Why is corona never on tap




















The numbers speak for themselves, so here goes: When Corona Extra was introduced to the U. Now, it's the country's best-selling imported beer and the fifth most popular beer overall.

And that's just the regular stuff. The light variety is the No. The internet has obviously come up with its fair share of theories. Some say the wedge was initially used to keep flies from crawling in the mouth of the bottle while others say one clever bartender made a bet that he could start a trend of adding limes to a Corona, and it stuck. Another idea: The lime combats the "skunky" taste the beer gets from being exposed to light. Others say the likeliest answer is that it's all just a marketing ploy.

You'll only get your hands on a Coronita, which — newsflash! Legend has it, a Spanish winemaker already owned the trademark for "Coronas" in the country, so the beer brand had to get creative. Corona also sells Coronitas in the states, which are smaller, 7-ounce bottles, often used in Bulldog Margaritas.

Two Nevada grocers pulled their entire stock of Corona from their shelves when they heard that Mexican brewery workers were peeing in the beers sold to the U. As it turns out, a local Heineken distributor started the rumor , but it took years for Corona to gain back its popularity.

At his house party in the first movie, Vin Diesel's character Dom makes it very clear that he's a Corona guy by telling Brian, Paul Walker's character, that he could have any brew he wanted, as long as it was a Corona. You'll find him sipping the Mexican beer throughout movies two through seven, too — and we're sure it'll get some screen time in the eighth installment, which hits theaters this April.

Follow Delish on Instagram. Kitchen Tips and Tools. Delish Shop. United States. Type keyword s to search. Read: A vaccine reality check. This has implications for a vaccine, too. Rather than a onetime deal, a COVID vaccine, when it arrives, could require booster shots to maintain immunity over time. You might get it every year or every other year, much like a flu shot.

Even if the virus were somehow eliminated from the human population, it could keep circulating in animals—and spread to humans again. SARS-CoV-2 likely originated as a bat virus, with a still-unidentified animal perhaps serving as an intermediate host , which could continue to be a reservoir for the virus.

SARS also originated in bats, with catlike palm civets serving as an intermediate host—which led officials to order the culling of thousands of civets. So far, tigers at the Bronx Zoo and minks on Dutch farms seem to have caught COVID from humans and, in the case of the minks, passed the virus back to humans who work on the farm.

The Ebola virus, for example, probably comes from bats. Even though human-to-human transmission of Ebola eventually ended in the West African epidemic in , the virus was still somewhere on Earth and could still infect humans if it found the right host.

And indeed, in , Ebola broke out again in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. These cold coronaviruses are so common that we have likely all had them at some point, maybe even multiple times. They can cause serious outbreaks, especially in the elderly , but are usually mild enough to fly under the radar.

Read: America should prepare for a double pandemic. In fact, virologists have wondered whether the common-cold coronaviruses also got their start as a pandemic, before settling in as routine viruses. In , biologists in Belgium studied mutations in the cold coronavirus OC43, which likely evolved from a closely related coronavirus that infects cows. Because genetic mutations accumulate at a somewhat regular rate, the researchers were able to date the spillover from cows into humans to the late s.

Around this time, a highly infectious respiratory disease was killing cows, and even more curiously, in , a human pandemic began killing people around the world. The older people were, the more susceptible they were. But the cause was never definitively proved from tissue samples.

Could it have been a coronavirus that jumped from cows to humans? This is all speculative, and the possible links between the other three cold coronaviruses and past pandemics are even less clear, says Burtram Fielding , a coronavirus researcher at the University of the Western Cape.

Read: Should you get an antibody test? With a virus, there is a general trade-off between how contagious it is and how deadly it is. And what a virus ultimately wants to do is keep spreading, which is much easier to do from a live, walking host than a dead one. The other four coronaviruses may also be less deadly because we have all encountered them as children, and even if our immunity does not prevent us from getting them again, it may still prevent severe disease.

All of this, along with immunity from vaccines, means that COVID is likely to become far less disruptive down the line.



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