News

Tide Pods look they way they do because of a product design trend known as "food imitating products," according to experts. According to a new report, an economic concept has worked a little bit ...
So widespread (and so potentially harmful) was the phenomenon that the brand took the step of posting a video advising consumers not to eat Tide PODs: What should Tide PODs be used for?
Do you know how to use Tide Pods correctly? Here's what the experts say about proper usage, including water temperature and just how many you should be using. While liquid or powder detergent is ...
The maker of Tide Pods is recalling 8.2 million bag packages of the product because they may be defective, causing them to come open and granting access to the pods themselves. Procter and Gamble ...
In 2012, after eight years, P&G finally introduced America to Tide Pods, a delectable blue, orange and white single packet of concentrated detergent. Tide Pods was a breakthrough success.
Learning how to use Tide Pods or any other brand of laundry detergent packet correctly can help. They're mess free, require no measuring and are easy to pop in the wash. Plus, they won't take up ...
SAN FRANCISCO — YouTube is cracking down on a dangerous new online trend: Teens putting poisonous laundry gel pods in their mouths and eating them like candy in "Tide Pod challenge" videos.