I feel fairly certain if Anson Frericks and I were ever at the same bar, we would not be at the same table, and still I would hear every word and clink of bottles of his conversation. To his credit, the central story of "Last Call for Bud Light" is something worth shouting about. Fredericks describes the hostile takeover of Bud Light from AB InBev. America's most trusted beer, managed for 150 years by 5 generations of an entrepreneurial family was no more. A brazilian-beligum investor group bought them out, and Frericks provides his employee experience of the unfolding acquisition. It is a story of an American company bought out by foreign investors - who try to maintain a brand and image of integrity.
Unfortunately, "Last Call for Bud Light" falls into the trap of extreme overreach. In the chapter "Welcome to Belgium", Frericks walks us his perspective on macroeconomic challenges, ping-ponging from challenges in the real-estate market to big tech product launches. The punchy spartan writing style works when the topic is close to his work experience, but comes off as naive and even childish when wading into areas outside Anheuser-Busch. Statements like "Even in 2010, Apple was a vibe. Amazon, by contrast, was a bookstore on a screen" (p.53). There are some wild sentences poking fun at their advertisement campaigns with ambigious gendered actors. Dilly dilly indeed.
The book really loses steam in the second half - part of which may be because Frerick's employment has switches from Anheuser-Busch to his launched private equity firm "Strive". There is less story to share so he pads the book with politics - we are never far from Anson's conservatively-coded opinions. We get introduced to his overriding theme - corporate America has shifted from shareholder capitalism to stakeholder capitalism. DEI, ESG, LGBTIA+ and any other acronymns that raise the blood of a red-blooded American are derided and seen as oppositions to meritocracy. Throw in some talk for Kid Rock, Vivek Ramaswamy, and we are halfway to a Fox News panel. It become a story increasingly difficult to connect to, as Frericks seemed more impassioned with a capitalist love-story that I found pretty thin and unexamined.
All of this builds to a failed marketing campaign with Dylan Mulvaney. I wasn't aware of the brew-up before this book, or the cringe commericals, but clearly there was a massive misalignment between this influencer and the frat-coded Bud audience. I did find myself persusaded by the points about the overzealous virtue signaling of large firms, and the perils of branding identity based poltics. With that said, Fredrick's approach is so misguided and crass. He brings in a reference to an unrelated tragedy, a school shooting by a transgender assiliant, whose only relationship to the branding campaign is the dates on which the events took place. It felt gross, irrelevant and careless - and I think Fredriks could easily make the point that the firm lose their north star without the chest thumping. There were no counter references to a positive trans-person or any attempt to humanize the community. Instead there are shock-jock references to Mulvaney's statements - which again feel cherry picked to humiliate the influencer. Fredricks spares no punch at the leadership team and belittles their saving-face measures as a non-apology.
Ultimatley Frerick's politics don't bother me - even if I think he fails to address his glaring biases. (The most glaring being his tacit approval for Brian Kemp's campaign to make voting harder in Georgia - completely ignoring how it disadvantages the working poor. Also he gives no mention of Trump's assault on the justice system with "The Big Lie" campaign. Funny right?). I just kept wondering as I read on - "is this how a leader would act"? So quick to undermine former employees, or offer political bromides, but never shows his own accountability. Also, do we really go through this whole book about the downfall of a major beer company, and not address the rising acceptance as marijuana as a prefered substance? Could we talk about how cell phones and dating culture are changing the impact of alcohol in youth culture? I couldn't help but think about another influencer, Garth Brooks, who steered his conservatively coded nightlife bar with statements of openness and acceptance toward the LGBTIA+ community with authenticity.
If reading this book leaves a bad taste in your mouth, know you aren't alone. It might have you reaching for a something a little more palatable like a local brew.