Hillary Clinton Spreads Rachel Maddow's Story of Ending Lunch Breaks for Child Workers
Poll Shows the Democrat Base Is Unmarried Women
Squatter in Detroit Explains How She's Put a Lot of Work and Money...
WUT? Days After Gutting Title IX, Biden Says Trump Has Taken Women’s Rights...
In an Example of a Complete Lack of Self Awareness, Chris Christie...
New York Magazine Profiles Will Stancil, 'One of Politics Twitter's Most Inescapable Power...
DEADLY DEI: UCLA Med School Docs Say 'Obesity' Is a Slur, Weight Loss...
Biden Simp Harry Sisson Says Biden's Ban on TikTok Will Hurt Black-Owned Businesses
Prosecutors in Trump’s New York Trial Prove Their Witness is a Lying 'Pecker'...
Rep. AOC Wants to Know Where Are the Journalists on the Mass Graves...
'Redacting Reality': WH Transcript Runs Cover After Joe 'Ron Burgundy' Biden's Teleprompte...
FOX News: President Biden Forgives Violinist's $250,000 Student Loan
Paging Dr. Freud: Biden's Slip of the Tongue Is the MOST Honest Thing...
Try Not to Roll Your Eyes at the United Nations' New Ally in...
NYU Protester Describes the Ordeal of Her Arrest, Assumes Cops Are White Supremacists

That Budweiser Super Bowl ad everyone is talking about is a LIE!

Remember that Budweiser Super Bowl ad we told you about earlier this week? You know, the one everyone is talking about because it tells the story of an immigrant coming to America and overcoming anti-immigrant sentiment but then creating the Anheuser Busch brewing company?

Advertisement

We asked at the time of our post “if the ad was even true?” Turns out, it’s not. From Slate:

Slate interviewed, William Knoedelseder — author of “Bitter Brew: The Rise and Fall of Anheuser-Busch and America’s Kings of Beer — who called the ad and “alternate view of the Adolphus Busch story” and “fanciful”:

What was your first impression of the ad?

It’s got wonderful production values, it’s very expensive and, I think, very effective—and mostly fiction. It’s an alternate view of the Adolphus Busch story. What’s true is, yeah, there was a guy named Adolphus Busch. He did land in New Orleans and come up the river to St. Louis, and there was a guy named Eberhard Anheuser that he became partners with. But the rest of it, as far as I know, is just fanciful. I particularly love the thing on the river where he’s on some sort of raft or a barge with the black guy, some sort of reference to a fella whose name we can’t say on the radio from Huck Finn. That, as far as I know, never happened. They’re just playing with another myth of the Mississippi. Ironically, that’s what Adolphus would do. He used the Battle of Little Big Horn to sell Anheuser-Busch. No one had ever done that before.

Advertisement

So not only is the Super Bowl ruining the ads with political statements, they’re fake, too. If we can’t trust beer companies to be honest, who can we trust?

Fake news meets fake ads:

https://twitter.com/ConservEsq/status/828357326285504516

And let’s call it was it is: a “lie”:

***

Related:

Is Budweiser trolling President Trump with its 2017 Super Bowl ad?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement