Craft Brewer Blasts Budweiser Rebrand as ‘Un-American’

Back in May, Budweiser announced it would be temporarily rebranding cans of its American style adjunct lager, with the word “America” replacing the name brand for a limited time this summer as part of its “America is in Your Hands” campaign. Like the rice-infused yellow swill itself, the decision left a bad taste in the mouths of a lot of beer drinkers.

After pondering the subject for weeks, Will McCameron, president and co-owner of Brewery 85 in South Carolina, decided to say something, penning a critical response for craft beer blog Brew Studs. “Frankly, Budweiser calling itself ‘America’ is the most un-American thing I’ve observed in quite a while,” he wrote. 

That’s because the brand’s parent company, A-B InBev, is a a Belgian-Brazilian multinational corporation headquartered in Belgium. So while a good portion of Budweiser is still brewed in various locations across the country — most notably St. Louis, Missouri — there’s an undeniable hypocrisy, he argued, in labeling your beverage “America” but refusing to pay a fair share of American taxes. One could easily argue, as well, that many of A-B InBev’s business practices in regards to distributors seem to reject the American idea of fair, open competition. After laying out an overview of his arguments, he tied the issue to economic ideas brought up by the current election cycle, concluding “…don’t come to me bitching about the state of the American economy with a can of Bud in your hand.”

He did concede, however, that those most effectively targeted by Budweiser’s “America” stunt are also those least likely to know or care about the brand’s open hypocrisy — in his words, those who “either don’t want to pay a premium price for beer, aren’t concerned with taste, or don’t care how and where their beer is made.”

Of course, this isn’t the first time in recent years that Budweiser has angered the craft beer community while its parent company continues to gobble up larger craft breweries and attempt to confuse less knowledgeable consumers with faux-craft brands like Shock Top.

The 2015 Anomaly Super Bowl spot “Brewed the Hard Way created by agency Anomaly, not- so-subtly mocked craft beer while Bud proclaimed itself “Proudly a macro beer.” It was met with expected vitriol from a community of brewers who actually do brew the hard way, some of whom released a video of their own parodying the ad. For this year’s Super Bowl, Anomaly and the brand released a slightly toned-down follow up.

McCameron’s piece highlights the downside to Budweiser’s effort. One could argue that not many people who actually care about the beer they’re drinking would reach for a Budweiser by any name. But then, is the change attracting a significant number of new customers?

It’s even more difficult to know whether there are drinkers in the middle ground who may have reached for the watery brew in a pinch or to save money this summer but instead will opt for something else after being turned off by the hypocritical appeal to blind patriotism.

Infographic: Here's Just How Much Crappy Beer Americans Are Drinking

Sure, we Americans drink a whole lot of light beer, but do you realize just how much?

The infographic below from the team at alcohol-fueled site VinePair shows the staggering scope of mainstream beer sales—especially Bud Light, which tallies $3 billion more in sales than its closest competitor, Coors Light.

The data, via IRI and Beer Advocate, are from 2013 but likely still quite accurate. Yuengling stands alone as the only privately owned craft beer in the Top 20, and VinePair notes that smaller brewers make up just 15 percent of sales. (Oh, and the site has another graphic suggesting microbrewed upgrades for the light beer lovers among you.)

If nothing else, the chart highlights the silliness of Budweiser’s Super Bowl ad positioning craft beer as some sort of anti-American hipster insurgency. Anheuser-Busch seems to be doing just fine without having to spend millions in ad dollars to crush the craft beer movement.

 



Anomaly Attacks Craft Beer, Brings Back Old Tagline for Bud

Budweiser ran two ads for its flagship brand during the Super Bowl last night. The first was soft and cuddly, the much anticipated sequel to last year’s “Puppy Love” spot, “Lost Dog.” For the second, “Brewed The Hard Way,” also created by agency Anomaly, the brand went into attack mode.

The ad proclaims Budweiser to be “Proudly A Macro Beer” which is isn’t made to be “fussed over” but for a “crisp, smooth finish” before going on to attack craft breweries. Oddly enough, Budweiser seems to want to have it both ways as the ad celebrates the beer’s beechwood aging, before stating, “Let them drink their pumpkin peach ale, we’ll be brewing us some golden suds.”

It’s a bit odd that A-B InBev would take this route, a little over a week after purchasing Seattle craft brewery Elysian, known for its annual pumpkin beer festival (following a string of similar purchases including Blue Point, Goose Island and Redhook). Of course, most viewers will be unaware of that piece of hypocrisy, but the ad retains an air of desperation. It concludes by re-introducing the classic tagline, “This Bud’s For You,” which will anchor a new campaign for the brand, replacing “Grab Some Buds.”

While Budweiser is clearly nostalgic for the days when it wasn’t losing ground to a host of competitors with superior products, Budweiser Vice President Brian Perkins told AdAge that this is not a retro campaign. “‘This Bud’s For You’ was a very powerful tagline at one time and it’s still there in the psyche of American beer culture,” he said. “We can make millions of these per day. But this one’s for you and it’s the same quality standard and the same attention to detail as everything else.”

Budweiser Unveils Anomaly’s ‘Puppy Love’ Sequel, ‘Lost Dog’

Budweiser has unveiled its much-anticipated “Lost Dog” ad from Anomaly, a sequel to last year’s immensely popular “Puppy Love” (itself something of a follow-up to 2013’s “Brotherhood”).

The 60-second spot delivers much of the same puppy-fueled cuteness as its predecessor. In “Lost Dog” the puppy from “Puppy Love” gets lost after jumping into the back of a truck. His owner —  the horse trainer from “Puppy Love” and “Brotherhood,” played by actor Don Jeanes — puts up signs all over town and the Clydesdales seem distraught. When the dog finds his way back home, he also finds himself in danger, but the Clydesdales (of course) come to the rescue.

While it may not have the same impact as its predecessor, “Lost Dog” is sure to be a crowd-pleaser all the same. It’s well shot by director Jake Scott, who was also behind last year’s effort, and delivers a heart-tugging (if a bit contrived) narrative. The musical choice — a downtempo and melancholy cover of The Proclaimers’ “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)” by Sleeping At Last — is an odd one, but somehow it works. And did we mention cute puppies interacting with horses? According to Budweiser, eight puppies were used for the filming of the ad, all 11-12 ½ weeks old when “Lost Dog” was filmed in early December.

Budweiser Unleashes Its 'Lost Dog' Super Bowl Ad, Hoping to Catch Lightning Twice

Sequels are tough. For every Godfather Part II, there’s a Godfather Part III. But Budweiser and Anomaly had such a big hit with “Puppy Love” on last year’s Super Bowl, they couldn’t resist going back to the well for another look at the “Best Buds”—the Clydesdales and their favorite golden Lab.

And so here it is: “Lost Dog.” Like last year’s ad, it was directed by RSA’s Jake Scott. We won’t spoil the plot, such as it is—the title tells you most of what you need to know. The Clydesdales, of course, come to the rescue of the wayward puppy, whom you’ll remember from the first ad has a tendency to roam and isn’t too concerned for his own safety.

Once again, music plays a key role here. This time we get a reworked version of “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)” by the Proclaimers, performed by Sleeping At Last. It’s a slow, acoustic version—more downbeat and poignant-sounding than last year’s choice, which was “Let Her Go” by Passenger. (Last year’s ad was itself a kind of sequel to 2013’s “Brotherhood,” featuring a baby Clydesdale and the same trainer from “Puppy Love” and “Lost Dog.” “Brotherhood” was set to Fleetwood Mac’s classic hit “Landslide.”)

“Lost Dog” is nicely produced, and will be well liked. But “Puppy Love” was a richer, more engaging story—that spot’s subtle parallels between the puppy/Clydesdale and the horse trainer/puppy adoption owner built a real connection over 60 seconds. This spot leans more on simple cuteness. It’s a decent sequel—but perhaps not a world-beating one.

Anheuser-Busch sent over these facts about “Lost Dog”:
• Eight puppies—seven females and one male—are featured in the spot, all of which were just 11-12 ½ weeks old at the time of filming.
• Seven Budweiser Clydesdales underwent training for three months to fine-tune their skills for the ad.
• It was shot at a ranch outside Santa Barbara, Calif., in early December.
• Actor Don Jeanes reprises his role as Budweiser Clydesdale trainer for a third time. Don is originally from Houston and now lives in Los Angeles.



This Heartbreaking Puppy GIF Is the Perfect Teaser for Budweiser's Super Bowl Ad

Budweiser pretty much won the Super Bowl, advertising-wise, with last year’s “Puppy Love,” a success the brewer hopes to reclaim with this year’s sequel.

“Lost Dog” continues the story of last year’s Clydesdale-obsessed pup, and Anheuser-Busch today released several images and even a few animated GIFs to tease the gameday ad.

