nickthecheese
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2001
- Messages
- 2,551
not wrong johnboy, mint isnt bad either...
the thing is, they actually taste realy nice... well the lemon ones do anyways...
I agree, especially for something that's sugarfree.
But they do look so much like pills that they're stupid! And saw the commercial again, when they take one the edges of the screen go smudgy. It seems obvious that they are trying to make them seem like pills. Pathetic!
i think someone who takes drugs would be the only one to actually notice it looks like a pill.
That's crap, anyone who has ever seen a panadol would think 24-7's look like a pill. If you didn't know what it was, you would be stupid to think it wasn't a pill of some kind! They DO look more like a pill (any kind) than any lolly.
I suppose a bigger problem than kids thinking they were e's is little kids being given them as lollies, and then going and finding mummy's panadols and eating a whole box because they're just like the lollies they were given.
[ 16 May 2002: Message edited by: *chaoscat* ]
Trebor 24-7 Air Surge
Size: Nicely concealed
Colour: Menthol fresh
Weight: 8g
Amount of Mints: 14
Manufactured: Manufactured in China for all distribution countries. (See back of pack for details)
Effect: Clears your head and invigorates the senses
Trebor 24-7 says: Clear your head with an invigorating menthol blast. Warning! Due to lasting invigorating effects, do not take Air Surge with any other mint.
I'm very surprised they didn't put, manufactured in amsterdam.
The people in the clubbing scene all look like their off their scones on something. Some guy obviously in a speed psychosis keeps pacing back and forth with a tray of drinks.
[ 20 May 2002: Message edited by: porn* ]
Syringe sweets cause concern
Sweets shaped like heroin syringes are causing concern among parents and MPs.
The "Freekee Drops" sell for 10p and people are worried that they could tempt children to start taking real drugs.
The sweets come in a packet which show a dribbling cartoon character who has rolling, spaced-out eyes.
The tube is full of red liquid which is shaped like a syringe and has to be squeezed to get the contents out.
"Despicable" sweets
Brian Donohoe, a Labour MP in Glasgow, Scotland said the "despicable" item was bought from an ice-cream van by a five- year-old who mimicked using it to inject drugs.
And some children have even told their parents they are "addicts" to the sweet.
Brian Donohoe wants the sweets banned in the UK. He's also asked Tony Blair to pursuade the Spanish Government to stop making them.