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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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Marzen Madness Reminder: Sign Up Today To Play

March 10, 2011 By Jay Brooks

basketball
If you’d like to play along and try to pick the winners for this year’s March Madness, I’ve set up a bracket game through Yahoo which I call “Märzen Madness.” It doesn’t look like there’s a limit to the number of people who can play, so sign up today and you can make your picks when the field is announced on Sunday, March 13. The first games begin on March 17, so that’s a four day window to make your picks. I’ll post and update standings each day there’s games played until a winner emerges.

To join Märzen Madness and play the Yahoo! Sports Tournament Pick’em game, just follow this link. You’ll also need a Yahoo ID (which is free if you don’t already have one), And you may, or may not, need the following information about the group information.

Group ID#: 20210
Password: beer

Should be fun. Good luck everybody.

Filed Under: Just For Fun, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Games, Sports

Play Marzen Madness 2011

March 3, 2011 By Jay Brooks

basketball
I confess I’m not the biggest fan of college basketball, but that doesn’t stop me from enjoying March Madness every year. Similar to fantasy football, I’ve set up a bracket game through Yahoo which I call “Märzen Madness.” It doesn’t look like there’s a limit to the number of people who can play, so sign up and make your picks by March 13. I’ll post and update standings each day there’s games played until a winner emerges.

To join Märzen Madness and play the Yahoo! Sports Tournament Pick’em game, just follow this link. You’ll also need a Yahoo ID (which is free if you don’t already have one), And you may, or may not, need the following information about the group information.

Group ID#: 20210
Password: beer

Also, if you know more about the NCAA Tournament than me — which odds are you do — weigh in about the best scoring method. There are three we can choose from, as follows.

  1. Do Not Use Bonus Points: Let your predictions speak for themselves. Works with any scoring system.
  2. Use Upset Pick Bonus: Bonus points for upset picks add importance to early rounds. Works best with Progressive and Straight scoring.
  3. Use Seed Difference Bonus: Seed difference multipliers put heavy emphasis on big upsets in early rounds. Works best with Yahoo! Default Scoring.

Post a comment here after you sign up and let me know which scoring system you favor. I’m pretty sure I can change it before March 13, so I’ll update it with the most popular choice on March 12. Good luck everybody.

Filed Under: Just For Fun, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Games, Sports

Brookston Football Pool Winners

February 7, 2011 By Jay Brooks

football
With a most satisfying conclusion to the Super Bowl yesterday, the winners of the Brookston Football Pools 2010 have been decided. Congratulations to everyone who played this year, the winners are:

Pick ‘Em League

  1. nighthops (174)
  2. Austin Hopheads (165)
  3. TIE: Beerguy101, HoldFastBrewery (160)
  4. TIE: The Beer Runners, bbbilly, GreenMachine-MWA, OakshireMatt (158)
  5. Piranha Pale Riders (157)
  6. Mr. Nuts (156)
  7. Bakersfield Bills (155)
  8. TIE: Beerman49, Hopstain (154)
  9. Little Guy (152)
  10. TIE: Fort Braggers, Pour Curator (151)

Congratulations to Lucas (a.k.a. nighthops). He took an early lead and never let go.

This was the first year they kept the picks going through the playoffs. It looks like next year, we’ll be able to assign more points for correct playoff picks which could keep thinks lively down to the end. I’m thinking it would make sense for Wildcard week to be worth 2, then 3, then 4 and finally 5 (or more?) for picking the Super Bowl winner.

Survivor League

It took 16 weeks before a winner emerged. In fact, two of the remaining three were both knocked out that week — GreenMachina-WMA and Hopstain. That allowed DOZEer to become the winner, having only one miss for the entire season.

Congratulations to Paul (a.k.a. DOZEer) for the being the lone survivor.

Thanks to everybody who played. See you next year.

Filed Under: Just For Fun, News, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Awards, Football, Sports

Wisconsin Food Pyramid

February 6, 2011 By Jay Brooks

nfl-gb
I imagine the “Wisconsin Food Pyramid” was originally meant to be derogatory, but what could be a better meal for a football game than sausages (cooked in beer), cheese and beer? That’s what I’m having at my Super Bowl party, along with chips, pretzels and more cheese. And Sean Paxton, the Homebrew Chef, has promised to bring Shepherd’s Pie. Yum. Go Packers!

wis-food-pyramid

Filed Under: Food & Beer, Just For Fun Tagged With: Food, Football, Humor, Sports, Wisconsin

ABI To Include Stella Artois In Super Bowl Ads

January 21, 2011 By Jay Brooks

stella-artois
Anheuser-Busch traditionally pulls out all the tops for the Super Bowl, one of the most-watched television events of the year, especially for their core demographic. And that looks to be true for this year’s game, as well. But according to a report from Advertising Age yesterday, they’ll be trying something new this year.