“In the spot, the Budweiser Clydesdales will tell an emotional story and help a puppy who has lost his way learn the true meaning of friendship,” Anheuser-Busch says in a news release. 

(We sincerely hope they mean the horses will literally tell the story, with actual neighs and whinnies and flapping horse-lip sounds, but sadly this seems unlikely.)

Our favorite teaser is, of course, the shivering puppy shown above, which perfectly illustrates just how adroitly Budweiser will be playing with America’s emotions on Super Bowl Sunday. I mean, just look at him, the poor guy. Golly I hope it ends well for the trembling little scamp.

Here are a few more GIFs and pics from the spot, which is sure to be a fan favorite:

For more news about the brands and stars preparing buzzworthy spots, be sure to check Adweek’s up-to-the-minute Super Bowl Ad Tracker. 



Budweiser lidera mais uma vez o top 10 do Super Bowl AdMeter

Se alguém ainda tinha dúvidas de que a Budweiser levaria, mais uma vez, a liderança do Super Bowl AdMeter, realizado pelo USA Today, elas acabaram. Puppy Love, o fofíssimo comercial criado pela Anomaly e estrelado por um cãozinho e os cavalos Clydesdale, ficou em primeiro lugar no top 10, repetindo o feito de Brotherhood no ano passado. Foram 57 comerciais exibidos no jogo de ontem, três a mais do que em 2013.

Foi a consagração total da marca e da agência, mas também serviu para mostrar que é possível contar boas histórias sem precisar complicar, emocionar, sem ser piegas. Basicamente, o que a gente espera do maior embate do mercado publicitário: que realmente sejam os melhores entre os melhores.

Outro filme da Budweiser, Hero’s Welcome, que mostra uma cidade recepcionando um soldado que está voltando para casa, ficou em terceiro lugar.

Doritos também se deu bem mais uma vez, e dois comerciais do Crash the Super Bowl ficaram em segundo e quarto lugares – Cowboy Kid e Time Machine, respectivamente. A invasão dos personagens dos anos 1980 no comercial da RadioShack garantiu à rede a quinta colocação, enquanto a Hyundai ficou em sexto com Sixth Sense.

A fofíssima Gracie, de Cheerios, Technology, da Microsoft, e Going All the Way, da Coca-Cola, ficaram com a sétima, oitava e nona posição. Soundcheck, da Pepsi, encerra o top 10.

top10

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We Ask an Expert: Why Do Dogs Dominate the Super Bowl?

With a cute canine-powered commercial from Budweiser chewing up its competition ahead of the big game, I decided to ask dog expert Brian Hare why a pooch is so often an adman's best friend.

"We share a lot of history with dogs that we do not share with any other animal," says Hare. "We've been evolving together for tens of thousands of years. This creates a special connection that is unique to our two species."

Judging from his pedigree, Hare should know. He serves as the director of the Canine Cognition Center at Duke University and co-founder of Dognition, a service dedicated to helping pet owners understand how their dogs think. (Ad shop McKinney helped create the service and its website.) With his wife, Vanessa Woods, Hare co-wrote The New York Times' best-seller The Genius of Dogs.

Sure, dogs are cute, but Hare believes there are deeper reasons that consumers respond so strongly, and in such positive ways, to ad campaigns that feature these animals.

"When you see a dog," he says, "it's not like looking at a tiger or a shark. It's like looking at someone familiar, someone you know and recognize. This sense of familiarity and comfort is very valuable to advertising."

That's certainly true for Budweiser's "Puppy Love," a 60-second commercial from Anomaly that tells the tale of a 10-week-old puppy who keeps escaping from an adoption center and cozying up to the Clydesdales on a nearby farm. The spot debuted on Wednesday's Today show, and in just over 30 hours online, "Puppy Love" is nearing 20 million YouTube views, making it by far the most-watched 2014 Super Bowl ad released prior to the game. It's also fetching massive feel-good buzz for the brand in social and mainstream media.

"This year's Budweiser commercial with the Clydesdales and puppy creates a very heartwarming story, pulling out all the stops and using our relationship with both of these animals very effectively," Hare says. "Seeing a dog brings up positive feelings that no other animal can to the same extent. Horses convey power and grace."

Overall, he says, the puppy-horse combo creates "incredibly strong positive feelings around the brand."

