July 23, 2007

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The Real ‘Truth Squad’

By Guy Smith @ 7:26 pm - Filed under: Responsible Drinking, alcohol labeling

Dear Harry: 

There was something missing from the BBD Truth Squad Survey: a mirror.

Yes, a mirror. It seems that the overall premise, including your set up…”how to prevent wine and spirits from taking more share…” was all about “them” and nothing about “us.”

This intramural stuff just drives me nuts. Read through the results you printed. It’s all about “them” and not very much looking in the mirror!

Yeah, I realize that the knee-jerk response to this from far too many will be who does-he-think-he-is! Well, I have been in this business since the mid-seventies. I actually wrote the press release that sent Lite Beer from Miller national (that was before it was Miller Lite!), so I do have a perspective.

The gratuitous slap at Smirnoff Source (which is a beer guys!) notwithstanding, possibly a look at the label will help: it says “Smirnoff,” it says “alcohol,” it is high priced, and it’s low ABV.

Hello….McFly, are you there?!

Harry asked my to speak at the BBD meeting back in February in Phoenix. Together we outlined some BIG issues facing the industry. One of the biggest issues is that we all throw spears at each other. The anti’s don’t need to, they can just sit back and watch.

Check out that speech. It outlines why “the enemy is us.” It also says that we asked Harry to carry a box every week on who in the industry is supporting the Federal Trade Commission’s “We Don’t Serve Teens” program. It is comprehensive. It is well thought out. It was developed with the help of members of our industry.

So Harry: where’s the box?

Cheers!

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Pogo!

Good afternoon.

Don’t you love Harry’s name for this conference, Phoenix: Back from the Ashes?

It says what all of us who care about the beer business knows.  Beer is still a great and important part of the beverage alcohol business.  And it is back. In fact, lots of us think it was never gone.  It is still the biggest category of the total industry.  It always has been, and always will be, one of the most vibrant and innovative categories.

So, all of us ought to be feeling terrific — about the beer business today, about the beer business in the future, in fact, about the whole industry. But the truth is Harry’s title also reflects an underlying feeling that a lot of us have.  Things are looking up.  But, damn, they ought to be better.  We shouldn’t even be thinking about “ashes,” but only roses.  

Why is that?  Why, even when our business is looking up, do we feel an undercurrent of unease and insecurity about our industry?

Here’s my short answer:

Seventy-four years after the end of Prohibition, we are still seen as a sin industry.  That fact is the single biggest constraint we have on our present and future success.  And the reason we are still seen as a sin industry is not just because of anti-alcohol activist groups.  It is also – and largely – because of what we do to ourselves.

Walt Kelly’s famous character Pogo got it exactly right.  Take an unblinking look at the mess in our swamp and you have to come to the same conclusion:  we have met the enemy and he is us.

We wear the “sin” label like leg-irons.  And, we will only get rid of the “sin” label when we put all of our energy into earning society’s trust and overcoming our common opponents – and stop putting so much of our energy and effort into trashing each other.
I know. In my 40 years in the industry, I’ve been there, done that. So I’m here to testify. The “amen” pew is right down front

For the next few minutes, I want us to:

  • Take a close look at all the signs that show, despite all our good efforts, we are still treated like a sin industry
  • Then frankly face why we still have that label
  • And finally consider what we can do to rid ourselves of it at long last.

By all rights, this industry should have long ago shed the “sin” label.  Over the last 25 years, the problems that most concern Americans have about alcohol have dramatically abated.  For example, since 1982 drunk driving fatalities have declined nearly 40%, despite an increase in licensed drivers, registered vehicles and miles traveled in that same period.

Underage drinking shows a similar long-term decline.  Since 1982, drinking by high school seniors has dropped by 33%, beer drinking among college freshmen is down 41%. And after seeming to plateau at the beginning of the decade, drinking by 8th, 10th and 12th graders has declined over the last five years.  In fact, current drinking among 12th graders is now at its lowest level since 1975.

Any drinking by those underage is too much.  But these signs are encouraging. The overall trend is clear.  And we ought to applaud and encourage it.

