Ubiquitous
2023-05-17 13:31:48 UTC
Miller Lite responded to online controversy over an advertisement claiming
that women are the founding mothers of beer by instructing customers to
appreciate the humor in the campaign.
The beer brands advertisement, which was initially published in March but
resurfaced online in recent days, blasted the industrys past marketing
campaigns which revolved around objectifying bikini-clad models, instead
promising to donate fertilizer so that female brewers could grow hops, the
flowers used as a bittering and stability agent in beer. Criticism over the
advertisement comes weeks after Bud Light faced backlash for sending a custom
beer can to self-described transgender social media influencer Dylan
Mulvaney.
Heres a little-known fact: women were among the very first to brew beer
ever. From Mesopotamia to the Middle Ages to colonial America, women were the
ones doing the brewing. Centuries later, how did the industry pay homage to
the founding mothers of beer? They put us in bikinis, female comedian Ilana
Glazer said in the advertisement, which coincided with Womens History Month.
Look at this $#!T. Wild. Its time beer made it up to women, so today Miller
Lite is on a mission to clean up not just their $#!T, but the whole beer
industrys $#!T. Miller Lite has been scouring the internet for all this $#!T
and buying it back so that they can turn it into good $#!T for women
brewers.
Social media users vented frustration over the advertisement and the brands
nods to social justice and intersectionality. Molson Coors, the Canadian-
American multinational conglomerate which owns the Miller Lite brand,
nevertheless insisted in a statement this week to multiple news outlets that
beer enthusiasts should not take the advertisement seriously.
This video was about two things: worm poop and saying women shouldnt be
forced to mud wrestle in order to sell beer, a company spokesperson said.
Neither of these things should be remotely controversial and we hope beer
drinkers can appreciate the humor (and ridiculousness) of this video from
back in March.
The backlash to the advertisement occurs as several reports indicate that
Anheuser-Busch, the parent company of Bud Light, has hemorrhaged sales after
the brand partnered with Mulvaney, a man who claims to be a woman and
chronicled his purported gender transition on social media. Executives for
Anheuser-Busch have offered vague apologies, downplayed the extent of the
campaign, and even hired veteran Republican lobbyists in attempts to win back
conservatives who once consumed the beer.
The attempts to back away from Mulvaney have provoked additional backlash
from the opposite end of the political spectrum: angered members of the LGBTQ
movement are now demanding that Anheuser-Busch affirm their support for the
ideology or face a second boycott.
Alissa Heinerscheid, the vice president of marketing at Bud Light who oversaw
the Mulvaney campaign, took a leave of absence after footage of her
criticizing the fratty image of the brand circulated online. Elizabeth
Hitch, the senior marketing director for Miller Lite, likewise appears to
have assumed a prominent role in creating her companys advertisement.
Miller Lite wanted to recognize that without women, there would be no beer,
she said in a press release. To honor this we wanted to acknowledge the
missteps in representation of women in beer advertising by cleaning up not
just our $#!T, but the whole industrys $#!T while benefiting the future of
women and beer.
--
Let's go Brandon!
that women are the founding mothers of beer by instructing customers to
appreciate the humor in the campaign.
The beer brands advertisement, which was initially published in March but
resurfaced online in recent days, blasted the industrys past marketing
campaigns which revolved around objectifying bikini-clad models, instead
promising to donate fertilizer so that female brewers could grow hops, the
flowers used as a bittering and stability agent in beer. Criticism over the
advertisement comes weeks after Bud Light faced backlash for sending a custom
beer can to self-described transgender social media influencer Dylan
Mulvaney.
Heres a little-known fact: women were among the very first to brew beer
ever. From Mesopotamia to the Middle Ages to colonial America, women were the
ones doing the brewing. Centuries later, how did the industry pay homage to
the founding mothers of beer? They put us in bikinis, female comedian Ilana
Glazer said in the advertisement, which coincided with Womens History Month.
Look at this $#!T. Wild. Its time beer made it up to women, so today Miller
Lite is on a mission to clean up not just their $#!T, but the whole beer
industrys $#!T. Miller Lite has been scouring the internet for all this $#!T
and buying it back so that they can turn it into good $#!T for women
brewers.
Social media users vented frustration over the advertisement and the brands
nods to social justice and intersectionality. Molson Coors, the Canadian-
American multinational conglomerate which owns the Miller Lite brand,
nevertheless insisted in a statement this week to multiple news outlets that
beer enthusiasts should not take the advertisement seriously.
This video was about two things: worm poop and saying women shouldnt be
forced to mud wrestle in order to sell beer, a company spokesperson said.
Neither of these things should be remotely controversial and we hope beer
drinkers can appreciate the humor (and ridiculousness) of this video from
back in March.
The backlash to the advertisement occurs as several reports indicate that
Anheuser-Busch, the parent company of Bud Light, has hemorrhaged sales after
the brand partnered with Mulvaney, a man who claims to be a woman and
chronicled his purported gender transition on social media. Executives for
Anheuser-Busch have offered vague apologies, downplayed the extent of the
campaign, and even hired veteran Republican lobbyists in attempts to win back
conservatives who once consumed the beer.
The attempts to back away from Mulvaney have provoked additional backlash
from the opposite end of the political spectrum: angered members of the LGBTQ
movement are now demanding that Anheuser-Busch affirm their support for the
ideology or face a second boycott.
Alissa Heinerscheid, the vice president of marketing at Bud Light who oversaw
the Mulvaney campaign, took a leave of absence after footage of her
criticizing the fratty image of the brand circulated online. Elizabeth
Hitch, the senior marketing director for Miller Lite, likewise appears to
have assumed a prominent role in creating her companys advertisement.
Miller Lite wanted to recognize that without women, there would be no beer,
she said in a press release. To honor this we wanted to acknowledge the
missteps in representation of women in beer advertising by cleaning up not
just our $#!T, but the whole industrys $#!T while benefiting the future of
women and beer.
--
Let's go Brandon!