But, doggonnit, this year's Super Bowl is also big on bears, with ursine incursions into commercials for Chobani, Beats Music and CarMax. (Actually, CarMax displays some puppy power too, with a Web version of its "Slow Clap" game day spot retitled "Slow Bark" and recast with pooches.) Elsewhere in animal-related big game ads, a bull-ish bachelor horns in on Chevy's Silverado and Audi breeds the Doberhuahua, a freakish mutant mutt.

Hare maintains that no other critters meet advertiser needs quite like dogs (real ones, not CGI-created Doberman-Chihuahua hybrids on a rampage). He says the combination of cuteness and familiarity helps bowsers win every time, even over the cotton-tailed charms of bunnies. (Perhaps a surprising assertion from a guy named Hare.)

Should some animals be barred from ads entirely? "Depending on the ad's intent, snakes are something to be wary of." Hare's also no fan of primates in commercials "because the abuse of chimpanzees is well documented within the entertainment industry."

So what about the Internet's favorite animal, the cat?

The feline fiends inexplicably get a couple of showcases on Sunday They'll hiss and spit, I imagine, across Hallmark Channel's Kitten Bowl, and cough up hairballs on Animal Planet's Kitty Half-Time Show—which is just an intermission during the cable network's Puppy Bowl anyway.

According to Hare: "Even though cats have also been companion animals for thousands of years, our relationship with dogs seems to be particularly extraordinary in comparison. Research shows that dogs can read our gestures, feel our emotions and even sense changes in our health better than most cats."

There, science proves it: When it comes to ads at least, cats aren't up to scratch.


    



Budweiser Gives a Single Soldier a Hero’s Welcome Home in Super Bowl Spot

UPDATE: Anheuser-Busch released the 60-second spot on Friday morning, along with a longer five-minute documentary. See both videos below.

Anheuser-Busch InBev is certainly personalizing its Super Bowl commercials this year.

While its Bud Light work will depict an elaborate prank on a single unsuspecting person, the brewer revealed Tuesday that one of its two Budweiser spots will feature a single U.S. serviceman, Lt. Chuck Nadd, receiving a surprise hero's welcome home—from Bud and his entire town of Winter Park, Fla.

"The festivities included a full ticker tape parade, complete with marching bands, antique military vehicles, the VFW motorcycle club and an appearance by the world-famous Budweiser Clydesdales—all a complete shock to Lt. Chuck Nadd, who expected only to see his family waiting for him," the brewer says.

A-B says it was originally planned as a 30-second spot, but expanded to a :60—bringing the company's total time in Sunday broadcast to four full minutes. Its other spot, "Puppy Love," also a :60 and a sequel to last year's "Brotherhood" ad with the baby Clydesdale, is expected to hit YouTube on Wednesday morning.

The 60-second version:

The five-minute documentary:

See the teaser for "A Hero's Welcome" below.


    



Budweiser cria continuação para o comercial do Super Bowl de 2013

Dizem por aí que não se mexe em time que está ganhando, e é mais ou menos isso que a Budweiser resolveu fazer este ano, para o Super Bowl. No ano passado, o comercial Brotherhood conquistou o primeiro lugar no AdMeter contando a história de um criador de cavalos (Clydesdale, é claro) que é reconhecido por um deles em um desfile. Este ano, a agência Anomaly preparou uma continuação, Puppy Love, com um fofíssimo acréscimo ao elenco original.

Até o momento em que este post foi escrito, não havia sinal de teaser do filme que será exibido no domingo no YouTube, apenas um making of.

A marca de cervejas, que conta com um contrato de exclusividade para anunciar no Super Bowl, também mobilizou uma cidade inteira para recepcionar um soldado voltando para casa, em um outro comercial também da Anomaly.

Não podemos esquecer, ainda, a promessa de uma noite inesquecível feita pela Bud Light, em um filme cheio de participações especiais criado pela BBDO. A brincadeira está começando a ficar séria.

[ATUALIZAÇÃO] Prepare o lenço. Taí o comercial da Budweiser para o Super Bowl.

 

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Budweiser’s Tweet-Powered Knitting Bot Makes Holiday Sweaters for Designated Drivers

Bad news for grinches who still hate ugly holiday sweaters despite their newfound ironic popularity: Budweiser U.K. is adding some charm to the practice of capitalizing on them.

