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Pride Month hasn’t officially begun but corporate brands from Bud Light to Target are already taking fire over marketing and merchandise celebrating the LGBTQ community. Called “Bud Lighting ...
Five Chicago gay bars boycott ... one post and not a campaign.” The move comes as Bud Light was mysteriously removed from the website touting the Cincinnati Pride Parade’s 2023 sponsors.
Worried about alienating customers after conservative boycotts slashed sales, some mainstream brands are scaling back Pride merch and promotions.
By Jordyn Holman and Julie Creswell For years, Pride ... Bud Light happened. Owned by the beer giant Anheuser-Busch, Bud Light continues to struggle with the fallout from a social media campaign ...
Then there’s this: Pride Month isn’t just about gays anymore. Bud Light partnered with transgender ... by groups like Human Rights Campaign (a gay-rights organization turned avid promoter ...
gay, bisexual, and transgender pride strikes a different tone this year for corporations supporting Pride. Recent headlines reported consumers driving their cars over unopened cans of Bud Light.
Like Bud Light before it, Target ended up alienating just about everyone in the process with its response. Target became the focus of the anti-LGBTQ campaign’s ire for its Pride Month ...
CONSUMERS CREEPED OUT BY TARGET'S ‘TUCK-FRIENDLY’ WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR: ‘SHOPPING ELSEWHERE’ Adding fuel to the fire, the retailer's Gay Pride collection ... following the Bud Light backlash ...
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