Well, for a bar I'd recommend a cool little 6oz glass bottle with a twist crown cap. You know, all of that is true about people snowboarding but I think that most beverage [and energy drink] consumption isn't right in the middle of doing physical activities. When there's a will there's a way. I drink 1-L glass bottles of Santa Lucia Water (non-carbonated) while driving my car on the freeway. It looks like a champagne bottle and it's not resealable. But it is the best and so that's what I have and I have a crate between the two car seats where I can put the bottles upright. In the summer this is an ice chest area. I never buy drinks at the drive-thru and never drink can or plastic drinks. If there's a beach with signs all over saying no glass, I go to another beach. I won't compromise what I want to succumb to lesser quality.
But anyway as for the thimble cans, I think that if you market a brand like that you are logically going to be compelled to be supportive of what you've got. My whole approach is from my true belief that every soda should be in a glass bottle that you can open with an opener. And doing things my way of course makes me happy and satisfied; conveniently lots of people think that what I sell is cool so I'm making some good money doing it which is certainly a plus. But even if I weren't in the biz I'd be hunting down these things for my own personal consumption; the difficulties in doing so originally caused me to hoard such drinks and thus my business started kind of by accident as I kind of stood out with all of my personal drinks and people always asked me to bring them one.
As for energy drinks, I only developed an interest in them once I saw them in glass. Of course I have to have everything in glass that is good, so hence I have a bunch of great energy drinks. From my perspective I sell a whole lot of them but I'm sure it's not even noticeable to Red Bull. But I'm not in the biz to show off to them or anyone else; I'm just doing what I think is necessary so that people like me don't have to go what I had to just to get decent glass sodas when they want them.
I have heard all of those arguments like what about a bunch of four-year-olds jumping around on a trampouline during a birthday party and what if they were drinking out of heavy deposit bottles and breaking them and getting cut and sued and so forth... Well, guess what; should I find myself in such a situation I'd probably pour from the bottle into a kiddie cup for the kids and keep my own beverages out of their reach until they were old enough to understand and respect the dangers of breaking glass. Gee whiz, were all of the kids in the 1920's interned in the hospital with broken glass shards all over themselves? People are too antiseptic these days and thus they accept reduced quality and forfeit aesthetics and good taste.
The only reason cans ever proliferated was because the US Gov't used to ship drinks and provisions to the GI's in the South Pacific during WWII and the prospect of bringing back empty deposit bottles was more costly than just littering a bunch of cheap cans. Once the bottlers noticed how convenient it was to ship it out and never see it come back, they started pushing consumers in that direction; once the can makers saw they could make a sale every time someone drinks rather than once in a while when a bottle breaks, they jumped on the bandwagon; finally when they created such a mess of litter and started indoctrinating kids about recycling and instigating trial lawyers to clean people out for liability related to broken glass etc ... so you have all of these cans and plastic. But they may be everywhere and lighter and more convenient and so forth, but you can go the further step and just have a tap on your kitchen sink if you're that worried about convenience.
I don't think I'd have the success I have now if people weren't fed up with the packaging and quality of mainstream products that are available today.
Not to get too far off the subject of energy drinks but I think that they deserve a small segment of the industry but I think most of them are overrated, hype products with kind of cheesy names and graphics. They usually are full of stuff that is not necessarily so good for your body even if they have a few vitamins or whatever. I think many people misuse them and even further this problem when they mix them with alcohol. I think it's fine to have an energy drink once in a while when you really need one but otherwise it's probably better to stay away from them. As for using them in the middle of a workout, I've heard alot of people say that that is not such a good idea but I'm not a doctor and I have heard so many opposing views that I haven't formed a firm opinion on that part of the equation. However, I'd say that the few times that someone can genuinely benefit from an energy drink... well, splurge for one that tastes good and comes in glass.
Keep in mind that the King Of Pop\'s crown is not made from a bunch of melted aluminum cans!