The biggest overall change is that “instead of running nine ads for a total of five minutes, as it did last year, A-B will air five ads that run over three-and-a-half minutes.” The ads themselves will be similar to past efforts. But 2011 will mark the first time they’ve deviated from their core brands of Budweiser and Bud Light. One of their spots, a 60-second ad, will be for the uninspired Belgian lager Stella Artois under the banner of a new campaign, “She is a thing of beauty.”

I’m fairly certain this isn’t the ad they’ll be running, but this one was supposedly directed by Wes Anderson and Sophia Coppola.

Despite the Marin Institute’s incessant complaining about alcohol advertising during the Super Bowl — oh, the horror, why won’t anyone think of the kiddies? — of the 28 planned advertisers, only one is an alcohol producer, Anheuser-Busch InBev. So not only are they misplaced about who watches the Super Bowl, but seeing as a mere 3.5% — exactly one — of the advertisers are alcohol producers it hardly seems worth all the hue and cry they’ve raised. Of the 3-4 hours of the game, just 3-1/2 minutes are taken up by beer ads, representing less than 2% to under 1.5%, depending on how long the game ultimately runs. Even at that, it assumes anyone watching would be glued the set the entire time, a dubious proposition at best, especially applied to children. But the Marin Institute won’t be happy until they’ve “freed the bowl” from even those three and half minutes.

Personally, I’m looking forward to this year’s Super Bowl, especially if my beloved Packers manage to win on Sunday. It’s been more then a decade since I’ve actually cared about who wins the game, it would sure be nice to have someone to root for this year.

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Editorial, News Tagged With: Advertising, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Big Brewers, Sports

Who Is The Super Bowl For?

November 15, 2010 By Jay Brooks

super-bowl-2011
This season’s Super Bowl is still three months away and we’re only half way through the 2010/11 NFL football season. This next Super Bowl at North Texas Stadium, the new Dallas Cowboy’s place, will be played on February 6, 2011.

super-bowl-xlv

But already I’ve received three e-mails from the Marin Institute with their now annual screed about saving the Super Bowl from beer advertising, known as Free the Bowl. It’s of the “it’s for the kids” variety of complaint, a favorite of anti-alcohol groups. Trying to restrict alcohol advertising began almost immediately after the repeal of Prohibition. Since keeping alcohol illegal proved unreasonable and counter-productive for society, temperance groups instead turned to other ways to limit access to it, and advertising codes proved an effective target, one that continues through today.

free-the-bowl

I realize that the Super Bowl is the chosen target because it’s such a big event, being one of the most watched sports events all year in the U.S. But I can’t help but ask, exactly who is the Super Bowl for? Is it a children’s event? No. Is it a family event? Maybe, but it’s not exactly Thanksgiving or Christmas. I can’t help but think that it’s an adult event where, like most things that occur in our society, some parents exercise the judgment to allow their kids to watch, too, like a PG movie. But let’s look at exactly who the audience is.

Last year, according to Nielsen, an estimated 151.6 million people watched the championship football game. The Marin Institute claims 30 million of those people were underage. I don’t know where they got that figure — perhaps they made it up — but even assuming it’s correct that means the underage audience is around 20%. That also means that the vast majority of the Super Bowl’s audience is adults, just over 80%. And that’s why I believe the Super Bowl is an adult event. Adults who are allowed to drink alcohol. The fact that many adults also let their kids watch the game with them should not turn the Super Bowl into “kid’s programming.” After all, any parent who doesn’t want to subject their kids to beer advertising has a very simple option available to them: they can turn off the game. No one is forcing them to watch or is forcing them to allow their kids to watch.

One more word about the 30 million underage viewers figure. I can only assume that’s all underage viewers, kids aged 0-20. Of those, how many are even paying attention? Certainly not the babies, but when does the so-called critical age begin? My kids are 6 and 9 and definitely do respond to advertising, but only to things they’re interested in already. When a new toy is advertised, the ad has their rapt attention. When it’s something they don’t care about — such as beer — they pay it no mind whatsoever and turn their attention elsewhere.

Assuming the kids’ ages are evenly spaced, that would mean if we assume it’s the kids over 10 and under 21 that are the ones supposedly “at risk” from — gasp — seeing a television commercial, then only 15 million kids are the ones the Marin Institute are concerned about. That’s 10% or just 1 in 10. That would mean 90% of the audience is effectively adult.

