Anheuser-Busch Appears Makes Unexpected U-Turn With New Ad, Do You Buy It?

“Go woke, go broke” has become a natural rule, much like gravity or one of the other fundamental principles of physics.

After declaring an extremely contentious relationship with transgender activist Dylan Mulvaney, Anheuser-Busch became the latest American company to face this maxim.

Following a huge outcry from conservative Americans and a $5 billion loss in a matter of days, the world’s largest beer distributor made a tepid apology. …

However, the company’s exceedingly diplomatic and sanitized PR response only seemed to elicit even more anger from the right—Anheuser-Busch’s main constituency.

While their apology seemed to fall flat, the company chose to run a new promotional advertisement utilizing a pro-America message, and featuring their iconic symbol—Clydesdale horses:

Could this abrupt shift in the message be symptomatic of a larger Anheuser-Busch effort to mitigate the bad impacts of the Mulvaney partnership? Is Anheuser-Busch reversing its position?

Will you continue to back Anheuser-Busch even if the firm legitimately changes course?

Examine these reactions and reports and let me know:

https://twitter.com/PugzRule_/status/1648026817171783680?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

According to Fox Business, the horses themselves are now a topic of controversy:

Budweiser’s famous Clydesdales, which have been a staple of the company’s advertisements for decades, have also found themselves in the middle of the controversy.

A Budweiser distributor in Missouri canceled all scheduled events to showcase the horses last week amid safety concerns for its employees, the New York Post reported.

“We aren’t going to comment on the issue … everything is still sensitive in social media,” and executive for the distributor told the Post.

https://twitter.com/DirtyWhiteBoyz_/status/1648001476935950362?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

AOL provided a transcript of the commercial:

“Let me tell you a story about a beer rooted in the heart of America,” a gravelly-voiced narrator says as scenes of Budweiser’s trademark Clydesdale horse gallops through the Grand Canyon and underneath the Gateway Arch in St. Louis.

“Found in a community where a handshake is a sure contract.

Brewed for those who found opportunity in the challenge and hope in tomorrow.

Raised by generations willing to sip, share, risk, remember. This is a story bigger than beer: this is the story of the American spirit,” the clip concludes.

So what about you?

Does this change anything for you?

I know it doesn’t for me and my family!

 

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