Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Smaller Large, Same Charge: Cineplex Shrinks Its Soft Drink Sizes

The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2015 11:21 AM
    TORONTO — Cineplex is shrinking soft drink sizes at its theatres and while the hulking large cup will disappear, moviegoers will be paying the large price for a drink that's 12 ounces smaller.
     
    The movie chain says it has decided to shrink its largest drink size as part of a countrywide reduction in cup sizes.
     
    Company spokesman Michael Langdon says the move comes after Cineplex (TSX:CGX) weighed the possibility of raising drink prices to accommodate for the higher costs of running its business.
     
    Instead, the company decided to keep prices the same, but make the soft drinks smaller.
     
    Under the changes, a large drink will assume the size of the former regular drink — 32 ounces down from 44 ounces.
     
    A regular soft drink will be reduced to 24 ounces versus 32 ounces previously. A small drink is unchanged at 16 ounces.
     
    Cineplex has been testing the revised drink sizes in British Columbia and Saskatchewan since 2013, Langdon said.
     
    "Because we found a general trend toward smaller cup sizes, we made the choice to reduce the size rather than increase the price," he said.
     
    Langdon added that Ontario's Making Healthier Choices Act, set to be introduced in 2017, also factored into the decision.
     
    The Act will require fast-food chains to display calorie counts on their menus, unmasking just how much its biggest drinks counted towards your daily intake.
     
    "We're making a change to help prepare for that," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Decision On Mount Polley Mine Reopening Is Imminent, Says B.C. Mines Minister

    WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — British Columbia's energy minister says a gold and copper mine that shut down last year after its tailings pond collapsed could be back up and running in a matter of days.

    Decision On Mount Polley Mine Reopening Is Imminent, Says B.C. Mines Minister

    Patrick Brazeau's Assault Trial Adjourned Until Mid-september

    Patrick Brazeau's Assault Trial Adjourned Until Mid-september
    GATINEAU, Que. — The assault trial of suspended senator Patrick Brazeau has been adjourned until mid-September.

    Patrick Brazeau's Assault Trial Adjourned Until Mid-september

    Fingerprints Remain Stable Over Time, Indian-Origin Professor Finds

    Fingerprints Remain Stable Over Time, Indian-Origin Professor Finds
    In what could put an end to controversies surrounding admissibility of fingerprint evidence in courts of law, a study by an Indian-origin researcher has found that fingerprint pattern remains stable over time.

    Fingerprints Remain Stable Over Time, Indian-Origin Professor Finds

    Alberta's Industrial Heartland Welcomes NDP Approach To Oil And Gas Processing

    Alberta's Industrial Heartland Welcomes NDP Approach To Oil And Gas Processing
    CALGARY — Alberta's NDP government has made it clear it would prefer to see less of Alberta's resources ripped and shipped, and more processed into higher value products at home.

    Alberta's Industrial Heartland Welcomes NDP Approach To Oil And Gas Processing

    Canadian Military Medical Staff End Six-month Ebola Mission In Sierra Leone

    Canadian Military Medical Staff End Six-month Ebola Mission In Sierra Leone
    TORONTO — The federal government says a six-month mission that sent Canadian Armed Forces medical personnel to West Africa to help with the Ebola crisis is over.

    Canadian Military Medical Staff End Six-month Ebola Mission In Sierra Leone

    Ontario Hikers Didn't Know What The 'Fuss' Was About After Week Missing In B.C.

    Ontario Hikers Didn't Know What The 'Fuss' Was About After Week Missing In B.C.
    TORONTO — The father of an Ontario man who emerged from a southern British Columbia forest after being lost for seven days says his son isn't sure why he's getting so much attention.

    Ontario Hikers Didn't Know What The 'Fuss' Was About After Week Missing In B.C.