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Another Budweiser jingle, "When You Say Budweiser, You've Said It All," also with music and lyrics by Steve Karmen, was published a year earlier in 1970, [2] and part of its lyric inspired "Here Comes the King." The underlying instrumental is imitative of a stereotypical Bohemian polka band.
The Budweiser Clydesdales stroll through the snow, while the famed Budweiser-jingle, Here Comes The King, plays. Also aired during Super Bowl XII Budweiser "When You've Said It All" Featuring footage of the Miss Budweiser hydroplane, the Budweiser-sponsored Spyder NF-10 Can-Am car, and the Budweiser Hot-Air Balloon in action. Miller High Life
Presenting Budweiser as the most advertised drink brand in America, [30] and accounted for a third of the company's US marketing budget. [31] On November 5, 2012, Anheuser-Busch asked Paramount Pictures to obscure or remove the Budweiser logo from the film Flight (2012), directed by Robert Zemeckis and starring Denzel Washington. [32]
After sitting out the 2021 and 2023 Super Bowls, the Budweiser Clydesdales are back for 2024 with a full 60-second spot. The full ad hasn't been publicly released but a 15-second teaser of the ad ...
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Bud Bowl Logo. The Bud Bowl was a stop motion animated Super Bowl advertising campaign first aired in 1989, and sporadically during the 1990s. It served as an advertisement for Anheuser-Busch's Budweiser family of beers. It featured anthropomorphized Budweiser bottles playing a football game against Bud Light bottles.
Budweiser Frogs: Budweiser beer: 1990s: One frog says "Bud," another says "weis," and a third says "er." This is often repeated throughout the company's ads, in that order. Frank and Louie, lizards: 1998: main adversaries to the Budweiser frogs. Budweiser Clydesdales: 1930s–present: usually pulling a hitch of Budweiser with a Dalmatian riding ...
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