The beer brand has created a "Knitbot"—what it calls a tweet-powered knitting machine—to knit ugly sweaters for designated drivers. Every tweet tagged with the hashtag #jumpersfordes (jumper being British for sweater, and des being short for designated drivers) causes the machine to knit a little more. Everything about this—the grasping for relevance in social media, the uninvited participation in a tradition not directly connected to any brand—should be annoying. But it's hard to argue against celebrating non-drunk-drivers. People always get sloppy wasted during the holidays, after all, so why not foster good will—and look less mercenary—by focusing on the chaperones?

A quick Twitter search for #jumpersfordes returns only a few dozen mentions since Nov. 27. Now, the brand plans to hand out the sweaters to actual designated drivers via a contest on its Facebook page. Sure, it's not the first holiday campaign to tie in Twitter, knitting and wooly giveaways. But the campaign's real problem is that the sweaters aren't near ugly enough. Coke Zero's are way worse.

Via Design Taxi.


    

The 10 Most-Viral Ads of 2013 (So Far)

A forensic artist drawing a picture of a baby Clydesdale shipping its pants? Now that would be a viral commercial supernova.

Dove, Budweiser and Kmart all rank near the top of Unruly Media's just-released list of the most viral commercials of 2013 so far. Those brands are joined by Pepsi MAX, Evian, Ram Trucks and more, as Unruly celebrates the commercials with the most pass-along value through the first five months of the year. And as the numbers show, it's been a very strong year for online video, as compared to 2012.

See the full list at this link:

The 10 Most-Viral Ads of 2013 (So Far)

Unruly counts shares of videos across social media—a metric that is often at odds with sheer view counts. For example, Microsoft's "Child of the '90s" video for Internet Explorer would place fourth on this list in terms of YouTube views (with more than 34 million), but its approximately 630,000 shares are good for only ninth place.

Conversely, Kmart's "Ship My Pants" and Budweiser's "Brotherhood" spots both have fewer YouTube views than Evian's "Baby & Me" or Pepsi MAX's "Test Drive"—but they rank higher on this list because of better share rates. (The top video on the list, however, leads in both views and shares.)

We left a couple of videos from Unruly's list off this one—including the Biting Elbows music video and the Miami Heat's Harlem Shake clip—to focus on brand advertising rather than more entertainment-based content.

    

Budweiser’s ‘Buddy Cup’ Might Be the Dumbest High-Tech Brand Innovation Yet

All you've ever wanted is to make it easier for that too-friendly guy you were too polite to while drunk at that party to stalk you the next day. No? Budweiser Brazil has the solution for you, anyway. The Buddy Cup (not a sexual position) comes with a QR code and built-in chip that connects it to your Facebook profile, so every time you toast some rando at a Bud-sponsored event, they gain instant access to your Facebook life. Because the world needs another uselessly hi-tech advertising innovation, and because the bar for being Facebook friends these days needs to be even more like blinking at a stranger passing on the street. Brought to you by Agencia Africa, which was also responsible for Bud's less idiotic Will.i.am magazine ad that doubled as a vinyl record.

    

Budweiser apresenta copo com chip integrado ao Facebook

É oficial. Você não pode nem mais beber cerveja em paz. Se um comentário ou foto mal interpretada no Facebook eram capazes de lhe causar problemas, agora é preciso tomar cuidado com quem você brinda.

A Budweiser inventou o “Buddy Cup”, um copo com chip integrado à rede social do Mark. Basta brindar, e você e a outra pessoa automaticamente ficam amigos no Facebook.

Pode parecer só ideia pra videocase, mas a marca pretende colocar o copo em ação nos eventos que patrocina, incluindo shows, festivais e festas.

A criação é da Africa, com produção do estúdio Bolha.

Budweiser

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Budweiser’s New Bow-Tie Can Is Skinny in the Middle, Unlike Its Target Market

Budweiser is introducing a new type of can, which is strange, because most people felt the old cans were just fine and it was the beer that needed improvement. Kidding, of course—All Hail the King! Thanks to a recent technological breakthrough in aluminum manufacturing, the bow-tie shaped cans, bowing May 6, have skinny middles—the irony of which will not be lost on some of its consumers. Basically, the cans come slightly pre-crushed, which should save folks a few seconds between brews. The can crinkles by 10 degrees in the middle, which means it holds less beer than the classic cylinders (11.3 ounces vs. 12 ounces). But Bud will be selling the bow ties in eight-packs priced nearly the same, ounce for ounce, as traditional SKUs, so the initial outlay to get shit-faced doesn't really change. If the cans catch on, they'll become Bud's new standard, though I'm pretty sure package design alone can't set brands apart and give them distinct personalities—or can it? Via Co.Design.

