Wednesday, March 9, 2011

very different.

after going through, and looking at everything i found that this site is awesome. keep up the work guys.

in reference to: 360voice.com - Give your Xbox a voice of its own! (view on Google Sidewiki)

this website is awesome

after going through, and looking at everything i found that this site is awesome. keep up the work guys.

in reference to: 360voice.com - Give your Xbox a voice of its own! (view on Google Sidewiki)

i love it

i am doing what i can to have traffic. And to say whatever is on my mind and talk to chat with people. i love it.

in reference to: Blogger: Dashboard (view on Google Sidewiki)

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

BUD-WEI-SER


Damn, I absolutely love Budweiser, The name Budweiser in America, advertised as the King of Beers, has been a mainstay in today's culture. Almost toted as a 'rock' in its industrial strength, but is it a stalworthy as claimed?

It's always Lawyer Time in this little corner of beerland. Budweiser, the flagship beer of Anheuser-Busch and the best-selling brew in America, has been scrapping over the rights to its name for decades, and there's no sign of a letup anytime soon.

The Budweiser saga began in 1876, when the E. Anheuser Brewing Association of St. Louis, Missouri, introduced Budweiser Lager Beer. Founded in 1860 by Eberhard Anheuser, the company was renamed the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association in 1879, recognizing the contribution and leadership of then president Adolphus Busch.

"Bud" was a hit. The decades flew by and Americans guzzled Budweiser by the barrelful (three million barrels per year by 1941, in fact). Americans continued to down Bud in massive quantities, and Budweiser became an American icon.

Meanwhile, in Czechoslovakia, trouble was brewing. It seems that when Eberhard Anheuser named his beer Budweiser, he was paying homage to the beer makers of a Czech town called Ceske Budejovice, known in Anheuser's native Germany as "Budweis." According to the folks in Budweis, their local beer has been known as Budweiser for several hundred years. For all this time Budweiser has been apart of this great nation. Now its owned and imported from Europe. It doesn’t make my decision on buying it any less. It just took away from what I loved so much about it. I hope that you all feel the same, relax and enjoy “The King Of Beers”