What’s more, this industry has made a significant contribution to America making these gains.  We are all doing our part to encourage and model responsible drinking by following strong marketing codes.  Over the past several years we have all made those Codes stronger. We place our ads where they will reach a preponderance of adults. We make sure the content of our ads appeals strictly to adults.  We audit what we do.  And we have made it easier for anyone to voice any concerns they have about our ads.  We think we do a good job of self-regulation.  And in its 2003 review, the Federal Trade Commission agreed.

All of us are also doing our part to fund and support programs that directly help reduce drunk driving and underage drinking.  Thanks to the leadership of companies like Anheuser-Bush, Miller, Coors and our own, as well as all our industry associations, more of our consumers than ever make good choices when they enjoy our brands. 

They know how to host a party responsibly. They know to take a safe ride home. They know how to be, or go out with, a designated driver.  And they are helped along in their responsible decisions by servers trained in watching out for consumers.

All of us are also working with local police and attorneys general to keep beverage alcohol out of the hands of young people and supporting our retailers with ID programs.

And all of us are doing our part to help parents – starting with our own employees — keep their kids safe.  Sometimes we do that by providing individual parents with guides on how to talk to their kids about drinking.  Sometimes we find common cause with parent groups whose personal tragedy has moved them to take action against drunk driving.

Frankly, few things in my career or life have touched me more than when a father from MADD told me how much our support of legislation to keep alcohol out of the hands of young people has meant to him.  Like most of you, I’m a parent, too. I can just imagine what his loss must feel like.  That man, that father, has now come to trust us to do the right thing and knows that we, too, do not want any more children hurt – directly or indirectly – by beverage alcohol. 

I do not think he is alone.  I believe the industry has made progress in earning the trust of Americans – at least some Americans.  For example, between 1990 and 2002 the number of Americans who thought our industry was going in the right direction increased from 29% to 38%.  And the number who thought we were off track dropped from 62%to 50%.  What’s even more encouraging is that 40% of those who thought the industry was headed the right direction felt that way because of our responsibility programs.

Nonetheless – none-the-less – for too many Americans, this industry still wears a scarlet letter.  

You can see it in the polling numbers.  Our approval ratings may have gone up. But they are still at levels that would be very, very troubling if we were in politics.  And, of course, we are in politics. 

Moreover, for all the gains we have made, 14% of Americans still don’t think it is ever right to have a drink – even with dinner.  Ten percent fewer Americans even choose to drink than they did just 30 years ago.  In 1978, 71% of adult Americans were our consumers. Today, just 61% are.  Obviously, we believe every adult American has the right to make that choice and clearly some people should not drink.  Let me be clear, I know all of us respect anyone’s right to choose not to drink. Nevertheless, a decline of this magnitude tells us something important about the standing of our industry today.

Here’s something just as telling.  Twenty-eight percent of Americans favor tougher restrictions on our business, keeping us in an even smaller box. 

And 20% — one in five – would welcome the return of Prohibition.  Think about that.  For anything we want to accomplish in this society, we start twenty points behind.
The numbers are one thing. But where we all really feel the sting of being not-quite-accepted is in how we and our products are treated nearly every day. 

Go to a supermarket on a Sunday afternoon in too many cities across America and where do you find the Budweiser, Miller Lite, Coors, Heineken, Sam Adams, Guinness, Harp and Red Stripe? Under a tarp.  Under a piece of canvas — as if even to be seen – much less bought and enjoyed – is an offense against decency, civil order and the heavens themselves.

We love what we make.  Every one of us is proud of the craft and passion that goes into our products.  But in too many places in America, they have to be hidden away, shunned, like something unclean.   That is just not right.

Here’s something else that’s not right and says it all for me.  Let’s say any one of us invites the mayor of our town to visit our offices some afternoon to show how glad we are to be a part of the community. 

What do you do?

You offer the mayor a beer, a glass of wine, a cocktail in the spirit of hospitality.  You ask the mayor to pose for a picture so you can share this moment with the rest of your organization. And what does the mayor do?  

Yeah, you’ve been there, just like I have. The mayor takes the drink and hides it — hands it to an aide, holds it behind the back, even sticks it behind a picture on a credenza — as if it is something to be ashamed of, as if you and I are people to be ashamed of.

