Is Red Bull Contains Bull Sperm?

23:36

Is Red-Bull Contain Bull Sperm?


Social media havoc once again knocked my mind and forced me to research on the Red bull alleged report “it contains bull sperm”On social media like Facebook, Twitter. Peoples are asking what the ingredients in Red Bull. Red bull has bull sperm? Where is taurine extracted from? Is taurine made/extracted from bull’s testicles? Red bull contains alcohol? Red Bull energy drink is safe to drink? Many more questions are raised during these days.

Replying to the question asked by an Individual Red bull official said

Is taurine made from bull's testicles?
Many people bet it comes from some delicate parts of the strongest and most potent bulls in the world, but the fact is that the   Taurine in Red Bull is produced synthetically to the highest quality slandered”(this is the reply from the officials website of Red Bull energy drinks It can be seen on the website)
 In India there is a government food regularity body called fssi, they have went through the contents/ingredients of the Red bull energy drinks, They examined the Red Bull energy drink sample rigorously but it seems to be artificial.
 One who made rumor they said taurine extracted from the bull testicles but it is not true, which is an ingrident in the Redbull, produced synthetically 

Now some people ask why Red Bull is banned in France, classified as a medicine in Norway and, until recently was only available in pharmacies in Japan. Yet, Red Bull?
Red Bull is the hip drink of the club scene
Its high energy-in-a-blue-and-silver-aluminium-can has become the epitome of cool for the dot.com revellers that pack the bars and clubs from L.A. to Singapore.
It has been described as "the Porsche of soft drinks" but one that combines well with alcohol, most popularly, vodka. Its logo can be seen flashing by on Sauber Formula One cars and Yamaha 500cc racing motorcycles. A high octane drink for those in life's fast lane. It was even rumoured to contain testosterone distilled from bull's semen.
In fact, Red Bull's energy is derived from a mixture of caffeine, vitamins, carbohydrates and taurine, an amino acid that jump-starts the body's metabolism.
It was the brainchild of Austrian businessman, Dieterich Mateschitz, and has made him a multi-millionaire and the richest man in Austria.
He adapted it from a cheap tonic called Krating Daeng (Thai for Red Bull) that he discovered in the early 1980s in a brown bottle in Bangkok, a favourite tipple among blue-collar workers in the Thai capital, trying to stay awake through the long hours of labour.
Red Bull has made its Austrian founder, Dieterich Mateschitz, a millionaire
Believing that the drink could become popular in Europe, he approached the Yoovidhya family, which owns TC Pharmaceuticals, the company that manufactures the drink.
They agreed to sell him the foreign licensing rights in return for a 51% stake in his Austrian Red Bull company. The Thais remain sleeping partners.
Mateschitz returned home, tinkered with the taste and texture of the tonic, and emerged, in 1984, with a carbonated, watered-down version of the original Thai recipe that satisfied the regulating authorities.
But it was the marketing which proved the masterstroke. As a former Procter and Gamble salesman who peddled toothpaste and shampoo, Mateschitz knew the importance of branding.
He realised it would be impossible to convince the factory workers of Vienna to give up their morning coffee, so he decided to target the young urban professionals who also work long hours but who have more cash to flash.
A billion cans were sold last year
By offering instant energy, a designer image and an association with glamorous sports and lifestyle, the marketing men had achieved a mix as potent as any Red Bull cocktail. It hit the spot. In the words of Mateschitz himself, Red Bull spread "like an avalanche or a bush fire".


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