• [Woke going broke...] Bud Light smartly tapped Shane Gillis for ads - t

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 1 20:43:46 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.society.mental-health
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    https://nypost.com/2024/08/29/opinion/bud-lite-smartly-tapped-shane- gillis-for-ads-the-latest-brand-doing-post-dei-damage-control/

    After a disastrous partnership with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney that reportedly cost the brand over $1 billion in lost sales last year, Bud
    Light has returned to its roots.

    The inch toward redemption started with a 2024 Super Bowl commercial
    featuring Peyton Manning and Post Malone. This week, Bud Light released a
    new ad starring comedian Shane Gillis — and it’s a full-on embrace of the brand’s fratty, frivolous ethos that, for decades, turned its ads into pop culture touchstones.

    And Dilly Dilly to that.

    If 2023 was peak woke, 2024 will be known as the year that DEI died — with corporations finally admitting it’s all a shakedown by lefty activists.

    Recently, companies like Harley-Davidson, Ford, John Deere and Lowe’s have
    all reversed course on DEI, thanks in large part to the work of people
    like Robby Starbuck calling them out.

    And now we get “The Dean’s Office,” in which Gillis plays a college
    football coach standing behind a dean, who is trying to extract an
    admission of plagiarism from a star player. In exchange for the stud
    athlete’s confession, the dean presents him with a bucket of ice-cold Bud Lights. Instead, the coaxing works on Coach Gillis (his jacket reads Coach Herb), a professor and the dean himself, who start singing like canaries.

    Alcoholic canaries.

    It’s hardly the superb “Real Men of Genius” franchise of the late ’90s and early aughts, but it’s fun and nostalgic. The spot is a throwback to a
    time when not everything was dissected through the lens of the most
    annoying progressive person you know.

    It’s also an admission that Bud Light was wrong — dead wrong about
    shedding brand DNA and disavowing its core customer to jump on the
    diversity, equity and inclusion bandwagon.

    Specifically, in partnering with insufferable Mulvaney back in the spring
    of 2023 — a costly move that turned the once-beloved American brand into a barroom pariah and sent sales into a free fall.

    At the time, Mulvaney, who has nearly 10 million TikTok followers, was
    working with seemingly every company under the sun: Kate Spade, Ulta,
    Nike. When the influencer posted a video in the bath with a personalized
    Bud Light can, it led to a fierce backlash. A boycott ensued. Bars
    canceled orders. Kid Rock blasted a case with a gun.

    Activist Robby Starbuck has been a thorn in DEI’s side, exposing its deep- seated place in corporate America.
    Getty Images

    Upon further investigation, this ill-advised pivot wasn’t a blip or an oversight. It was the strategy of Alissa Heinerscheid, a marketing VP who touted herself as the “first woman to lead the biggest beer brand in the world.”

    In a March 2023 interview with the “Make Yourself At Home” podcast, she
    said she wanted to move on from the brand’s “fratty” and “out of touch”
    humor to “evolve” and “elevate.”

    “What does evolve and elevate mean? It means inclusivity … It means
    shifting the tone,” she said. “It means having a campaign that’s truly inclusive and feels lighter and brighter and different. And appeals to
    women and to men. And representation is sort of the heart of revolution.”

    This from the woman who proudly presided over the most forgettable Super
    Bowl ad in Bud Light history, starring Miles Teller and his wife dancing.

    “Consumers young and old want a brand to stand for something,”
    Heinerscheid said at the time.

    Out-of-touch executives like Heinerscheid — following in the grand
    tradition of Gillette razors calling out “toxic masculinity” — broke their messaging so they could fix it. But it was never broken to begin with.

    They tried to say that beer ads were misogynistic, but most make men look
    like simple creatures and the butt of the jokes. And yes, in some
    commercials, women wear bikinis. Turns out, people love boobs too. (See
    Sydney Sweeney.)

    In the aftermath of the Mulvaney debacle, an ad for Miller Lite starring
    Ilana Glazer surfaced — apologizing for sexist old beer ads and exalting
    women brewers. Oh, the pandering!

    Americans want beer commercials to entertain us, not preach empty
    progressive virtues. I look fondly on the golden age with Bob Uecker or
    John Madden. Barroom fights over whether Miller Lite tastes great or is
    less filling. We loved seeing Spuds MacKenzie be the life of the party.

