Tag: beer

  • Euro leaders offended by Vance should ‘have a beer with’ their people to understand concerns: US conservatives

    Euro leaders offended by Vance should ‘have a beer with’ their people to understand concerns: US conservatives

    European leaders upset by Vice President JD Vance’s recent remarks in Munich should consider listening to their own citizens’ concerns instead of worrying about fellow elites, say U.S. conservatives who attended a global conference in London.

    Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyo., and Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts spoke to a group of reporters after the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference in London on Tuesday evening GMT. The conference is intended to bring together those with a vision of citizen empowerment throughout the world and is associated with Canadian psychologist and media commentator Jordan Peterson.

    Vance had previously told the Bavarian confab of world leaders that “the threat that I worry the most about vis-à-vis Europe is not Russia; it’s not China. It’s not any other external actor – What I worry about is the threat from within the retreat of Europe from some of its most fundamental values, values shared with the United States of America.” 

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    Vance also criticized what he called “cavalier” and “shocking” fearmongering about a right-wing German party in the upcoming chancellor elections.

    “What JD Vance was saying to Munich just the other day was a recognition that it is not for our governments to control our lives and in order to make sure that we have the freedom and liberties that we need to order our own lives and make our own decisions,” Hageman said. 

    The Wyoming lawmaker, who unseated Liz Cheney in what was similarly seen as a populist win over the political establishment, spoke of what she called a “new hope” for global conservatism to prevail against “backsliding” governments that put in place onerous regulations instead of listening to the people.

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    Roberts, meanwhile, offered advice to world leaders like German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who expressed outrage at Vance’s speech – in which the vice president warned of such proverbial backsliding from the West’s “most fundamental values,” like free speech and government responsiveness to the populace.

    Roberts said the reaction appears limited to a “small number of very vocal European leaders like [Scholz] and unfortunately, is emblematic of what we’ve seen the last few years.”

    “[Scholz] and particularly [France’s Emmanuel Macron] and a couple of other leaders like to wag their finger at Americans and say we must do more to defend their interests when they themselves don’t make enough sacrifices to spend the requisite spending for defense as part of their annual budgets,” Roberts said.

    “And that’s the kind of commonsense revolution that [Vance and President Donald Trump] are bringing to both domestic politics and foreign policy.”

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    Referencing conversations he’s had while in London and at the conference, Roberts said he and Hageman are “translating” American conservative policies outlined by people like Vance to the Europeans – and they are being receptive.

    “The translation would be easier if more of these European leaders were more engaged in common sense,” he said.

    “Maybe having a beer with everyday Germans rather than spending so much time in Brussels (at the EU).”

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    Scholz had expressed outrage at Vance’s nod to the right-wing Alternativ für Deutschland (AfD) party in Berlin’s upcoming elections. The party, while aligning with some of the global right’s economic principles, also has what critics consider select callbacks to the Nazi Party, which was banned in Germany post-World War II.

    “Today’s democracies in Germany and Europe are founded on the historic awareness and realization that democracies can be destroyed by radical anti-democrats,” Scholz said this week.

    “And this is why we’ve created institutions that ensure that our democracies can defend themselves against their enemies and rules that do not restrict or limit freedom but protect it.”

  • Eagles GM Howie Roseman bleeds from forehead after being hit with beer can during Super Bowl parade

    Eagles GM Howie Roseman bleeds from forehead after being hit with beer can during Super Bowl parade

    Philadelphia Eagles general manager Howie Roseman was bleeding from his forehead during the team’s Super Bowl victory parade Friday.

    Photos show a wide gash on the general manager’s forehead after the incident. 

    However, it didn’t seem to stop him from partying. 

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    “I laughed at him a little bit when it happened,” Eagles player Josh Sweat told NBC Sports Philadelphia. “And I know he’s mad at me. … When I saw it, I knew what happened, and I couldn’t contain my laugh. … I did not throw the can at him. But, hey, that’s part of it. They’re throwing full cans and bottles.”

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    It was not clear who hurled the can that struck Roseman. 

    At the final destination of Friday’s parade, Roseman shouted to fans, “I bleed for this city!”

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    Roseman has been the Eagles’ general manager since 2010 and is largely credited as the architect of the team’s success since. Under Roseman, the franchise has reached three Super Bowls, winning two. 

    Under Roseman’s leadership, the Eagles have a 139-104 overall record and a 10-7 playoff record.

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  • More craft beer breweries are shutting down than opening up

    More craft beer breweries are shutting down than opening up

    For the first time, more craft beer breweries are shutting down than opening up.

    Breweries and taprooms are dealing with rising supply costs while demand for beer is slipping, according to the Brewers Association.

