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Budweiser for a dolla

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A super summery outfit: swimsuit with teniis skirt and slides. Singapore has been too hot, I am back with dressing as less as possible again ugh. Been heading for the beach recently so i thought i will be cool to make an outfit with a swimsuit  (≧∇≦)/. And guess what, I scored this brand new with tag Budweiser swimsuit and  tennis skirt at the thrift store for A DOLLAR EACH!! This may be the cheapest outfit set I have ever pull together! (www.plaaastic.com/2014/06/budweiser-body.html).


 



As for "the King" of beers, Budweiser's Track Your Bud campaign is an effort to highlight the quality and consistency of the All-American brew. The patriotic bottle is a reminder that Budweiser is America's beer, and now when you take a sip of Bud, you'll also associate it to a brewery within the states not so far away (http://fromatozeny.blogspot.nl/2013/11/budweiser-cares-where-your-bud-came.html).

May 2008
Credits & Description:
Company: ADK, JAPAN, Tokyo
Creative Director/Art Director: Takeshi Yamamoto



Budweiser Super Bowl Commercial
The [2014] Budweiser Super Bowl Commercial, called “Puppy Love” has caused a lot of controversy on whether or not the commercial was appropriate for a beer company.....this commercial had absolutely nothing to do with beer. Even though cute, the commercial seemingly lacked in making people feel the need to drink their product. Rather the commercial incorporated a slogan that does not really have to do with beer drinking. Also the commercial targeted the wrong audience with sentimental value, as it is not usually too many real sentimental people that drink Budweiser (https://isenbergmarketing.wordpress.com/2014/02/18/budweiser-super-bowl-commercial/).

Ook de 2015 commercial (niet die met de hond en een brouwerijpaard) was contorversieel:


Beer lovers and beer makers of all shapes and sizes are taking issue with the incredibly defensive Budweiser Super Bowl Ad that mocks hipsters, millennials, and people who like beers that actually taste good.
On Sunday, Budweiser aired a commercial during the Super Bowl declaring that it is “PROUDLY A MACRO BEER,” while also mocking “FUSSED OVER” craft beers and the bearded young hipsters who supposedly enjoy “DISSECTING” their taste.
The ad was puzzling—and arguably hypocritical and foolish—in several ways, and casual beer drinkers and brewers all over the beer spectrum have said so. Bud’s attack ad has spurred on many to attack the brand and its owner, the multinational monolith Anheuser-Busch InBev (http://time.com/money/3695498/budweiser-super-bowl-ad-mocking-craft-beer/).

We have an ad that essentially attacks brands the company has spent millions of dollars acquiring. “Let them sip their pumpkin peach ale,” the ad copy read, in between cliché-ridden images of mustachioed men in hipster glasses sniffing effete brews out of fancy glasses. Meanwhile, Seattle’s Elysian Brewing, which AB-InBev purchased less than a month ago, is known for producing beers that would seem to be similarly worthy of poking fun at, such as Punkuccino Coffee Pumpkin Ale and Superfuzz Blood Orange. Fortune pointed out that the brewer had, in fact, made a Pecan Peach Pumpkin Amber beer just last year ... Elysian co-founder Dick Cantwell, who opposed the AB-InBev acquisition, explained to the Chicago Tribune in an email earlier this week....It’s made a difficult situation even more painful.” ... On social media and in beer forums, Budweiser was being bashed for the ad before the Super Bowl was even over....On Monday, the world’s other well-known giant beer company, MillerCoors, released a statement on social that obviously took issue with the Bud ad. “We believe each and every style of beer is worth fussing over,” the message stated. “Quality isn’t something that belongs to a single style of beer or a single brewer.” A stamp at the bottom of the message bore the slogan, “We Stand for Beer.” Basically, the MillerCoors proclamation makes the case that the Bud ad wasn’t simply “anti-craft” but anti-beer in general. (http://time.com/money/3695498/budweiser-super-bowl-ad-mocking-craft-beer/). Hier nog enkele parodieën op de reclame.

Certainly, the ad struck some as an attack on any beer made for tasting good as opposed to one brewed merely for drinking for the sake of drinking. The Atlantic viewed the ad as “a company trying to sell beer by casting Millennial foodies as a pretentious out-group to be mocked.” As a followup Slate post noted wryly, “This is a somewhat odd approach to winning over young drinkers, which, presumably, is AB-InBev’s goal.” (http://time.com/money/3695498/budweiser-super-bowl-ad-mocking-craft-beer/).

Zelf hebben ze echter ook vreemde smaakjes:


En laten we eerlijk zijn, ze zijn ook niet de enige die de draak steken met het omhoogevallen wijnerige gedoe:


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