    It’s also poignant that Gillis would be the one to repair the damage
    brought by this unforced error. After being run over by the PC patrol in
    2019, when he was hired and quickly fired by “Saturday Night Live” for
    having previously using an Asian slur and “homophobic” language, he never complained. He went harder in his stand-up and, surprise, became more
    popular. So big that “SNL” could no longer ignore him: He came back as a celebrity host this past February.

    Through Gillis’ ascendance, we saw the disconnect between cultural
    overlords and real American consumers and appetites. The so-called silent majority.

    Last week, BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, said it had cut support for shareholder proposals linked to environmental and social
    issues to a new low of 4.1% in its most recent annual general meeting
    season.

    Corporations that once feared ESG and being judged by investors on how
    many “inclusive” initiatives they had — scored by the far, far left Human Rights Campaign — now fear association with these discriminatory and
    divisive practices.

    Expect to see more throw in the towel. And to that, I say, this Bud’s for
    them.


    --
    We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
    stupid people won't be offended.

    Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.

    No collusion - Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller III, March 2019.
    Officially made Nancy Pelosi a two-time impeachment loser.

    Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
    fiasco, President Trump.

    Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
    The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
    queer liberal democrat donors.

    President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pothead@21:1/5 to Leroy N. Soetoro on Sun Sep 1 20:46:08 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.society.mental-health
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    On 2024-09-01, Leroy N. Soetoro <democrat-insurrection@mail.house.gov> wrote:
    https://nypost.com/2024/08/29/opinion/bud-lite-smartly-tapped-shane- gillis-for-ads-the-latest-brand-doing-post-dei-damage-control/

    After a disastrous partnership with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney that reportedly cost the brand over $1 billion in lost sales last year, Bud
    Light has returned to its roots.

    The inch toward redemption started with a 2024 Super Bowl commercial featuring Peyton Manning and Post Malone. This week, Bud Light released a
    new ad starring comedian Shane Gillis — and it’s a full-on embrace of the brand’s fratty, frivolous ethos that, for decades, turned its ads into pop culture touchstones.

    And Dilly Dilly to that.

    If 2023 was peak woke, 2024 will be known as the year that DEI died — with corporations finally admitting it’s all a shakedown by lefty activists.

    Recently, companies like Harley-Davidson, Ford, John Deere and LoweÂ’s have all reversed course on DEI, thanks in large part to the work of people
    like Robby Starbuck calling them out.

    And now we get “The Dean’s Office,” in which Gillis plays a college football coach standing behind a dean, who is trying to extract an
    admission of plagiarism from a star player. In exchange for the stud athleteÂ’s confession, the dean presents him with a bucket of ice-cold Bud Lights. Instead, the coaxing works on Coach Gillis (his jacket reads Coach Herb), a professor and the dean himself, who start singing like canaries.

    Alcoholic canaries.

    It’s hardly the superb “Real Men of Genius” franchise of the late ’90s and
    early aughts, but itÂ’s fun and nostalgic. The spot is a throwback to a
    time when not everything was dissected through the lens of the most
    annoying progressive person you know.

    It’s also an admission that Bud Light was wrong — dead wrong about
    shedding brand DNA and disavowing its core customer to jump on the
    diversity, equity and inclusion bandwagon.

    Specifically, in partnering with insufferable Mulvaney back in the spring
    of 2023 — a costly move that turned the once-beloved American brand into a barroom pariah and sent sales into a free fall.

    At the time, Mulvaney, who has nearly 10 million TikTok followers, was working with seemingly every company under the sun: Kate Spade, Ulta,
    Nike. When the influencer posted a video in the bath with a personalized
    Bud Light can, it led to a fierce backlash. A boycott ensued. Bars
    canceled orders. Kid Rock blasted a case with a gun.

    Activist Robby Starbuck has been a thorn in DEIÂ’s side, exposing its deep- seated place in corporate America.
    Getty Images

    Upon further investigation, this ill-advised pivot wasn’t a blip or an oversight. It was the strategy of Alissa Heinerscheid, a marketing VP who touted herself as the “first woman to lead the biggest beer brand in the world.”

    In a March 2023 interview with the “Make Yourself At Home” podcast, she said she wanted to move on from the brand’s “fratty” and “out of touch” humor to “evolve” and “elevate.”