But all that speculation aside, who actually watches the Super Bowl? Is it kids? No, actually, it’s not. According to Nielsen research data, the younger you are, the less likely you are to actually tune in to the Super Bowl.

nielsen-sb-age-2010
According to Nielsen, “[a] look at age/gender demographics showed that viewers of both genders exhibited a similar viewing arc: generally, the older the viewer, the more likely they tuned into the game.”

So kids are actually less likely to watch the Super Bowl than adults, making all this fear-mongering hoopla about kids and the Super Bowl even less truthful and more shameless propaganda. All three of the Marin Institute’s e-mails were to raise money from their supporters. Each included pleas that they needed money to fight the scourge of beer ads during the Super Bowl using such propaganda slogans as listed below, so let’s look at those.

“Football & Beer are not the same thing”

Did anybody say they were? What does that even mean? But that’s followed up with:

“Anheuser-Busch InBev wants kids to think so”

Really, they do? What on earth makes them think that? I should also mention that the graphics in the e-mail show pictures taken from the “Bud Bowl,” the stop-motion ads that Anheuser-Busch ran during the Super Bowl beginning in 1989 that showed two teams of beer bottles wearing football helmets and playing their own bowl game. So perhaps that’s the confusion. Unlike my own children, perhaps they’re unable to tell the difference between animation and reality. This is a tactic that just infuriates me. They seem to suggest that because it’s animated — or fun — that it’s meant to appeal to only children. You hear this same argument when beer labels have Santa Claus on them, as if cartoons and Santa Claus belong exclusively to the province of childhood. But since the last Bud Bowl took place in 1997 — thirteen years ago (14 by the time of the next Super Bowl) — it seems pretty far fetched to use an example that’s over a decade old and no longer even used to try to make their point.

“Football & Beer are a dangerous combination”

I would think playing football while drinking is a bad idea, but watching it? Oh, but wait for the punchline.

“Anheuser-Busch InBev wants kids to think it’s cool to drink when we know that Beer Kills Kids”

Oh, it’s because ABI is trying to make kids think it’s cool to drink beer. Nonsense. 80%, and more like 90%, of the Super Bowl audience is of legal drinking age. That’s the audience for the ads. If anybody, that’s who ABI wants to convince that drinking Bud is cool. Besides the fact that the underage kids can’t buy their products legally, why would any company spend the millions of dollars it costs to get an ad on during the Super Bowl to advertise to 10% of the audience watching? Simple answer; they wouldn’t.

And the phrase “Beer Kills Kids” is needlessly alarmist and at its core, untrue. It makes it sound like beer is a toxic poison. Do some children die because they drank too much alcohol? Of course, but more often it happens because of doing something stupid afterward while still intoxicated, like driving or being in a fraternity hazing. Beer didn’t do them in like they were drinking anti-freeze. It’s exactly the same as with adults, though we hope more adults are capable of behaving more maturely than our youth. But the reality is, for children and adults, that some people are mature enough to drink responsibly and some are not. Nothing magical happens when a person turns 21. I drank more responsibly at age 18 than my stepfather did at 51, my age now.

Worse still, the phrase makes it sound like they’re calling every person who makes or sells beer a murderer. I find that more than a little insulting.

“Americans Love Football…Why Push The Beer?”

This may be the single stupidest rhetorical question ever asked. Check the sales figures, Americans love beer, too. Countless adults like to watch sports and enjoy a beer at the same time. It’s relaxing, it’s enjoyable, it enhances the experience. I do it, don’t you? Don’t most people you know?

Hmm, let’s see. The Super Bowl is the most watched annual sports event in America and the audience is 80-90% adults, and even skews more male. Why would any company that makes a product aimed at almost that exact same demographic want to advertise during the game? Say it with me — “opportunity.” Any company that can afford it, should be advertising during the Super Bowl. To not do so would practically run counter to their corporate charter. And it’s that same opportunity to reach lots of people that the Marin Institute is cynically exploiting to raise money and stir up yet more unwarranted criticism of the beer industry.

The reality is I’m no great fan of the television advertising by the big beer companies, foreign and domestic, but not for the reasons that anti-alcohol groups don’t like it. The way in which beer has been advertised for decades has done a lot of damage over the years to people’s perception of what exactly beer is and can be. They’ve treated beer like an interchangeable commodity that has to be heavily advertised and marketed to sell, because at that level most beer is pretty similar and the differences all come down to how it’s marketed. That has also made it harder for the craft beer industry to be successful, because of how much re-edumacation has been necessary to essentially retrain people about beer’s diversity and sophistication. To this day, when many people say “I don’t like beer” invariably it’s because they view it as that one thing that big beer has convinced them is all that beer is.

