
News Link • Business/ Commerce
Bud Light Goes Masculine In New Ad, Attempting To Un-Woke Itself After Trans Disaster
• https://www.zerohedge.com, by Tyler DurdenThe brewer's latest ad features Peyton Manning, Post Malone, and Shane Gillis drinking beers in a suburbia neighborhood during a cul-de-sac party—a stark deviation from its woke marketing with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, which nuked the brand after a nationwide uproar. Still, the brewer has not apologized.
Ahead of the most-watched sporting event in the country, the Super Bowl, Bud Light has published the new masculine ad on X.
"These beers are a metaphor for an invitation," Gillis said after he and Malone used leaf blowers to launch invitational beer cans to nearby neighbors.
Manning entered the picture as a partygoer and said, "This Cul-De-Sac is popping."
Todd Allen, SVP of Marketing for Bud Light, told People Magazine that the trio was chosen to star in the ad because they're masculine: "all undoubtedly deliver BMOC [Big Men on Cul-De-Sac] energy in their everyday lives."
What a seismic change from Bud Light in April 2023, featuring a man pretending to be a woman in a TikTok ad.
Despite the pivot into masculine advertising with a target audience of millennials in suburbia, Bud Light still faces mounting structural demand pressures after having lost the 'king of beers' title as consumers revolted and switched to other brands.
Here's a snippet from JPM's Celine Pannuti, Philip Spain, and others about lingering demand woes Bud Light faces:
ABI's US Beer & Beyond Beer (excluding Spirits-based RTDs) market share in 2024 declined 480bps to 31% compared with 2022, as the business was hit by share loss at Bud Light (following controversy on social media). The vast majority (85%) of the lost share has moved to Constellation +300bps (N, covered by Andrea Teixeira – latest view here) and Molson Coors +105bps (N, covered by Andrea Teixeira – latest view here) with small gains for other companies and some share losses also for Heineken and Boston Beer. By brand, the biggest winners from ABI's share losses have been Modelo (owned by Constellation), which is benefiting also from consumer preference for Mexican beer (+240bps, the majority of Constellation share gains), Coors (+90bps, the majority of share gains for Molson Coors,), Twisted Tea (+85bps, alcoholic iced tea owned by Boston Beer), Miller (+50bps, owned by Molson Coors) and Pacifico (+35bps, a Mexican beer owned by Constellation).