Budweiser’s Super Bowl ad has the beer brand in hot water.
On Tuesday, Budweiser released its Super Bowl ad online. The 60-second commercial follows Anheuser-Busch co-founder Adolphus Busch’s journey to the US in the mid-1800s, highlighting Busch’s struggles and the prejudice the German immigrant encountered.
“You’re not wanted here, go back home!” one American yells at Busch as he arrives in New Orleans.
Budweiser has said the commercial was not intended to be a political statement. However, many people aren’t buying it after it aired at the Super Bowl.
“I drank your product for 30 years and I will no longer drink it you liberal s— heads,” reads one such comment on Budweiser’s Facebook page.
This Bud' s no longer for me. It is activist juice.
— Lynn Sellick-Lane (@LynnSellickLane) February 1, 2017
https://twitter.com/MetalMilitia74/status/826557464606830592
The Super Bowl commercial dropped at a time when immigration is an especially hot topic in America. In late January, President Donald Trump signed an executive order barring immigrants from seven majority-Muslim countries from entering the US for 90 days - a move that inspired protests across the country.
While Budweiser's ad was in the works long before Trump was inaugurated, some saw the timing of the commercial's release as a jab at the president's executive order.
https://twitter.com/KatieWagnerFox/status/826448926056312833https://twitter.com/lilojuicy/status/828163533707759616
More than 14 million people have watched Budweiser's ad online, fueling the #BoycottBudweiser and #BoycottBud hashtags.
#boycottBudweiser - Budweiser is a Belgium - Brazilian brewery which no doesn't reflects Americans. Drink Samuel Adams!
— Eric Thompson (ET) (@ETTalkShow) February 4, 2017
https://twitter.com/KevinLeeMorris/status/827943765620854784
As is often the case with threats of boycott, many people are promising to buy more Budweiser to make up for those who are protesting.
https://twitter.com/VonnegutTattoo/status/827562514342932481https://twitter.com/klbtweeter/status/828215743510671361
Ricardo Marques, the vice president of marketing at Anheuser-Busch InBev, said there's no correlation between the ad and today's political climate.
This isn't the first time Budweiser has been criticized for attempting to tap into the American spirit in advertising.
Last May, the brand announced its labels would simply read "America" for the summer. While the campaign inspired mixed reactions, Marques revealed in January that Budweiser would bring back "America" cans and bottles again in summer 2017.