Is that the way this industry ought to be treated, that we ought to be treated?  NO! So, how do you explain it?  Here it is three-quarters of a century after the end of Prohibition in this country, and we still get treated like pariahs.  How does that make sense? I know we like to point to all those folks on the fringe of civil discourse that we call the “antis.” And it is true they are as busy as legions of horned devils making mischief.

They loudly proclaim that advertising leads to increased drinking by young people.  They assert that they can prove that sales to children are a “critical component” of this industry’s profits. And they attack both our good actions and good intent by belligerently claiming we would lose one-half our market if we really acted responsibly.

But here’s what strikes me about all their busy mischief.  Nearly every thing they say and do is so patently trumped up, misleading and distorted that it ought to defy belief.

The claim made earlier this year that advertising leads to increased drinking by young people flies in the face of 30 years of previous research and uses such an obviously flawed methodology that your ordinary undergraduate can see right through it. 

And the demeaning assertions that we profit by underage drinking are based on cynical manipulations of prior studies and a misuse of government data.

But does all this hogwash defy belief?  No.  Reporters who ought to know better are ready to believe it.  Parents are ready to believe it.  Legislators and their aides are ready to believe it.  Regulators are ready to believe it.

Now, if you try, you can get the attention of reporters, parents and regulators.  And you can get them to give a second thought to what they were so ready to believe. You can even get reporters to ask the skeptical questions they ought to ask about such outrageous claims.  And they will report the astounding responses. 

Take this one for example.  Recently the AMA issued a survey that purported to show that sex and intoxication were more common among young women on Spring Break.  With a little urging, a few reporters asked some tough questions about the validity of the survey. The AMA’s response?  The survey was never intended to be “scientific;” it was – and I quote – a “standard media advocacy tool.”  And AMA’s spokesperson said that with a straight face.  The nation’s physicians don’t do science.  They do PR.  (You may see me after this speech for your appendectomy!)

You would think such stunts would wholly discredit the extremist anti-alcohol types. And to some degree, it is now a little easier to get folks to take a second look at their claims.
 But it is a second look.  Reporters, parents and regulators are still pre-disposed to believe them. And they are still pre-disposed to disbelieve us. We still wear the scarlet letter.

But, when you look at the facts, you cannot blame the “antis” for that letter.  Their claims against us are built on sand.  So that is not what is really hurting us. My friends, when we really want to know why we wear the scarlet letter, we have to look in the mirror. We have met the enemy and he is us.  For all the good we do, we continue to make the job of the “antis” easy by the ways we treat each other.

Let me give you an example from my own career.  You can think of this as a true
confession. 

Thirty or so years ago I was a young PR executive at Miller Brewing Company.  We were locked in a tight fight with the reigning king of the industry to capture the attention and loyalty of beer drinkers.

It was a pretty tight and tough competition.  We both looked for all kinds of ways not just to win loyalty for our beers, but to wrest it away from their beers. It was pretty much a tit-for-tat battle in which we both gave as good as we got. Frankly, the battle often got closer to a school yard shouting match.

They said our beers weren’t made with “natural” ingredients. And we, well, we decided to debunk the romantic myth of beech wood aging. We pointed out in brochures and press releases that “beech wood aging” amounted to little more than dumping a bunch of wood slats – sort of like bed slats – into a tank of perfectly good beer.

Did all our mutual rock throwing do any good?  It certainly felt good at the time, in the way school yard fights can.  We did get their attention and they got ours.

But it did not change the loyalty of beer drinkers.  If you loved the finish of beech-wood-aged beer, you didn’t particularly care how the wood and beer got together.
If you loved a beer that made you join the “tastes great” versus “less filling” debate, you weren’t much up for a lecture in food science.

And more to the point, it got the industry the kind of attention it did not need.  Lots of folks looked at us both like we should be wearing spats and carrying violin cases.  We heard that from consumers, especially the more sophisticated who were becoming really important to our industry’s success. 

We heard it from customers.  A whole bunch of retailers looked at our companies like a couple of punks in a bar fight – and they wanted to know who was going to pay for the broken glass.

And we heard that from the BATF – the TTB’s predecessor.  The folks over there acted like they were going to have to put on their Elliot Ness outfits to get us to straighten out.

