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Beer snob sues MillerCoors for making Blue Moon

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by old_tony, May 6, 2015.

  1. steveu

    steveu Well-Known Member

    I have to laugh. The beer snobs who are trying to push the craft craze are trying to say "no one is drinking so-and-so anymore", almost trying to shame you because you like one of the established brands. (Give me a cold Budweiser any day of the week.)

    The last I checked, yes... sales of the big brands were down, but a crapload of people are still drinking them. :)
     
    expendable likes this.
  2. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Well-Known Member

    Who said that "no one is drinking so-and-so anymore"?
     
  3. steveu

    steveu Well-Known Member

  4. old_tony

    old_tony Well-Known Member

    I guess the question I really want to ask based on 11 pages of this thread is this:

    Why can't a beer brewed by one of the big breweries -- even if it's made in very small batches and not mass produced -- ever be considered a craft beer? I would suspect the big breweries employ a lot of people who know an awful lot about brewing beer.
     
  5. doctorquant

    doctorquant Well-Known Member

    steveu and LongTimeListener like this.
  6. LongTimeListener

    LongTimeListener Well-Known Member

    The Atlantic writer doesn't know anyone who drinks it. So that counts.
     
  7. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Well-Known Member

    It's just an arbitrary term that the industry uses to designate where a beer comes from, I think.

    Beer geeks would consider, for example, Goose Island Bourbon County Stout, though made by InBev, to be a "craft beer."
     
  8. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Well-Known Member

    I'm just a simple caveman, but I think that the writers of those articles was using hyperbole.
     
  9. old_tony

    old_tony Well-Known Member

    Another thing I liked in that article was the stuff about Genuine Draft. It's simply Miller High Life, but cold-filtered instead of pasteurized for the bottling process. So if you go into a bar and they have both MGD and High Life on tap, they're serving exactly the same product under two different names. MGD is High Life.
     
  10. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Well-Known Member

    Huge breaking news flash: Americans are susceptible to marketing.
     
  11. steveu

    steveu Well-Known Member

    THIS. Exactly.

    They try to say millennials don't drink their dad's or grandpa's beer. Funny. They're the ones that made Pabst a household name again.
     
  12. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Well-Known Member

    But the beers I'm seeing on that list aren't the bygone brands. They are brands from the '90s and '00s.
     
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