HUGE ANNOUNCEMENT: The Townhall Gulf of America Cruise Is Here!
AI-Powered Schools Might Be Coming to Your Neighborhood
A Foolish NATO Was a Big Loser in the Iran War
Dems Explode Over President Trump's Iran War Speech
President Trump Fires Pam Bondi
This Is What the Iranian Regime Had to Say About Trump's Speech
Florida's SAVE America Act Faces Immediate Legal Challenge
Kash Patel Just Shamed Senator Sheldon Whitehouse for Failing the People of Rhode...
Has the UK Home Office Just Ended This Orwellian Policy or Merely Redefined...
BBC Radio Should Have an IQ Requirement for Its People, Apparently
New York Times Look at 'Gun Violence' Reduction Misses Big Factor
New CNN Poll: Even Democrats Are Done With Democrats
The White House's New Fraud Task Force Takes Down It's First Target in...
Can You Guess What Percent of Newborn Children in the US Are Born...
Here's Jonathan Turley's Reaction to the Oral Arguments in the SCOTUS Birthright Citizensh...
Tipsheet
Premium

It Looks Like Budweiser Learned Their Lesson After This New Ad Dropped

It Looks Like Budweiser Learned Their Lesson After This New Ad Dropped
AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, File

Budweiser has reversed course and decided that they want to market to Americans again in the latest ad they’ve released ahead of Super Bowl LX.

The ad celebrates 150 years of brewing as the brand’s iconic Clydesdale horse and a bald eagle team up in a pseudo-training montage to the tune of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Free Bird. The company claims that the ad is supposed to run during the Super Bowl, raising questions as to why it would be released so early.

The company had previously come under fire after partnering with TikToking trans activist Dylan Mulvaney in what turned into a public relations disaster for Anheuser-Busch. Conservatives and beer-lovers partook in a massive boycott that is reported to have cost the brewing company up to $1.4 billion in sales.

The return to form was met with mass praise from individuals on social media, with some poking fun at the company.

So why did the company drop the ad before the Super Bowl even happened? The best guess would be to get onto the public’s good side once again before the largest sporting event of the year takes place. The profit potential is likely too enticing to pass up.

It may be cynical, but don’t be so quick to assume that Budweiser is suddenly back on the side of truth, justice, and the American way. 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement