Friday’s ad is for the Australian brand, Cairns. The ad looks to me eye to be from the 1960s or 70s. The “take home Draught” and “Brewery Bottled” seem almost quaint now but were probably a new angle at that time.
Beer In Ads #624: Friendly, Fresh’ning, Happily Dry
Thursday’s ad is for Rheingold, from 1961. The ad features Miss Rheingold for 1961, Janet Mick, at a bowling alley. Maybe it’s just me, but it sure looks like this date is not going well. The smile on her face looks so forced to me, like she’s pretending to have a good time. Or maybe he’s just an incredible douchebag. I just love the propensity for brewers in the fifties and early sixties to refer to their beer as being “friendly” and other similar adjectives. In this one, Rheingold is characterized as being “Friendly, fresh’ning, happily dry.” Nice.
Beer In Ads #623: Budweiser’s 6,000 Men
Wednesday’s ad is also for Budweiser, from 1908. In the first two decades of the last century — the run up to prohibition — there was a lot going on in the beer world. It was period of vast consolidation. Increasingly, breweries finally started worrying that prohibition could really become a reality and began doing pro-beer ads. This one is partly hit-you-over-the-head obvious, and also somewhat subtle. Obviously, the main thrust of the ad copy is that Anheuser-Busch in 1908 employed 6,000 at just one “plant.” That sure sounds like a lot for a single brewery. They go on to say there are 750,000 people employed by all of America’s breweries and not less than 4 million “women and children” who are “directly dependent upon their pay envelopes,” with an additional 400,000 employed on farms that produce the crops necessary to make beer. Perhaps more importantly, all of those employees who work in the beer industry “love their homes,” plus “they are good, honest citizens, temperate, patriotic and true.”
On the more subtle side, the ad is designed to look like it’s burting out of a regular page in the newspaper, in this case the Washington Post. BUt look closer at the headlines. Here are a few of them: “Beer on the Mayflower,” “The Drink of the Great,” “World’s Decisive Battles Won By Beer Drinkers,” “The Grain of the Gods,” “Food Value of Malt Brews,” and “The Temperance Value of Beer.” Great stuff.
Beer In Ads #622: Budweiser Ski Threesome
Tuesday’s ad is for Budweiser, from 1949. This one is part of their long-running “there’s nothing like it …” series. But the story that the illustration tells is a bit ambiguous. A couple is relaxing by the fire, their eyes fixed on another woman, just coming in from the ski slopes. But look closely. There are exactly three, not two, full glasses of beer. She was expected. Is this a seduction scene? Or is it merely my overactive imagination? Personally, I think the answer is all in the eyes. What do you read into their expressions?
Beer In Ads #621: The Gold Standard Of All Fine Beer
Beer In Ads #620: The Brew’s On View
Friday’s ad is for British Columbia’s O’Keefe’s Brewery, from 1960, when they apparently opened their new “plant.” I know it shouldn’t, but I’m always suspect of any company that refers to its brewery as a “plant.” To me, it suggests a lack of passion for the beer itself, instead placing more emphasis on the business aspects of the endeavor. I do, however, love the shiny illustration of the new brewery and the sign for their Old Vienna Lager Beer.
Beer In Ads #619: Nothing So Good … For Good Company!
Beer In Ads #618: Refreshingly Different
Beer In Ads #617: Don’t Cry Over Spilled Beer
Tuesday’s ad is for Franz Falk Brewing Co., a Wisconsin brewery which was only around for a short time, from 1856 to 1892 — 36 years. I don’t know for sure, but it looks to me to be from the latter half of the 19th century. I’m not sure why anyone would entrust a couple of beer bottles and glasses on a tray to a young girl, but she certainly knows she’s not supposed to drop them. I can’t tell if she’s so upset because one of them is about to break or she knows she’s going to get a whoopin’ when her father finds out.
Beer In Ads #616: The Beer With The Friendly Flavor
Monday’s ad is another one from the 1950s, again for the Canadian beer Dow Ale. I love how in the fifties everybody dressed up to watch television, lounging at home in a suit and tie or party dress. What is it about the 50s where so many products claimed to be “friendly” in their advertising? For this one, it’s “the beer with the Friendly Flavor.” I love that.