Hey guyzzz,,,Are u drinkin "REDBULL"?

@brwasana (582)
Sri Lanka
December 1, 2006 3:56am CST
I DRINK
3 responses
• Australia
1 Dec 06
Red Bull and Jagermiester perfect combination
@rishaayu (339)
• India
1 Dec 06
I do it tastes good but gatorade is also good
@oly2006 (948)
• Romania
1 Dec 06
I think it's a toxic drink read here some articles: Red Bull’s high caffeine content, combined with other ingredients, gives people who drink the beverage quite the kick. But Red Bull has been flagged by some health regulators as a potential danger. It was recently approved for sale in Canada – although its label must carry several warnings for consumers. And Marketplace has discovered those warnings are being ignored. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The label on a can of Red Bull boasts caffeine, vitamins, a carbohydrate (glucuronolactone), an amino acid (taurine), and about five teaspoons of sugar. We tested Red Bull for those ingredients. We hired a laboratory to analyze the contents of the slender silver and blue can – and sure enough, the label’s no bull. A 250 ml can of Red Bull contains, among other ingredients: 80 mg of caffeine (more than three times the caffeine that’s in the same amount of Coke) 1000 mg of taurine, an amino acid It’s a combination the company claims will boost your energy. (For more on that, drink's ingredients, see In the can: Red Bull's ingredients FACT Enter the energy wars… In early 2005, the Coca-Cola company plans to launch a new energy drink of its own, Full Throttle. It aims to challenge energy leader, Red Bull. dissected). FACT Enter the energy wars… In early 2005, the Coca-Cola company plans to launch a new energy drink of its own, Full Throttle. It aims to challenge energy leader, Red Bull. That combination of ingredients in a can of Red Bull that has a lot of people talking. There’s no long-term research on how caffeine, taurine and glucuronolactone interact in the body. That has some countries saying: ‘No studies? No thank you.’ Countries like Norway, Denmark and France are so nervous about the can’s contents, they’ve banned the sale of Red Bull. French nutritionist Isabelle Vanrullen, who works with the country’s food safety agency, says France banned the brew because of how the ingredients in Red Bull interact: “There are various side effects for each one of these three substances, which vary in degrees of severity. And they can also interact with each other.”