Well, that’s an exaggeration.   They did call us into their office, like the sign on the door should have said “Principal.”  They did tell us to knock it off.  They did say they were going to keep an eye on us – a very close eye.  And that is not what you ever want to hear from one of your most important and powerful regulatory agencies.

Over the past 30 years, I’d like to think we have all learned not to repeat the mistakes we made in those early days of the “beer wars.”  I would like to believe that when it comes to our industry’s reputation, we all know we are in the same boat.   When we take on water, it’s not your end and it is not my end that is sinking.  Our boat is sinking and the last thing any of us should be doing is drilling holes in the bottom.

But too often it looks like we are stuck in the same place.  Too often we act as if the fastest way to get ahead is to attack somebody else — their character, their integrity, their motives.

Here are some of my examples; I suspect you have your own.
A little while ago an important part of our industry decided to object to direct shipping, a perfectly reasonable thing to do. But the way they went about it wasn’t.  Essentially they said direct shipping was a bad idea because the rest of us in this industry were criminals who couldn’t be trusted.  We had to have our every movement closely monitored.  In effect, this member of the industry invited Elliot Ness back to slap us in irons.

More recently, some members of the industry have expressed differing viewpoints about beverage alcohol companies participating in motor sports.  Beer companies have been doing that effectively and responsibly for 35 years.  Over the last two years, some spirits companies, including Diageo, have, too. 

We think it makes sense for every company to make its own decision about any promotional opportunity.  We do not think it makes sense for one member of the industry to accuse other members of the industry of doing something “inherently dangerous” by being part of motor sports. 

Consumers know better than that.  Attorneys General, police and traffic safety experts know better than that. Up until now, about the only person who didn’t seem to know better and who would make such an inflammatory accusation was, well, CSPI’s George Hacker …and we all know how George is!   Up until now.

My last example comes from the public policy arena.  We all know there are lots of different ways to attack the drunk-driving problem. And we know that reasonable people can differ about the best solutions. 

Policy disagreements are fine. Character assassinations are not.  We may as an industry sometimes disagree with proposals from grieving parents and those who sympathize with them, but it is not appropriate to vilify them – calling them “neo-Prohibitionists,” or claming that ideas they may support amount to “car theft,” or accusing them of being “extremists.”  What does it say about our industry, if one of our members responds to the proposals of a mother or father who has lost a child to a drunk driver by saying that they are “extremists?” Is there a way to feel the loss of a child that isn’t extreme?

If our industry is going to finally shed its “sin” label and be fully welcomed into our society’s civil discourse, then every member of the industry in every part must, at the very least, behave with common decency – toward those with whom we may differ, and toward each other.  And, of course, it should go without saying that we all need to follow the letter and the spirit of the laws governing our industry, especially in what we provide retailers.  It really is tough to shed the “sin” label when you continue to sin.

Let me be clear. What I am talking about is very different from tough, fair, hard-fought competition.  Hard-fought competition comes from working very hard to please consumers. 

We can, and certainly should, try to out do each other in offering consumers new products and new ways to enjoy products they already love.  That kind of rivalry earns the continuing loyalty of consumers and actually expands the market for all of us.  Just take a look at the competition in the FMB segment.  It brings new consumers to the beer aisle and actually expands the grocery basket for us and our retail customers.

And I applaud the hard-fought competition in the brilliant advertising this industry produces.  It shows we understand our consumers and what they expect from us. And it’s fun – even when we are just showing off. I also applaud the kind of hard-fought competition that shows up in making clear the difference between your brand and mine.  You want to run a blind taste test and publish the results?  Bring it on. Hard-fought competition is good for consumers and good for the industry. But denigrating somebody else’s character, reputation, and intentions is not.

Consumers do not like it. Sure, a few may find it occasionally entertaining or even persuasive, but they are almost always outside the mainstream.  The vast majority of consumers simply find it repugnant.  They end up saying “a pox on both your houses.” It works that way in politics.  It works that way for consumer products.

Regulators, legislators and their staffs loathe the denigration.  It makes them more certain than ever that they need to keep us under tight check.  To them it says we really haven’t come far from the days of Prohibition.

Most galling to me, is that the denigration makes the most rabid “anti” look credible.  When we indulge in it, we seem to be everything they say we are.

