Thank you all for coming to this meeting fellow political junkies. My name is Andrew and I drink Bud Light.
It all started with Hollywood superstar Paul Newman. Although I did a little work for his Budweiser Lightning CanAm racing team back in my motorsports days, my most recent encounter occurred much closer to home.
My refrigerator, actually.
I keep a couple of pizzas in the freezer to consult whenever temptation visits. I always buy Newman’s Own. Even though they cost more, all profits go to charity. The late Mr. Newman’s foundation long ago eclipsed $100 million to non-profit organizations.
Even though he died in 2008 (“Paul Newman: Driven Star” Barbwire 9-28-2008), his image still sells very well.
I once had a major New York ad agency fly their chief counsel to Reno to negotiate a Newman racing sponsorship for one of their big time clients. They offered a laughable amount.
“Paul’s getting $3 million a picture,” his racing partner chuckled when
I told him about it.
And so it came to pass late one night last week that I needed a pizza, a desire soon assuaged by firing up a Newman’s Own Stone Fired Quattro Formaggi (four cheese) beauty. And then the humour descended upon me: I needed a beer to go with it. There, in the back of my fridge, was a lonely Bud Light perfect for the occasion.
Alas and alack, moonhowlers have toppled Bud Light from its well-deserved number one ranking after more than two decades. Thanks to their unpatriotic efforts, a foreign import now rules.
About three months ago, a transgender podcaster named Dylan Mulvaney posted a Bud Light promotional video. Trolls pounced.
Anheuser-Busch had even given Mulvaney a can of Bud Light with her picture on it. String her up!
I have not read any of their viral infections and do not intend to do so. The results of the insults speak for themselves. Apparently there were a lot of manhood-challenged Bud Light drinkers who possessed loyalty worthy of a pre-teen Donald Trump. (I pity their wives.)
Two Bud marketing execs who had OK’d the Mulvaney influencer video are now on “administrative leave,” the term normally applied to cops who shot somebody.
Brand loyalty and sports team affinity is as fickle as teenage crushes.
Wanting to belong remains an innate human tribal desire. Why else would anyone put hyper-expensive Las Vegas Raiders tickets on a high interest credit card to watch guys beat on each other when they need binoculars to see which of the little ants down on the field is which? But hey, you’ve bought your way into the tribe which gathers on the parking lot, all wearing expensive Raiders paraphernalia to partake of the body and blood of their gods (hot dogs and beer) before venturing several miles into the holy of holies.
If the Bud bosses had been paying me, I would have risked my job advising them to rise above the bigotry. Look how Nike hugely benefited as the only corporate sponsor to stand with former UNR/49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick when he protested America’s endemic racism.
Oh, I forgot, we no longer have a racism problem. Gov. Ron DeSatanist told me so. And that pillar of civic virtue, Clarence Thomas, even coined the term “racialism” because racism no longer exists.
Wiseman George Carlin once advised to beware when they start adding syllables. Shell shock became combat fatigue, he groused. Over the decades, it morphed into traumatic stress syndrome and is now post-traumatic stress disorder.
“Shell shock” perfectly described the damage done to soldiers who’ve undergone such suffering, Carlin said. Now, we have bloodless “PTSD.”
Anheuser-Busch CEO Brendan Whitworth turned into a waffle maker on “CBS Mornings.”
“There’s a big social conversation taking place right now and big brands are right in the middle of it…not just our industry or Bud Light,” he mumbled, adding “What we need to understand is, deeply understand and appreciate, is the consumer and what they want, what they care about and what they expect from big brands.”
How about balls? Macho woman bashers understand brass balls. They don’t appreciate soggy soothing suits.
All this reminds me of Schlitz. Ever heard of them? Back in the mid-1970s, Schlitz was the world’s largest brewery. Somebody tinkered with the ingredients of the flagship brand.
One batch was so modified that when poured, it wouldn’t create a “head” of foam, which is useless. The 1970s equivalent of trolls went to work.
Competitors planted the word that Schlitz was selling (gasp) “green beer.” Zounds.
Beer does not need aging or foam, but brewers add ingredients just like detergent marketers. Housewives were used to soap creating bubbles.
Detergents, which were much more efficient, didn’t do so. But bubbles told housewives that the detergent was working. So they add bubble chemicals to this very day, as do brewers.
It’s all a marketing mirage like the beer-broads-bras-macho mystique. I know a Sparks businessman who used to smoke. One day, he was out of Camels. A woman offered him a Virginia Slim, a brand targeted to addict women with flowers on the tall thin packaging.
My Sparks friend recoiled, refusing to put a “Vagina Slime” into his mouth. That’s marketing and salesmanship, baby. Cigarettes and beer are both drug delivery systems. The only real differences are illusions created by the advertising department. Kinda like with politicians.
For me, I will remain a good Christian and enjoy my vices in moderation. An occasional Paul Newman pizza with one Bud Light.
I’m an old marketing and advertising dinosaur, immunized against spin.
Have a Bud Light.
Stay safe, get vaxxed and pray for those cruelly afflicted by the cruelly small minds on this small planet.
Be well. Raise hell. / Esté bien. Haga infierno.
Andrew Quarantino Barbáno is a 54-year Nevadan and editor of NevadaLabor.com and MississippiWestNV.org/ Barbwire by Barbano has originated in the Tribune since 1988. E-mail barbano@frontpage.reno.nv.us>
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