TWTBWTW: Money, money, money

Pliny the Younger Economic Impact

Greetings from New Orleans, where I am much more focused on music (beginning today, beginning Thursday) than beer right now. So right to That Was The Beer Week That Was.

The birth of line culture
The link is to a transcript of the Taplines podcast, where links to the podcast are included. It is an interview with Russian River Brewing co-owner Natalie Cilruzo, talking about the phenomenon of Pliny the Younger. The graphic at the top illustrates the econonmic impact of the release of the Younger. It is a big deal, a success story about hospitality as much as beer.

“Our Windsor Brewery is what we call our new brewery. It’s our dream brewery. It’s really beautiful and we designed it from the ground up. We designed it for this release with the parking lot being oversized for the rest of the year. It’s virtually empty for the rest of the year. Not virtually, but rarely, do we half-fill the parking lot for the rest of the year. It’s huge. The whole front of the brewery has this giant sidewalk that snakes around the front of the brewery, which is designed for the Pliny the Younger line, to go around the whole front of the brewery. Unfortunately, sometimes the line goes all the way out to the sidewalk and then down the street which it did on Saturday. We have bathrooms. They’re on electronic locks and the bathrooms are designed to have an outdoor access that we keep open 24/7 during the Pliny the Younger release. There’s clean bathrooms that get cleaned every day that people can use if they’re here overnight or in the middle of the night or two o’clock in the morning, or whatever. This whole brewery on the hospitality side was designed for these two weeks and I can’t tell you how excited I was the first year that we released Pliny the Younger at both locations, so now we have it at our Santa Rosa location as well as the Windsor location.”

Questions provoked by High End layoffs
“If Stella can be made in breweries that make Budweiser, what’s to come for the much smaller brewers? It would seem inconceivable, but in theory Devils Backbone Vienna Lager could be brewed in other breweries, including those in Belgium.”

Read This Before Shopping for Your Bud Light Replacement Beer
Pair this one with the next. “Despite the passionate claims about its unique identity and its conservative political profile, the only value driving Bud Light, or any other consumer good available on a global scale, is the remorseless logic of shareholder value. That makes it hard to coherently express your politics with your beer preferences.”

If Companies Have Convictions, They Need to Stand By Them
Jeff Alworth writes, “Some years ago, I argued that it’s bad business for companies to take political positions. That was correct then, but it’s not anymore. The very act of reaching out to your own customers has become a political act. Now companies are going to have to define their values and own them, and when they find themselves under attack, be prepared to defend them. Depressingly, we customers are going to have to start paying attention to where our dollars are going in this whole long war.”

And once again I will quote something Pete Brown wrote in “Craft: An Argument.” That is, “(Craft) isn’t just about the things we make; it’s about the kind of people we are. And for this, we get to an unspoken assumption we may be reluctant to admit even to ourselves; we believe that makers and buyers of craft products are morally superior to other people.”

Small breweries that some call “craft” have benefited by what in unspoken; that they are the good guys. Recently, they’ve been asked to prove it. Many have. The rest? We’ll see what happens.

How Consolidation In the Middle Tier Is Impacting The Future of Craft Beer Brands
“As if growing craft beer producers didn’t have enough to contend with these days in the form of rising costs of goods, labor shortages, inflation, and the squeeze from alternative beverage choices in the marketplace, woes like wholesaler consolidation, unfair trade practices, and antiquated beverage alcohol regulations are making the middle tier the next big battleground for craft beer brands.”

On the importance of cask beer
Matthew Curtis has a question: “Instead of trying to modernize cask and turn it into something it very much isn’t, wouldn’t it be better to lean, hard, into its tradition?”

Thai beer fan fined for posting review
“Thailand is a country where it’s illegal for people to drink a beer and say it’s delicious.”