Finally, the denigration and character assassination just plain wastes resources – resources that belong to our shareholders and not to us.  We’d all be better off putting those resources to different, more valuable, uses:  winning current consumers, combating those who really do want to put us out of business, and expanding the pie for all of us. So, what do we need to do to shed the sin label?

I think we all know at least part of the answer to that question.  When you are in a deep hole, there’s an important rule: put down the shovel.  Said another way, we can put the rocks down and stop doing the anti’s job for them.

But I think there is more that we can do than “just say no” to the temptation to trash each other and what Pogo called “make a mess of our swamp.”  And we can do more of what we are all already doing individually to end underage drinking and drunk driving. We can do more of the brilliant work we are already doing to encourage, implore and lead consumers to responsible drinking with our advertising.  Frankly, I think the responsible drinking advertising we all do is among the best work that comes from our marketing teams.  That’s what our research tells us.  And that’s what our eyes tell us.

And finally, I think we can do more together as a unified industry to make a difference, in fact an exponential difference, in the issue that today most concerns parents: underage drinking.  It is the right thing to do.  It is what parents expect of us.  It is what our consumers expect of us, welcome and admire.

And you know what? It does not take some kind of ponderous industry summit where we first debate the size and shape of the table for us to act as a unified industry.  Right now, the Federal Trade Commission is in the midst of launching a campaign to prevent underage drinking, one of the things that the Commission does that I think we can all applaud, however some of us may feel about other Commission initiatives. 

The program is called “We Don’t Serve Teens.”   It is comprehensive.  It is well thought-out.  It was developed with the help of members of our industry. And almost everyone who has seen the program thinks it is brilliant.

I say “almost” because there has been one, very visible, nay-sayer:  George Hacker.  And what did he object to?  Just the fact that the FTC was willing to work with our industry to do what is right for kids. I think that says all anyone needs to know about George, his organization, and his agenda.    Keeping the scarlet letter pinned on us trumps what is right.

Our industry helped get the FTC’s program off the ground.  Now, we have the opportunity to make it a stunning success.  The campaign works by reminding adults that providing alcohol to teenagers is unsafe, illegal and irresponsible.  Responsible adults don’t serve teens in a retail business.  They don’t serve teens at parties.  They don’t serve teens in their home. They don’t serve teens, period.

We all know that one of the most powerful places to deliver that message is at point of sale.  So does the FTC.  They’ve developed POS posters, cold case stickers, register signs and lapel pins in English and Spanish.  The FTC is making them available to retailers. But you and I need to go one step farther for the FTC and do what we know how to do best.  We need to get them into the hands of retailers, just as we would do with any of our brand campaigns and just as some distributors, like Charmer Sunbelt and Alliance Beverage right here in Phoenix, are already doing.

This morning, I am calling on every company and every trade association in this entire industry to send the whole POS tool kit to every retailer that you do business with.  I mean every company – Anheuser-Bush, Miller, Coors, Heineken, Diageo. I mean every trade association – NBWA, WSWA, DISCUS, the Beer Institute, the Wine Institute, ABI.  And I mean every retailer in the country – from the Wal-marts, Safeways, 7-11s, and Outbacks, to the Red Horse Tavern [Middleburg, VA, where Stuart and Moseby once had dinner] and Elbow Room [Lawyer hang out in Indianapolis.]

And Harry, I ask you to help us keep this commitment.  I urge you to run a box on the front page of Beer Business Daily as often as you can that shows which of us is stepping up to this commitment and what each of us has done to fulfill it.

As a down payment on Diageo’s commitment, this week we and our distributor in Phoenix, Alliance Beverage, distributed more than 600 lapel pins in English and Spanish, along with posters, register signs and cold case stickers to retailers here.

My friends, the proposition is really very simple.  If we want to finally lose the “sin” label, then let us, together, take a giant step by putting this label on:  “We Don’t Serve Teens.”
Let’s take, together, this very visible, very meaningful step by getting the “We Don’t Serve Teens” program wide and deep distribution around the country.  Think about our reach – if we choose to reach.  Think about the incredibly positive impact of that reach.  If we get these images before every stakeholder important to our industry – all of them – them who can say with any credibility that we are a sin industry. 

The questions will then be to our antagonists: Why are you not helping us?  Why are you not stepping up?  Do you not care?   If you care, muzzle your negative rhetoric and help us help America’s teens. 