    Bart Watson is the president and chief executive officer of the Brewers Association. Watson said things got worse for many craft breweries during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “The pandemic obviously also had secondary ripples for the economy, for supply chains and it changed consumer patterns overall. We are seeing people certainly spend as much at bars and restaurants as they did before, but they are doing so in different ways – more to go and delivery.”

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    Coming off dry January, some brewery owners said they were hoping Super Bowl Sunday would kick up their sales. (Kennedy Hayes/ FOX News / Fox News)

    Last year, beer sales dropped 2% nationwide, and in Colorado, beer sales fell by over 3%, according to the Colorado Liquor Enforcement Division.

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    Even though Colorado has the fourth most breweries of any state, right behind Pennsylvania, New York, and California, it saw some of the highest number of closures last year, according to the National Brewer Association.

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    “Some of the most challenged regions are some of the most developed, like here in Colorado, the pacific northwest, the west coast in general,” Watson said.

    A Colorado brewery

    One brewery owner in Georgetown, Colorado said they are facing higher costs. (Kennedy Hayes/ FOX News / Fox News)

    Patrick Toland is a manager at Cabin Creek Brewing. Toland said they opened their brewery in May 2020. Cabin Creek is located in Georgetown, Colorado, which is a city about an hour west from Denver with just over 1,000 people.  

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    “The cost of raw materials-especially for the beer [and] the grain has increased. The shipping has massively increased,” Toland said. 

    Man enjoying a drink

    A patron at the brewery enjoys a drink. (Kennedy Hayes/ FOX News / Fox News)

    This February, Cabin Creek Brewing, became the sole brewery in Georgetown after a nearby brewery closed. Toland said he’s kept the doors open by raising prices and expanding the menu.

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    “A lot of big brands are aligning with trend setting on social media in terms of offering non-alcoholic or alcohol alternatives. We have had to do the same,” Toland said.

  • Anheuser-Busch CEO wants beer to be called ‘American’ made

    Anheuser-Busch CEO wants beer to be called ‘American’ made

    Anheuser-Busch is encouraging its distributors and partners to replace the term “domestic” with “American” when marketing beer, arguing that the term better reflects the industry’s identity. 

    In a Wednesday letter titled “A Call for American Beers,” CEO Brendan Whitworth expressed his dissatisfaction with the longstanding use of “domestic” to describe American-made beer, saying it shows up on bar menus, at beer stands, in grocery aisles and is used by syndicated data providers “too frequently.”

    Whitworth starts the letter with six words, “I don’t like the word ‘domestic.’”

    “I’m asking the Anheuser-Busch team and our wholesalers to make the change. Change the bar menus, change the venue boards, change the signs, change their reports, change their jargon, and insist upon American. I hope other American brewers and wholesalers will join us,” Whitworth also wrote.

    He is also calling on marketing and research firms such as Circana and Nielsen to do so as well.

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    While the word is not “necessarily an incorrect adjective to use,” Whitworth said. “It just doesn’t fully capture the spirit and passion that’s intrinsic to the American beer industry and its brands.”

    It also falls short of capturing “the pride we should all take in products made right here in this great country,” Whitworth continued.

    Anheuser-Busch CEO Brendan Whitworth started his letter to wholesale partners with six words, “I don’t like the word ‘domestic.’” (Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The move comes amid a patriotic push from the White House. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. Whitworth did not mention Trump’s executive order in his letter.

    Whitworth – who served in the Marines before joining the CIA – was named as the Anheuser-Busch chief executive in July 2021 and led the company through challenges associated with its controversial 2023 Bud Light marketing campaign featuring transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, which sparked backlash and a significant boycott by consumers and public figures. 

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    Whitworth tried moving beyond the controversy by launching a slew of patriotic or humorous marketing campaigns focused on the company’s broader role in American culture. Those also highlighted the workers responsible for making the company’s beer and its contributions to the economy and communities. 

    Anheuser-Busch Beer

    Anheuser-Busch CEO Brendan Whitworth expressed his dissatisfaction with the longstanding use of “domestic” to describe American-made beer. (Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    In the Wednesday letter, Whitworth underscored that American beers should better advertise that the product is made by “American hands.” 

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    “They are brewed by American workers who receive American wages. They rely on American farmers and on American raw material suppliers. They support American causes like the military and first responders,” he said. “They pay American taxes. And they exist because of decades of capital investments made in hundreds of local communities, right here across this great country.” 

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    Whitworth said that 99% of the beers that Anheuser-Busch sells in the U.S. are made in the country. Additionally, 99% of the ingredients the company uses come from American farmers. 

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    “Together, let’s leave ‘domestic’ in the rear-view mirrors of those good ol’ American pick-up trucks. Let’s all take more pride in our American beers,” Whitworth said in the letter.