How Do You Play 7up
We hope you enjoy playing Heads Up! with your friends and family. New decks are regularly added to the game, so keep a watch out for them! Did you play the game? How did go? Let us know in the comments below.
Conclusion
Of course, you don’t need to use your car’s speakers — you could also use a portable Bluetooth speaker. Larger examples can offer better audio than some car stereos, and have long enough battery lives to make them a viable alternative. Just pair over Bluetooth, place the speaker somewhere secure and hit play. Red 3s and complete book bonuses do not count. Play begins with the player to the left of the ‘hand’ dealer and passes clockwise. Play continues until someone ‘goes out.’ Before your turn, red threes must be placed face-up on the table.
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Origins: The
power of the enigma lies in its ability to enthrall, to capture the imagination. As a society, we delight in the little mysteries that don’t immediately yield up their
answers, which is why products whose names we can’t fathom hold their appeal.
One such product is 7Up. Though the soft drink itself is not the least bit mysterious, its name is. To this day, no one can swear to know the reason for that particular choice of moniker.
Here is what is known: 7Up was invented in October 1929 by Charles Leiper Grigg, a man who ten years earlier had formulated a carbonated orange-flavored drink (“Whistle”)
while working for an employer with whom he later had a falling out. Said contretemps led to his packing up and leaving, and in 1920 the employerless Grigg formed his own soft drink company, the Howdy Corporation to produce “Howdy,” yet another orange-flavored soda.
Howdy was fairly successful as soft drinks go, but it was unable to seriously challenge Orange Crush, the leader in the field, and over time Howdy lost market share
to its predominant rival. Rather than see his company die by inches,
Grigg discarded colas, root beers, and ginger ales in favor of a lemon-lime concoction. Although most every bottler was producing a lemon-lime drink in those
days, none of those sodas had achieved national prominence, a state of affairs that left a golden opportunity forlornly sitting there waiting to be noticed.
And Grigg noticed. In response, he invented the soda we now call
However, the uncola wasn’t known as
Fortunately, the unwieldy name was soon morphed to
As to why “7Up,” C.L. Grigg never explained how he came up with the cryptic name. Several theories exist about its origin:
- 7Up was the product of seven ingredients. (Which, in a way, was at least true with regard to the classes of ingredients in that original formulation: sugar, carbonated water, essences of lemon and lime oils, citric acid, sodium citrate, and lithium citrate.)
- “Seven Up” has seven letters. (This explanation is rather far-fetched, as it posits that the drink was named after itself.)
- The beverage was originally sold in 7-ounce bottles.
(Which it was. Then again, so was Orange Crush.)
- Its inventor boasted the drink would cure mankind’s “seven hangovers.” (Grigg did make this statement, but it was rather tongue-in-cheek.)
- Grigg saw cattle branded with a mark that resembled “7UP.” Reasoning that if the brand was distinctive enough to help a rancher identify his cattle, the soft drink inventor concluded it would similarly work to help consumers remember his new lemon-lime beverage. (A former
7Up president and chairman did recount this anecdote in a 1942 speech, saying Grigg had read about the history of cow brands in a Sunday newspaper article, including one brand that consisted of a letter “u” on top and to the right of a number “7.”) - Grigg won a great deal of money in a craps game thanks to all the sevens that were rolled that night. (Though oft repeated, little supports this tale. What money Grigg needed when he started the Howdy Corporation he obtained by bringing in moneyed partners.)
- Grigg won a fortune at poker, thanks to the seventh “up” card dealt him. (The same reasons for disbelieving the craps explanation apply to the poker postulation.)
It’s quite possible the drink’s name was meant to be a enigma, given that its creator never publicly explained it. It could even have been a nonsense term meant to leave people wondering after its backstory as a way of generating interest in the beverage. (We humans do love mysteries, after all.)
Questions of how it came by its name aside, 7Up has attracted another origin rumor. Many trivia lists circulated on the Internet make the following claim:
The ‘spot’ on 7UP comes from its inventor who had red eyes. He was albino.
Charles Leiper Grigg wasn’t an
albino. In photographs (albeit black and white ones),
he appears normally pigmented, and we’ve yet to encounter a biography of him that makes any mention of his displaying traits of albinism. (By the way, though it is
possible for an albino to have reddish or violet eyes, most people with that condition have blue eyes, and some have hazel or brown eyes.)
How Do You Play 7-up Card Game
As to where the red dot in the beverage’s logo came from, so far the earliest examples we’ve found of that design have come from the 1970s. Prior to that, the company’s trademark for the longest time was a black-outlined white “7Up” on a red background that bore some white
Barbara “7Upswept” Mikkelson
How Do You Play 7-up