As we leave this hall today, I urge us all to take up this effort all across the land. Show the world that the label of sin, the scarlet letter, no longer has safe haven in the alcohol business.

Thank you!

March 9, 2007

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A Call To The Alcohol Industry

By Guy Smith @ 2:30 pm - Filed under: Underage Drinking

This week in Arizona, on the occasion of Beer Business Daily’s Beer Summit, I delivered a speech that addressed a number of issues facing the beverage alcohol industry today. I covered a lot of ground but I think the most critical component of this speech was Diageo’s call for all the industry’s companies and their associations to rally in support for the FTC’s “We Don’t Serve Teens” campaign.

This campaign, which was unveiled in October by the FTC and The Century Council, aims to educate adults on the ramifications of providing alcohol to minors. We, at Diageo, have already endorsed this campaign and recognize the importance of its message: don’t provide alcohol to those under the legal drinking age. It’s irresponsible and it’s dangerous. If all the members of our industry unite to spread this message, imagine how loud our voice will be and how far our message will travel!

Our distributor in Arizona, Alliance Beverage Distributing Co., is just as excited about this campaign as we are. Robert Smith, President of Alliance Beverage said: “We are excited to work with Diageo on tackling this significant issue and we are looking forward to partnering with retailers here in Arizona and across the nation to spread the message that ‘We Don’t Serve Teens.’”

Curbing underage drinking is the responsibility of all of us, as beverage alcohol companies and citizens of this country. I hope America’s beverage alcohol industry, from the suppliers, distributors, retailers to all the beer companies, wine companies and  spirit companies heed our call and take this meaningful step to help spread the message that “We Don’t Serve Teens” and neither should YOU. We need to join forces on this issue. Operating in a vacuum simply won’t work. But together, as a united front, we can fight this battle head-on.

Cheers!

guy

February 1, 2007

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Base It On The Facts

By Guy Smith @ 3:45 pm - Filed under: Studies

First things first, let’s get something straight.  Irresponsible use of alcohol is an important issue, and one that the government, industry, public and a host of other stakeholders take quite seriously.  Some focus on developing policies to keep us safe from the harm associated with the misuse of beverage alcohol, a laudable goal.  However, at times, this is done in the absence of a firm grip on the facts.

Take, for example, a recent report from Join Together’s website that would have us believe that the 2003 Licensing Act which allows for extended operating hours for pubs and bars in the UK has led to mayhem at closing time.  A scary thought, to be sure, but it doesn’t reflect what research is showing from the front lines:

• 13 police forces across England and Wales found no marked rise in alcohol related crimes since the Act was enacted; 6 police forces reported a fall and 5 reported a rise in response to a survey conducted by and published in the English newspaper The Independent in November 2006.

• In Wirral, England, people reporting assaults at the Accident and Emergency Department fell by 15% according to a study conducted by the Centre for Public Health at Liverpool after the Act was introduced.

• In the English county of Sussex, 1,000 fewer people reported injuries after the Act was enacted, leading the Asst. Chief Constable of Sussex to comment: “Concerns over 24-hour drinking leading to a significant increase in alcohol-fuelled violence and public nuisance have not materialized.”

• In Norwich England, six months after the change in operating hours, police officials reported 584 fewer violent offences compared to the same period a year earlier.  Says Inspector Peter Walsh, “We’re no longer seeing the huge queues for clubs and taxis at 11:30pm and then 2am which were often associated with trouble and we no longer see large crowds pouring out on to the street all at the same time.”

Alcohol-related policies are an important part of our society, but it’s critical that the people making – and commenting on – these policies are  relying on actual FACTS.

January 17, 2007

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What Ever Happened To The Scientific Method? Not to Mention Media Scrutiny?

It’s pretty frustrating when some of the most “reputable” scientific institutions in our country lead us astray…and then, when their methodology is debunked, they correct themselves…but they do so very quietly. 

Case in point: The American Medical Association published an erroneous survey in March 2006 about underage drinking claiming that girls were drinking excessively on college spring break tours.  A shocking finding…if it were true. 

