Glass bottles walk in…
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I use a handle bottle of vodka as my water bottle. I haven't gotten in trouble yet.
As much as I like Stanley's thermos' - I own 3 of them. One is 50+ years old and still has the silvered glass flask inside that is sealed with a real cork, the other 2 have the stainless flask. The glass flask one is very fragile if dropped. The "newer" ones have been beaten like rented mules and still work like new. One fell off the tailgate of my pickup on bounced down a gravel road and I ran the other one over with a disc while doing spring field work. The hot stays hot and the cold stays cold all day.
The old glass model I inherited. The other 2 I bought. The newest one is a bit over 25 years old and cost me $40 new. But I don't get the $100 cups. I have had an enameled stainless 12oz $10 knockoff for 2 years now and it works very well. It keeps my tea hot while I'm sitting on the ice of a frozen lake and fishing for at nearly an hour at a time.
Don't Stanley Cups become lead poisoned if damaged? In opposition to almost every single other thermos...
I rock a stainless nalgene. Best of both worlds.
There's another theory running around that Stanley cups are also growing in popularity due to a demographic focus of Mormons.
It didn’t take long before netizens began pointing to a connection between the popularity of the tumblers and Mormonism in the United States. For those of you who don’t know, Mormons are taught to not drink hot beverages, as they believe that “hot drinks are not for the body or belly,” thus avoiding tea or coffee and instead turning to alternative fizzy drinks for caffeine.
To keep them at an approved temperature, the Stanley Quencher’s ability to keep a drink cold for hours makes it a perfect option, thus making it extremely marketable to this particular demographic.
Source [blog]: https://screenshot-media.com/the-future/trends/mormons-stanley-cup-craze/
I believe the "hot beverages" claim is a bit misleading. I'm not a Mormon, but my understanding is they "hot beverages" only applies to coffee and tea. It was interpreted as a medicinal phrase (like how a "cold compress" might refer to a particular medicinal application of cold rags and not any cold rags?). The Mormon Church allows members to drink some cold caffeinated beverages since they are not "hot beverages". However, I think they weirdly still ban iced coffee despite it being cold...
Anyways, they represent a sizeable 2% of the US population. 6.5 million people who generally abide by these cold/hot beverages principles. So a running theory is they command a decent portion of the thermos market share.
I'm not an expert. I'm just sharing what I've heard.
It’s pretty funny that kids are saying “sus” again though. Have those Coca-Cola “spinner” yo-yos come back round again yet?