Kimbo
07-11-2015, 02:39 PM
July 11 is nearing, and for many around our nation and the world, this signals a truly monumental event. I’m talking about Free Slurpee Day.
To some, the Slurpee is a mere symbol of syrupy, technicolored overindulgence. Lowly sources of sugar highs, brain freezes, and red and blue-stained tongues. A 28°F, nutritionally devoid cup of toxic-looking slush. But for me, and many, Slurpees represent much more: home, childhood, friends, and family.
Growing up in suburban Colorado, there wasn’t much else to do on hot summer days than walk to the single 7-Eleven in town, conveniently just down the street from my house, and layer a clear, plastic cup with a variety of bright, slushy flavors.
I was all about the eclectic mix, and all combinations were fair game. Though sometimes banana would end up mingling with Coke — definitely not recommended — there was something undeniably beautiful about the way the colors mingled together to make a sugary, impressionistic watercolor. Call me the Van Gogh of the gas station.
Slurpees were also a tradition between me and my dad, who would often go grab a cup of the sweet frozen stuff in lieu of dessert. When the 7-Eleven shut down years ago, becoming a soup restaurant instead, we mourned the loss for months.
So, naturally, if there’s one marketing gimmick a year I get really excited about, it’s Free Slurpee Day.
The perennial convenience store chain began Free Slurpee Day in 2002, offering the first 1,000 people through the door of each location a (of course) 7.11-oz. Slurpee. About 7 million free Slurpees were given out that year.
Since then, Slurpee Day has evolved, upgrading the free cup size to their small (12 oz.), and, in 2014, expanding the day into a whole freebie week, offering up steals on cookies, Twinkies, Big Gulps, and other convenience store classics.
How do you get one? Just walk into any 7-Eleven store on July 11 (Get it? 7/11?) and ask for one, between the hours of 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
If you’re thinking, “So what’s in it for them?”, Free Slurpee Day is in fact a huge sales day for 7-Elevens nationally. And that doesn’t just go for savory side snacks. Oddly enough, the sales of Slurpees themselves on Free Slurpee Day in 2011 were up 38 percent from average — proving that people are willing to pay for more of what they love.
And man, do people love their Slurpees. About 7,290,000 gallons of Slurpee — or 12 Olympic-size swimming pools worth — are consumed worldwide every year. So how exactly did this multinational frozen phenomenon come to be?
To some, the Slurpee is a mere symbol of syrupy, technicolored overindulgence. Lowly sources of sugar highs, brain freezes, and red and blue-stained tongues. A 28°F, nutritionally devoid cup of toxic-looking slush. But for me, and many, Slurpees represent much more: home, childhood, friends, and family.
Growing up in suburban Colorado, there wasn’t much else to do on hot summer days than walk to the single 7-Eleven in town, conveniently just down the street from my house, and layer a clear, plastic cup with a variety of bright, slushy flavors.
I was all about the eclectic mix, and all combinations were fair game. Though sometimes banana would end up mingling with Coke — definitely not recommended — there was something undeniably beautiful about the way the colors mingled together to make a sugary, impressionistic watercolor. Call me the Van Gogh of the gas station.
Slurpees were also a tradition between me and my dad, who would often go grab a cup of the sweet frozen stuff in lieu of dessert. When the 7-Eleven shut down years ago, becoming a soup restaurant instead, we mourned the loss for months.
So, naturally, if there’s one marketing gimmick a year I get really excited about, it’s Free Slurpee Day.
The perennial convenience store chain began Free Slurpee Day in 2002, offering the first 1,000 people through the door of each location a (of course) 7.11-oz. Slurpee. About 7 million free Slurpees were given out that year.
Since then, Slurpee Day has evolved, upgrading the free cup size to their small (12 oz.), and, in 2014, expanding the day into a whole freebie week, offering up steals on cookies, Twinkies, Big Gulps, and other convenience store classics.
How do you get one? Just walk into any 7-Eleven store on July 11 (Get it? 7/11?) and ask for one, between the hours of 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
If you’re thinking, “So what’s in it for them?”, Free Slurpee Day is in fact a huge sales day for 7-Elevens nationally. And that doesn’t just go for savory side snacks. Oddly enough, the sales of Slurpees themselves on Free Slurpee Day in 2011 were up 38 percent from average — proving that people are willing to pay for more of what they love.
And man, do people love their Slurpees. About 7,290,000 gallons of Slurpee — or 12 Olympic-size swimming pools worth — are consumed worldwide every year. So how exactly did this multinational frozen phenomenon come to be?