The study was a non-random Internet poll of volunteers.  And of those volunteers, only about 27% had even BEEN on spring break! Nevertheless, the Associated Press jumped on it without even a question as to the validity of the methodology and proceeded to run a story on the “findings” shortly after the release of the study. 

 Fortunately, we have watchdogs out there like the American Association for Public Opinion Research and Mystery Pollster that caught this study and exposed the AMA for their deceptive findings. Though the AMA eventually modified its release, the amendments were hardly publicized and, of course, garnered MUCH less attention then the initial study.

You may be asking yourself why I’m writing about this in January of 2007, nearly one year later.I’ll tell you why: the drama goes on. 

The Columbia Journalism Review and the AP have been bickering over the AP’s role in perpetuating this bogus study on the pages of the Review.  Last month, the CJR wrote a “dart” criticizing the AP’s “delayed reaction and impaired judgment” on this study.  The latest chapter unfolds in the January/February issue in which the AP responds in a Letter to the Editor (which, unfortunately, isn’t available online) to the CJR’s criticism of how the AP handled the situation.

I’m not going to get into all of the details of the mud-slinging, but the point I want to make is that here we not only have a case of a special interest organization using dubious data to further its own agenda, but we also have an example of the AP, one of the most preeminent news wires in this country, adding fuel to the fire.

I don’t want to blame the individual reporter or bureau that issued the story because I think this is really a larger issue that I’ve seen in assorted news organizations across the country.  As budgets are cut and staffing is reduced, we - the consumers of news - are often the victims of misinformation.    

 

 

 

January 12, 2007

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Top 10 Dubious Data Sets

By Guy Smith @ 10:42 am - Filed under: Studies, Underage Drinking

Have you ever wondered what goes through the minds of people that feel so strongly on an issue that they just make things up? The world is full of well-intentioned folks who just can’t look at an issue and dispassionately articulate the facts.

Now comes the Chicago Tribune with an article about the “Top 10 Dubious Data List,” a fascinating collection of outrageous misinformation that during 2006 was laid before the public. Not surprisingly to those of us who have been in the alcohol business for longer than 10 minutes, some of the most outrageous, egregious “dubious” honors center on alcohol. Now don’t get me wrong, there are problems with irresponsible use of alcohol and lots of people in the industry, in not-for-profits, and in the government, are working hard to combat them. But hey, why can’t these characters just tell things straight?
Read on:

Low and behold, a number of the past year’s top media fabrications listed in the “Top 10 Dubious Data” list concerned alcohol and underage drinking. Take a look:

• “The media gushed over an AP report that “all but confirm[ed] what goes on in those `Girls Gone Wild’ spring-break videos:” young women blacking out from drinking, having sex with more than one partner and so forth. Actually, the American Medical Association study was a non-random Internet poll of volunteers, of which only 27 percent had been on spring break.”

• “The Wall Street Journal misreported that teenage girls increased alcohol consumption more than 30 percent from 1999 to 2004. The study’s mistake was that it treated, for example, a 6-ounce glass of alcohol the same as an ounce of alcohol mixed with 5 ounces of orange juice. U.S. government studies show that binge drinking by college-age women has remained steady since 1980 and daily drinking has been declining since 2002.”

• “Forbes and The New York Times bit on a study by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, which claimed that the alcohol industry reaped almost $50 billion, or half its revenue, from underage drinkers. To buy that, you have to believe that teen drinkers consume as much as all adult drinkers combined, and that half of all teens consume more than 1,000 drinks a year, or almost three daily.”

Three cheers to the Chicago Tribune for getting out the facts. We need more reporters and news organizations to ask better questions before they just publish whatever these guys have to say. They sure ask me lots of questions!

If you want any detail on any of these three studies, just let me know. And, as always, anyone associated with any of the three items mentioned is welcome to post a response, a defense, an apologia right here at www.NoBullBar.com
guy

January 9, 2007

Click here to read Guy Smith's bio.

Hooray Beer!

By Guy Smith @ 5:19 pm - Filed under: Alcohol Tastings

It is not everyday that I go out of my way give one of our competitors a pat on the back, but I want to commend Anheuser-Busch for backing a new law taking effect this year in California that will allow free beer tastings at restaurant and bars. Of course, the necessary limits will be placed on these free samplings but this is a great way for our customers to try new products.