But to suggest that those ads can’t run during the Super Bowl just because I’m going to let my children watch the game, too, is to me personally the height of absurdity. If nothing else, it’s a teachable moment for parents. Drinking responsibly with your children is perhaps the best way to show them that drinking alcohol is not to be feared, but can be done safely, enjoyably and in moderation. My wife and I teach that lesson every single day in our household, often while watching television with our kids. As a result, they see untold numbers of commercials for products aimed at adults, both watching sports and other programming. Some are for beer, most are not. But they all elicit a conversation about what they see, allowing us to shape how they respond to and think about the commercials they view. Isn’t that what parenting is all about: engaging your kids? Talking to them about how the world works, what’s in it and how they can deal with it is what we do every day? Why should Super Bowl Sunday be any different?

Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Editorial, Politics & Law Tagged With: Football, Sports

ABI Suing Baseball Over Exclusive Beer Rights

November 12, 2010 By Jay Brooks

baseball
Today in U.S. District Court, for the Southern District of New York, Anheuser-Busch InBev filed a lawsuit asking for a declaratory judgment against Major League Baseball. In “Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. Major League Baseball Properties, Inc.,” ABI alleges that MLB “reneged on a renewal of its beer sponsorship rights this year and demanded ‘exponentially higher’ fees.” Back in April of this year, ABI believed it had reached a deal to renew its long-standing status (over 30 years) as the “official beer of baseball,” but apparently the baseball league tried to renegotiate the deal “due to ‘a change in marketplace dynamics,’ according to the lawsuit.” Naturally, MLB was seeking to increase the amount of money they would receive from ABI and also wanted to negotiate with rival beer companies for the same rights. The lawsuit asks the court to enforce the April deal and further prevent “MLBP from negotiating with any other brewers for sponsorship rights. The lawsuit doesn’t request money damages.” Baseball’s position is that the April deal was not binding and that they could “offer sponsorship rights to Anheuser[-Busch]’s competitors.” In addition to sponsoring the league as a whole, Anheuser-Busch also sponsors 26 of the total of thirty individual baseball teams in MLB.

The story has already been picked up by Bloomberg, Reuters, the St. Louis Business Journal and the Wall Street Journal.

Filed Under: Breweries, News, Politics & Law Tagged With: Anheuser-Busch InBev, Baseball, Big Brewers, Law, Sports

Beer In Ads #233: Stroh’s Beer Salutes The World Champions

November 1, 2010 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
With the World Series ending in a Giants victory tonight, this will be the last baseball ad, at least for now. It’s for Stroh’s Beer and celebrates the Detroit Tigers winning the World Series in 1968 (though the ad ran the following year, in 1969).

Strohs-1969-tigers-baseball

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

The World Series At 21st Amendment

October 31, 2010 By Jay Brooks

21st-amend-sm
In an effort to help the Giants win for the last win in Game 2 — and being superstitious — I met an old friend of mine from Pennsylvania (actually we were in kindergarten together, making him my oldest friend) who was in town on business Thursday. We met at the 21st Amendment Brewery to watch the game. Hop Crisis, 21 A’s Imperial IPA was tasting fine, as was their regular IPA. I also had one of Rodger Davis’ IPAs from Drake’s (I was in a hoppy mood).

P1010612
From the moment I got there, I knew we would win, because karma was with me. First of all, I found a parking space directly across the street from 21st Amendment and then not only was co-owner Shaun O’Sullivan there with a seat for me, but he was wearing one of my logo shirts! Thanks Shaun!

P1010613
My friend Jim, from Shillington, PA, though he now lives in upstate New York. That’s 21A sales manager Lloyd Knight’s infamous orange vest I’m sporting.

P1010617
Since we were just a few blocks from the stadium where the game was being played, at the 7th inning stretch we walked down to the ballpark just to drink in the atmosphere.

P1010619
Even McCovery Cove was packed with boats.

P1010625
There were tons of people hanging out around the ballpark, and there was an electric vibe in the air. Very cool. I hope this helps recreates that atmosphere tonight! Go Giants!

Filed Under: Breweries, Just For Fun, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Baseball, California, Personal, San Francisco, Sports

Beer In Ads #231: Leo Durocher For Rheingold

October 31, 2010 By Jay Brooks

ad-billboard
With the World Series and baseball ads plus Halloween this weekend, I’m doubling up on ads so I can highlight both baseball and Halloween-themed ones. Today’s baseball ad is from 1942 and features baseball legend Leo Durocher, when he was a manager for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Durocher is saying that “My beer is Rheingold — the DRY beer!”

Rheingold-1942-leo-durocher

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

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