    

Has Budweiser Been Watered Down? No Way, A-B Says in Defiant Newspaper Ads

Anheuser-Busch is tired of allegations that Budweiser might as well be sex in a canoe, and it placed ads this weekend in the Houston Chronicle and The New York Times in response to lawsuits claiming it's been watering down its product to save money. One ad shows a can of the branded water they give away during natural disasters, alongside the headline "They must have tested one of these." Clever, but it's still a clumsy sidestep of the issue at hand, which has nothing to do with A-B's laudable relief efforts, and now they look like they're trying to create a diversion. Thankfully, not everyone in the company is as eager to change the subject. Brewing and supply vp Peter Kraemer tells the press that "the claims against Anheuser-Busch are completely false, and these lawsuits are groundless."

Super Bowl 47: Budweiser aposta alto na emoção

Super Bowl 47

O primeiro comentário que li no YouTube sobre este comercial foi: “Eu acabei de chorar por um comercial de cerveja”. Logo em seguida, pensei: ufa, não foi só eu. A ideia da Anomaly para a participação da Budweiser no Super Bowl 47 está longe de ser nova, mas nem por isso deixa de ser eficiente. O filme mostra o nascimento de um pônei da raça Clydesdale e o carinho e amizade que o criador tem com ele, enquanto o bichinho cresce para se tornar um cavalo forte e ser levado embora pelo pessoal da Budweiser.

Três anos depois, ele fica sabendo pelo jornal que a Bud estará na cidade com seus cavalos, para um desfile. Ele resolve ir até lá, mas o cavalo está com um tapa-olhos e nem percebe a presença do velho amigo. A partir daí, são só lágrimas, tudo ao som de Landslide, do Fleetwood Mac.

Uma curiosidade é que a Bud vai “batizar” o pônei que aparece no filme com um nome escolhido a partir de sugestões enviadas via Twitter.

bud
bud1

 

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The Great Preparation: Anderson Silva e Steven Seagal em filme da Budweiser

Anderson Silva e Steven Seagal, juntos.

Depois de soltar um teaser e fazer um buzz na web, a Budweiser (patrocinadora do UFC, como vocês sabem) enfim lançou “The Great Preparation”: Filme estrelado pelo campeão Anderson Silva, com participação de Lyoto Machida, Bruce Buffer, Mr. Machida, Dan Miragliota e ele, o cara que te faria implorar por piedade, Steven Seagal.

Sempre achei que o Seagal era só um ator que gostava de artes marciais, mas pesquisando um pouco sobre a história do cara descobri que além de ser faixa preta em cinco artes marciais (e ter treinado muitos anos no Japão), ainda é especialista em armas, treinou agentes da CIA e deu umas aulas pro Anderson Silva (!!!).

E não só o filme, mas também os cartazes fazem referência a clássicos de ação do cinema. Confira abaixo. :)

A criação é da Africa.

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Budweiser cria anúncio-vinil com música do will.i.am

A música é robotizada como qualquer outra que o will.i.am já fez, mas o a maneira como ela chega na sua casa é diferente, em uma iniciativa da Budweiser.

Trata-se de um anúncio-vinil. Você coloca na vitrola – esse objeto da antiguidade – e toca como um disco.

A criação é da Africa.

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Budweiser prepara reality show para Copa do Mundo e pede a participação dos brasileiros

BudHouse Budweiser

Durante a Copa do Mundo 2010, a Budweiser quer levar um cidadão de cada país participante para morar em uma mesma casa. Trata-se da Bud House, uma espécie de reality show da marca que promete colocar 32 pessoas para acompanhar o evento na África do Sul, em luxuosas instalações e com todas as mordomias possíveis.

Há algumas semanas, a AdAge especulou que a Bud House seria como um Big Brother, mas os produtores alertam que não se trata de um programa com eliminação, e sim de uma experiência entre apaixonados por futebol torcendo juntos por seus países.

Qualquer pessoa, homem ou mulher, fluente em inglês e acima de 25 anos, pode se inscrever para entrar na casa e participar do projeto. O prazo termina em 12 de março.

Eu conversei com Michelle C., responsável pelo casting dessa campanha de Budweiser, que contou que a participação do Brasil nas inscrições são bem poucas até o momento, o que, nas palavras dela, “é inaceitável”, tendo em vista a força do país em uma Copa do Mundo. Então, se você quiser representar o Brasil, as chances são grandes.

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