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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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Beer In Ads #1056: The Ballantine Snowman

December 30, 2013 By Jay Brooks


Monday’s ad is another one for Ballantine Ale, from 1947. This one also uses their standard layout from that time period, and features an awesome snowman holding a beer. I have an original of this ad framed in my office; it’s a favorite.

ballantine-1947-snowman

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Ballantine, History

Who Is The Craft Beer Drinker?

December 30, 2013 By Jay Brooks

demographics
With only two days left in the year of the infographic, I have a few more left to fit in before the year ends. Today’s second one is entitled Who is the Craft Beer Drinker?. It was created by SteadyServ Technologies, makers of a “mobile, SaaS-based inventory and order management system for the beer industry.”

craft-beer-drinker
Click here to see the infographic full size.

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun Tagged With: Demographics, Infographics, Statistics

Watchdog’s Department of Redundancy Department

December 30, 2013 By Jay Brooks

watchdog-2
While I don’t think too much about what I post on Twitter, lots of companies do think about their Twitter frequency, content, timing, etc. How much is the right amount? How much is too much? Organizations should, and usually do, give this careful consideration. Last year, Track Social conducted a study to determine the sweet spot entitled Optimizing Twitter Engagement – Part 2: How Frequently to Tweet. They determined that 2-5 tweets per day is best to get a response from your followers. Less than that and they forget about you, more than that and they start to tune out. Looking at my own Twitterstream, I tend to tweet 4-6 times a day, usually no more than 10; though sometimes I tweet more when I’m traveling.

Lately, I’ve been noticing that I see an awful lot of tweets from the prohibitionists at Alcohol Justice, usually with a great deal of repetition. I started noticing that I keep seeing the same twitpic day after day, the same plea for money day after day and the same propaganda day after day. For example, recently I was annoyed by one of their tweets, and considered doing a post about it, but then changed my mind. But I noticed I saw it again, and then again, and then again today. It turns out they first tweeted the one below every single day since December 17, which was the first time, until today. That’s fourteen times in two weeks. Exactly the same every time, as below. They could change the wording, change it up, make it at least appear fresh, but nope, they just retweet it over and over again, as is.

aj-tweet-12-30

What originally annoyed me is that clicking on the link takes you to a story, Watchdog Group Slams Alcohol “Social Responsibility” Campaigns. The “watchdog” doing the slamming is none other than Alcohol Justice. So in effect, every day they’re saying hey, look at this information about what a watchdog group is saying as if it’s from an objective, unbiased source. But what they’re really saying is: “hey check out this study by us that we got someone else to post without questioning anything.” It feels dishonest at best. There’s nothing about it that’s not slimy and self-referential, more of the circle jerk of prohibitionist propaganda. They could have tweeted that there’s a story about their own study or something to the effect that here’s an article by one of our own, or at least own the information. But that would be honest, something the watchdog holding big alcohol accountable has a hard time doing themselves.

But as this sank in, I also noticed I’ve been seeing lots of repetition. Beating a dead horse seems to be part of the S.O.P., a policy decision. As far as the amount of tweets, looking at the last ten days, Alcohol Justice tweeted 369 times, not including RT’s. That’s an average of almost 37 tweets per day. As of 2:30 p.m. PST, they’ve tweeted 70 times today! That would push the average to nearly forty tweets per day.

Beyond the insane number, it’s the repetition that’s so amazing. There appears to be a calculated policy of tweeting the exact same tweets every day for weeks on end. Just seeing the same graphics tweeted every day makes that point. Take a cursory glance down their twitterstream and you’ll see the same photo and language over and over and over again. The graphic for this tweet is a bottle of Absolut in a rainbow pattern and the text “Absolut Pride,” making me wonder if perhaps they’re also subtly trying to appeal to homophobics, too. Otherwise, what was the point of choosing that particular ad to use in a post about social responsibility? Personally, I like this colorful neon beer bottle sign better. But then, I generally prefer beer.

bud-light-rainbow-bottle-neon-beer-sign_giant

And then there’s donations, pleas for which are seemingly never-ending. During the month of December, so far, they’ve asked followers for money 57 times, or an average of almost twice a day.

The amount of redundancy in the average day’s Twitter feed by Alcohol Justice reminds me of an old Monty Python bit with a government agency called the “Department of Redundancy Department.” Can their nearly 16,000 followers really welcome that much repetition in the information they’re sending out on a daily basis? Or can it be possible they think so little of those followers that they believe that they need to keep telling them the same things over and again in the hopes that it sinks in eventually?

Filed Under: Editorial, Politics & Law Tagged With: Anti-Alcohol, Prohibitionists, Social Media, Twitter

The Beer Breakdown

December 30, 2013 By Jay Brooks

beer-styles
Today’s infographic is entitled The Beer Breakdown to shows some of the basic differences between ales and lagers, some examples and the brewing process. It was created by Chloe Hoeg for an illustration class she took at Ohio University, where she graduated from in 2012.

beer-breakdown
Click here to see the infographic full size.

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun Tagged With: Beer Styles, Infographics, Science of Brewing

Beer In Ads #1055: The Ballantine Sleigh

December 29, 2013 By Jay Brooks


Sunday’s ad is for Ballantine Ale, from 1949. One of their standard layouts from this time period, this one shows a winter time sleigh being loaded into it. I bet their not going to grandmother’s house.

ballantine-1949-sleigh

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Ballantine, History

Beer Flavor Triangle

December 29, 2013 By Jay Brooks

beer-triangle
Today’s infographic is a beer flavor triangle from, of all places, Betty Crocker’s Beer 101: The Basics. It’s interesting way to break down the basic flavors in beer, from the triumvirate of malt, hops and yeast.

Flavor-diagram
Click here to see the chart full size.

Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun Tagged With: flavor, Food, Infographics

Home Brew Beer: Only 3 Weeks To Beer

December 29, 2013 By Jay Brooks

home-brew-graphic
Today’s infographic is from a British home shopping store, Lakeland, which also sells homebrewing supplies. Their chart shows the three-week process of brewing a standard batch of homebrew.

homebrew_beer_infographic
Click here to see the infographic full size.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Homebrewing, Infographics, UK

Beer In Ads #1054: Budweiser Frost

December 28, 2013 By Jay Brooks


Saturday’s ad is also for Budweiser, from 1956. Showing a couple through a frosted window, it’s as though someone had used a towel to clear the middle so we could see the scene. As the man pours a beer for his lady, she’s looking so intently at the glass it’s as if her life somehow depended on a perfect pour.

Bud-1956-xmas-frost

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Budweiser, Christmas, History, Holidays

The Wholesomeness Of Brewing

December 28, 2013 By Jay Brooks

home-brewing-graphic
Today’s infographic showing the process of brewing is from an article entitled The Wholesomeness of Brewing on Beer: the Natural Choice, a website set up by the British Beer & Pub Association.

process-of-brewing
Click here to see the infographic full size.

Filed Under: Breweries, Just For Fun Tagged With: Homebrewing, Infographics

Beer In Ads #1053: Good Living

December 27, 2013 By Jay Brooks


Friday’s ad is for Budweiser, from 1947. Showing a tasty looking spread of meats and cheeses, the only thing missing is some more flavorful beers to pair with them. Still, it’s interesting to see a beer company before 1950 suggesting cheese to eat with beer.

Bud-1947-good-living

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Christmas, History, Holidays

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