While our wines and spirits have been sampled by consumers for a number of years, I think it simply makes sense that beer has all the same opportunities , especially since all alcohol drinks, when served with a standard size serving (12 oz beer, 5 oz wine, 1 and 1/2 oz spirits), contain the same amount of alcohol. There is no reason beer should be discriminated against. Diageo has a number of great-tasting drinks in the beer category including Guinness, Red Stripe and our flavored malt beverages like Smirnoff Twisted V and Smirnoff Raw Tea.  I’m glad to see that adult consumers in the  State of California can try some of our great brands for the first time in bars and restaurants thanks to this law. …and they can try some of A-B’s great brands too!

I’m all for providing consumers with choice and variety and I’m thrilled that Californians can now experiment a little more with their beers! 

Cheers!

guy

Click here to read Guy Smith's bio.

Loyal readers of NoBullBar.com know that CASA has a long history of playing fast and loose with the facts.  And just last week, Susan Foster showed that they’re at it again.

She was quoted in the New York Daily News saying, “’We’re seeing an increase in rates of drinking to get drunk” among teens.

Sounds terrible!  And it would be…if it were true.

Susan based her comments on The National Youth Risk Behavior Survey conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services, a federal agency that is a part of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.  The study was conducted from 1991-2005 with a representative sample of 9th trough 12th grade students throughout the United States. 

It found NO CHANGE in episodic heavy drinking from 1991 to 2005.  In fact, they found a DECREASE from 1997 to 2005 in heaving drinking behavior and the trend was consistent when they looked at lifetime alcohol use, current alcohol use and use of alcohol on school property.

Susan, CASA: I encourage you to join us in being part of the SOLUTION.  It’s about time you stop twisting the facts to support your political agenda.

As always, we invite Susan to post her comments on why she distorts these and other facts right here on www.NoBullBar.com

Cheers!

guy

November 9, 2006

Click here to read Guy Smith's bio.

Amen To Sunday Sales!

By Guy Smith @ 1:40 pm - Filed under: Sunday Sales

OK, so Election Day has come and gone and lots of politicians who annoyed the electorate are now gone too. Americans went to the polls and spoke their minds, rather loudly it would appear from seeing the gigantic shifts in Washington and in many states.

That’s fine, but there are some election results you may just have missed. I’m not sure why Katie Couric and Brian Williams and Anderson Cooper skipped over them, but hey..

Anyway, I know you will be pleased to learn that the very enlightened citizens of Rock Hill, North Carolina approved a ballot measure that now permits a patron in a restaurant to have a drink on a Sunday. The question passed with 61 percent for approval. The large margin even surprised supporters, according to The Charlotte Observer. So, now you can have a Smirnoff cocktail at a restaurant after church, a Guinness while watching Sunday NFL games, or maybe a glass of Sterling wine with Sunday dinner. Well, hey, it is the year 2007!

Not to be outdone, the land of Dorothy and Toto (who wasn’t then, but is now, of legal drinking age…well, not Toto, but Dorothy). I’m talking about Kansas (remember, “Gee, Toto, I don’t think we are in Kansas anymore.”).

Ballot measures in Kechi and Park City, Kansas passed now allowing Sunday sales of alcohol and in Clearwater voters approved selling packaged liquor (like from a retail shop) on Sundays.

This is as it should be. Presumably the wedding at Cana occurred on a Sunday. Well, Jesus turned water into wine at that grand event, good wine too according to the Scriptures. If alcohol had been the wrong thing, then don’t you think he would have done it the other way around and turned wine into water!

Amen!

November 6, 2006

Click here to read Guy Smith's bio.

Introducing Some New Guests!

By Guy Smith @ 5:06 pm - Filed under: Contributors

Hello out there!

I wanted to let you know that beginning today, there will be a new batch of bloggers to No Bull Bar. These members of the Diageo team will offer fresh insights and opinions on the various issues I like to address in this blog. Some will make you laugh, others may make you want to scream, but hey – that’s No Bull Bar! Click on contributors to see who these people are and what they are all about.

Within this industry there will always be hot discussion topics and No Bull Bar is committed to encouraging and facilitating conversations on these issues. I am very excited about our new guest contributors and can’t wait to see where this takes us!

Cheers!

guy

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