tazuk
Landlord.
+1 :thumb: :
mikep42 said:Hmm, we seemed to have turned this into a Brew Dog thread, but that's the internet for you!
I'm only chipping in because a mailing list I'm on was recently trying to organise an xmas party at a fairly major local venue, and was essentially told that there was no real ale sold by the venue, and they couldn't organise getting real ale, and the party couldn't even bring their own real ale and have the venue sell it back to them with their normal markup.
Basically, no real ale. End of.
A few years ago, I remember reading an article comparing the advertising spend on commodity lager versus real ale - and the differential was something like 100:1, if not more. Basically, real ale was being marketed out of the market.
Fast forward a few years and - not being a great TV viewer or consumer of advertising - I started seeing the youngsters in our group drinking cider with ice in it. "What's all that about", I asked myself - only to figure out a while later that a whole breed of ads had come out showing bright young things drinking cider with ice in. So that's what they were doing.
My point ? Controversially, I think people like Brew Dog might be on the right track with their marketing. It may be over the top, but we live in an over the top world so it seems. We've all seen the real ale in local pubs curl up and die, and we've all seen those same pubs then curl up and die themselves. If using over the top, in your face marketing to get the upcoming generation drinking proper beer, I have to say I'm all in favour, because it means when I go to a pub, I might find something in there that I would like to drink.
The alternative is that all the tasteless fizzy pop commodity lagers dominate the landscape, and real ale becomes a thing of the past.
And I remember my grandad telling me that part of their pay as farm workers was in ale.... how times have changed.