Every time I start paying attention to this blog, something comes along to annihilate it. Since my last post MFI went bust, at a time when I’d paid them £6500 for a new kitchen that hadn’t yet been delivered, and now never will be. I had to buy a new kitchen from somewhere else, fight to get my money back from MFI via my credit card company, deal with the fact that said credit card company, after reassuring me they would follow up and resolve it, then took the £6500 from my bank account, thereby reducing me to penury just before Christmas, and cope with builders taking advantage of the situation to up their fees and reduce their service, all while having had to take a five day a week contract back in the greasy world of advertising to keep my head above water while all this was happening.
I’ve got a list of blog entries as long as my arm that I’ve been meaning to write, but don’t have time. But every now and then, one comes along that jumps to the head of the queue, and even though I’m up and at my desk after midnight writing a PowerPoint TM presentation on the future of an online media player for a meeting in nine hours’ time, with a good night’s sleep and a 75 minute commute between me and said presentation, I can’t resist commenting.From the press release:Newly formed brewing giant Anheuser-Busch InBev may look to sell off its Budweiser Stag Brewery as part of a restructuring progamme in the UK, analysts believe.The brewery, based in Mortlake, London, could face an uncertain future following confirmation by Anheuser-Busch (A-B) InBev that it is reviewing its UK operations.One analyst told just-drinks today (8 December) that InBev’s US$52bn buyout of A-B has left it with “significant over-capacity” in the UK.The only genuinely funny thing CAMRA’s Roger Protz has ever written (to my knowledge) is when he pointed out the Stag brewery – formerly the home of the reviled Red Barrel, subsequently colonised by Bud – was in Mortlake, AKA ‘dead water’. I laughed out loud and was jealous he’d said it and not me. Personally, I’d rather drink my own piss than Budweiser, and I think most CAMRA members would share my views. But CAMRA also oppose British brewery closures on principle, and the Stag brewery has a long and honourable history…Rub your hands with glee and get ready for one of those moments usually only seen in sci-fi movies where the intelligent robot has two core directives: protect human life at all costs, and obey the human master, and the human master orders the robot to kill him…
Category: Uncategorised
Lovely Pub Hosts Festival of Lovely Beer This Weekend
The White Horse in Parson’s Green has long been famous as THE Mecca for the luvvies of the beer world, if that’s not too bizarre a concept (the idea of there being luvvies of the beer world, rather than them having a Mecca).
Why does this wanker hate pubs so much?
Positively my last post about Stella Artois before a self-imposed three month moratorium (unless they go and do something REALLY stupid)
My local corner shop stocks a decent range of beers but has no beer knowledge – they’re Muslim Turks who simply stock what sells and operate their business in response to the market. It’s the kind of place you go to on the way to a party, or on your way home when you’re tired and don’t have the energy to do a ‘proper’ shop.
Bemused beer bore wonders: is it me that’s stupid, or the pub landlord?
We all know what’s to blame for the fact that five pubs in Britain are closing down every day: the credit crunch, the smoking ban, the government and their cruel tax increase, the supermarkets and their evil low prices, the punter and their insistence on staying home.
Hurrah! A Decent Lager Ad Campaign!
Pilsner Urquell has a new poster campaign out – at Waterloo station the walkway between the Bakerloo and Jubilee lines is completely taken up by posters based on the theme that it’s the detail that matters.
Happy Hour Again
You must have seen the thing in the news the other day about the call to ban happy hours. There’s been quite a bit of debate about the fact that cut-price drinks are next in the firing line for the current gaggle of moral crusaders.
Is that the sound of nails being hammered into a coffin?
No, it’s the new TV ad for Stella Artois 4, the new 4% ABV addition to the Artois range of beers (not to be confused with Peeterman Artois, the, um, recent 4% ABV addition to the Artois range of beers).
I really, really don’t want this blog to turn into http://www.ihatestellaartois.com/ – that would be at least as boring for me as it would be for you. But they just keep doing things that make my jaw drop, and not in a good way.
When the ad came on my TV on Friday night I hadn’t seen it before or heard anything about it. Until the resolution where the brand is introduced, right at the end of the 40-second spot, I honestly believed I was watching a new ad for Lynx – the deodorant specifically targeted at teenage virgins who masturbate furiously to pictures of recent Big Brother contestants in Zoo and Nuts magazines.
Maybe this was intentional – a watered-down beer targeting the consumers of watered-down porn – but I doubt it.
Officially the ad has a James Bond theme. The campaign is set on the French Riviera. (Confusingly, while the entire dialogue is in French, the final bar call is for “une Stella Artois Four”, the number being the only English word used. Why?) While the plot may be Lynx-lite, the tone and feel are sub-Peroni: five years ago, Peroni was shamelessly stealing art-directional cues from Stella Artois. Now, too, that’s reversed.
One final thought: given that the whole launch of Stella Artois Four is aimed at helping Stella lose the ‘wifebeater’ tag, isn’t it a bit ill-judged that the whole plot is driven by the threat of physical violence meted out by one man to another who has been messing with his bird?
It’s fascinating watching the sheer velocity with which this brand is imploding.
Let’s have a heated debate!
I’ve done enough pontificating for a few days and wanted to try something different.
Most of the people who read this blog really seem to know their stuff, so let me ask you a question: what’s the next big thing in beer? What’s the next thing we’re excited about that has a real chance of going mainstream? Think about how Hoegaarden launched in the UK a decade ago: building slowly with little in the way of marketing hype, to the point where wheat beer is now an established sector in the beer market that doesn’t scare the mainstream drinker.
Things are very exciting just now -we’ve got more choice and variety in beer than ever before if you know where to look for it. Deus and Kasteel Cru have pegged out a ‘champagne beer’ niche that seems to have a lot more room in it. Innis & Gunn has blazed a trail leading wood-aged beers into the supermarket and we’ve seen an explosion of whisky-aged beers from Schiehallion, Orkney, Brew Dog, and now Fuller’s. Brew Dog’s Punk IPA and Thornbridge’s Jaipur show that British brewers can make big, American-style IPAs, and we’re getting more of the US beers readily available. And what’s happening in the States now? What’s creating a beery buzz over there?
Will 2009 be the year we see another big beer style go mainstream?
I may be using some of the answers to this for a commercial project for which I will be paid money. If this offends your sensibilities and you feel it contravenes the unwritten ethics of blogging I apologise. I’m making this clear so that if you object, you can choose to withhold comment. But if you don’t mind, I’d love to hear what you think and would hope that it would create an interesting thread!





