    “What does evolve and elevate mean? It means inclusivity … It means shifting the tone,” she said. “It means having a campaign that’s truly inclusive and feels lighter and brighter and different. And appeals to
    women and to men. And representation is sort of the heart of revolution.”

    This from the woman who proudly presided over the most forgettable Super
    Bowl ad in Bud Light history, starring Miles Teller and his wife dancing.

    “Consumers young and old want a brand to stand for something,”
    Heinerscheid said at the time.

    Out-of-touch executives like Heinerscheid — following in the grand
    tradition of Gillette razors calling out “toxic masculinity” — broke their messaging so they could fix it. But it was never broken to begin with.

    They tried to say that beer ads were misogynistic, but most make men look like simple creatures and the butt of the jokes. And yes, in some commercials, women wear bikinis. Turns out, people love boobs too. (See Sydney Sweeney.)

    In the aftermath of the Mulvaney debacle, an ad for Miller Lite starring Ilana Glazer surfaced — apologizing for sexist old beer ads and exalting women brewers. Oh, the pandering!

    Americans want beer commercials to entertain us, not preach empty
    progressive virtues. I look fondly on the golden age with Bob Uecker or
    John Madden. Barroom fights over whether Miller Lite tastes great or is
    less filling. We loved seeing Spuds MacKenzie be the life of the party.

    ItÂ’s also poignant that Gillis would be the one to repair the damage
    brought by this unforced error. After being run over by the PC patrol in 2019, when he was hired and quickly fired by “Saturday Night Live” for having previously using an Asian slur and “homophobic” language, he never complained. He went harder in his stand-up and, surprise, became more popular. So big that “SNL” could no longer ignore him: He came back as a celebrity host this past February.

    Through GillisÂ’ ascendance, we saw the disconnect between cultural
    overlords and real American consumers and appetites. The so-called silent majority.

    Last week, BlackRock, the worldÂ’s biggest asset manager, said it had cut support for shareholder proposals linked to environmental and social
    issues to a new low of 4.1% in its most recent annual general meeting
    season.

    Corporations that once feared ESG and being judged by investors on how
    many “inclusive” initiatives they had — scored by the far, far left Human Rights Campaign — now fear association with these discriminatory and divisive practices.

    Expect to see more throw in the towel. And to that, I say, this BudÂ’s for them.


    I've witnessed 18 wheelers hauling Bud Light get honked at and flipped the bird several times now.
    The pubs around where I live can't give the stuff away.
    Neither can the distributors.
    People are not forgetting this one so soon.



    --
    pothead
    Kamala Harris Is A Marxist
    Tampon Tim Walz Is A Radical Left Wing Nutjob
    They Are A Match Made In Heaven

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Charlie Glock <"Charlie@21:1/5 to pothead on Sun Sep 1 21:46:17 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.society.mental-health
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    On 2024-09-01, pothead <pothead@snakebite.com> wrote:
    On 2024-09-01, Leroy N. Soetoro <democrat-insurrection@mail.house.gov> wrote:
    https://nypost.com/2024/08/29/opinion/bud-lite-smartly-tapped-shane-
    gillis-for-ads-the-latest-brand-doing-post-dei-damage-control/

    After a disastrous partnership with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney that
    reportedly cost the brand over $1 billion in lost sales last year, Bud
    Light has returned to its roots.

    The inch toward redemption started with a 2024 Super Bowl commercial
    featuring Peyton Manning and Post Malone. This week, Bud Light released a
    new ad starring comedian Shane Gillis — and it’s a full-on embrace of the >> brand’s fratty, frivolous ethos that, for decades, turned its ads into pop >> culture touchstones.

    And Dilly Dilly to that.

    If 2023 was peak woke, 2024 will be known as the year that DEI died — with >> corporations finally admitting it’s all a shakedown by lefty activists.

    Recently, companies like Harley-Davidson, Ford, John Deere and LoweÂ’s have >> all reversed course on DEI, thanks in large part to the work of people
    like Robby Starbuck calling them out.

    And now we get “The Dean’s Office,” in which Gillis plays a college
    football coach standing behind a dean, who is trying to extract an
    admission of plagiarism from a star player. In exchange for the stud
    athleteÂ’s confession, the dean presents him with a bucket of ice-cold Bud >> Lights. Instead, the coaxing works on Coach Gillis (his jacket reads Coach >> Herb), a professor and the dean himself, who start singing like canaries.

    Alcoholic canaries.

    It’s hardly the superb “Real Men of Genius” franchise of the late ’90s and
    early aughts, but itÂ’s fun and nostalgic. The spot is a throwback to a
    time when not everything was dissected through the lens of the most
    annoying progressive person you know.

    It’s also an admission that Bud Light was wrong — dead wrong about
    shedding brand DNA and disavowing its core customer to jump on the
    diversity, equity and inclusion bandwagon.

    Specifically, in partnering with insufferable Mulvaney back in the spring
    of 2023 — a costly move that turned the once-beloved American brand into a >> barroom pariah and sent sales into a free fall.

    At the time, Mulvaney, who has nearly 10 million TikTok followers, was
    working with seemingly every company under the sun: Kate Spade, Ulta,
    Nike. When the influencer posted a video in the bath with a personalized
    Bud Light can, it led to a fierce backlash. A boycott ensued. Bars
    canceled orders. Kid Rock blasted a case with a gun.

    Activist Robby Starbuck has been a thorn in DEIÂ’s side, exposing its deep- >> seated place in corporate America.
    Getty Images

    Upon further investigation, this ill-advised pivot wasnÂ’t a blip or an
    oversight. It was the strategy of Alissa Heinerscheid, a marketing VP who
    touted herself as the “first woman to lead the biggest beer brand in the
    world.”

    In a March 2023 interview with the “Make Yourself At Home” podcast, she
    said she wanted to move on from the brand’s “fratty” and “out of touch” >> humor to “evolve” and “elevate.”

    “What does evolve and elevate mean? It means inclusivity … It means
    shifting the tone,” she said. “It means having a campaign that’s truly
    inclusive and feels lighter and brighter and different. And appeals to
    women and to men. And representation is sort of the heart of revolution.” >>
    This from the woman who proudly presided over the most forgettable Super
    Bowl ad in Bud Light history, starring Miles Teller and his wife dancing.

    “Consumers young and old want a brand to stand for something,”
    Heinerscheid said at the time.

    Out-of-touch executives like Heinerscheid — following in the grand
    tradition of Gillette razors calling out “toxic masculinity” — broke their
    messaging so they could fix it. But it was never broken to begin with.

    They tried to say that beer ads were misogynistic, but most make men look
    like simple creatures and the butt of the jokes. And yes, in some
    commercials, women wear bikinis. Turns out, people love boobs too. (See
    Sydney Sweeney.)

    In the aftermath of the Mulvaney debacle, an ad for Miller Lite starring
    Ilana Glazer surfaced — apologizing for sexist old beer ads and exalting
    women brewers. Oh, the pandering!

    Americans want beer commercials to entertain us, not preach empty
    progressive virtues. I look fondly on the golden age with Bob Uecker or
    John Madden. Barroom fights over whether Miller Lite tastes great or is
    less filling. We loved seeing Spuds MacKenzie be the life of the party.

    ItÂ’s also poignant that Gillis would be the one to repair the damage
    brought by this unforced error. After being run over by the PC patrol in
    2019, when he was hired and quickly fired by “Saturday Night Live” for
    having previously using an Asian slur and “homophobic” language, he never >> complained. He went harder in his stand-up and, surprise, became more
    popular. So big that “SNL” could no longer ignore him: He came back as a >> celebrity host this past February.

    Through GillisÂ’ ascendance, we saw the disconnect between cultural
    overlords and real American consumers and appetites. The so-called silent
    majority.

    Last week, BlackRock, the worldÂ’s biggest asset manager, said it had cut
    support for shareholder proposals linked to environmental and social
    issues to a new low of 4.1% in its most recent annual general meeting
    season.

    Corporations that once feared ESG and being judged by investors on how
    many “inclusive” initiatives they had — scored by the far, far left Human >> Rights Campaign — now fear association with these discriminatory and
    divisive practices.

    Expect to see more throw in the towel. And to that, I say, this BudÂ’s for >> them.


    I've witnessed 18 wheelers hauling Bud Light get honked at and flipped the bird several times now.
    The pubs around where I live can't give the stuff away.
    Neither can the distributors.
    People are not forgetting this one so soon.

    Why would anyone drink Bud Light?
    That slime is swill and nasty.



    --
    Charlie Glock
    "No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms"
    - Thomas Jefferson 1776

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)