entered the official Olympic program in 1908, and made a brief exhibition comeback in 1924.

7. Roque

Roque Competition - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

An American twist on the French game of croquet, roque featured at the 1904 St. Louis Games. Since the sport was virtually unknown outside the United States, the field was comprised solely of American competitors. After the St. Louis edition, roque vanished from the Olympic roster, widely believed to have been included merely to pad the host nation’s medal tally.

6. Tug of War

Tug of War - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

Believe it or not, tug of war has a legitimate claim to an Olympic comeback, having roots that stretch back to the ancient Games. It featured in five modern editions—1900, 1904, 1908, 1912, and 1920. The British team amassed the most medals, highlighted by a 1908 gold captured by a squad of London police officers.

5. Standing Jump

Standing Jump - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

It sounds odd to limit the world’s most explosive field events to a stationary start, but early Olympiads required athletes to perform the long, triple, and high jumps from a standing position. This format persisted from 1900 through 1912, offering a stark contrast to today’s running‑start spectacles.

4. Rope Climbing

Rope Climbing - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

Another contender for a future revival, rope climbing was part of the gymnastics program and appeared intermittently from 1896 to 1932. The 1904 Games produced a memorable champion: American George Eyser, who, despite having a wooden prosthetic leg, scaled the rope to claim gold and later added five more gymnastics medals, including two additional golds.

3. Shooting at a Mannequin

Shooting at a Mannequin - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

An aristocratic test of marksmanship—except the target was a mannequin dressed in finery, positioned 20 to 30 metres away. This peculiar event debuted at the 1906 Intercalated Games, resurfaced briefly in 1912, and was then expelled forever (thankfully).

2. Solo Synchronized Swimming

Solo Synchronized Swimming - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

Synchronized swimming already raises eyebrows, but the solo variant pushes the absurdity further. Featured in the 1984, 1988, and 1992 Games, a single swimmer performed choreographed routines alone in the pool, attempting to match the music’s rhythm. Critics agree—it was as bewildering as it sounds.

1. Pigeon Shooting

Pigeon Shooting - 10 odd discontinued Olympic sport

The 1900 Paris Games hosted the only Olympic event where live animals were killed for sport. Over 300 pigeons were shot, many by Belgian marksman Léon de Lunden, who secured gold with 21 kills. The grim spectacle was promptly removed from the program and later replaced by the more humane clay‑pigeon version.

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