.

Jay Brooks

Jay Brooks
Location
San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA
Birthday
March 03
Bio
I've been writing about beer for over 15 years, which is when my first book was published, and currently write features and columns for most of the beer magazines available, both trade and consumer oriented, along with my local paper, the San Francisco Chronicle. I'm the former General Manager of the Celebrator Beer News, a national magazine that covers craft beer. I'm also a beer judge and frequently can found at beer festivals throughout the U.S. I cover all aspects of the beer industry from the business side of things down to the brewing itself. I'm a former homebrewer and commercial brewer and was educated (in brewing science) at U.C. Davis and have taken courses from the Siebel Institute in Chicago. I also have a B.A. in Communications. I work from my home in northern California where my most important job is taking care of my two kids, Porter (7) and Alice (4). My other hobbies include photography, especially stereo photography, collecting View-Master reels, reading, music, documentary films and traveling. I'm originally from Pennsylvania and grew up in Shillington, which is near Reading. I've lived in New York City, Virginia and North Carolina but have been in California since 1986. I'm also a veteran and former musician. I disdain most sports as a distraction, but root for the Green Bay Packers. I'm currently putting the finishing touches on my first novel, "The Ghosts of Autumn," a semi-fictional memoir, "Under the Table," and a proposal for my second beer book, to be called "Living Beer."

MY RECENT POSTS

OCTOBER 26, 2008 3:12PM

Whassup For Obama

Rate: 1 Flag

Remember those iconic "whassup" Anheuser-Busch ads from almost a decade ago? Advertisers love it when a catch phrase works its way into public use outside the original advertising because it spreads the meme far wider than advertising alone can ever manage. Whassup was one of those catch phrases that captured public attention for a brief period of time and spread itself all around popular culture, and was used referentially in a variety of contexts. You don't hear it that often these days, but its memory still lingers in the public conscious.

The Whassup ad campaign, officially called True, ran from 1999 to 2002. The first spot aired during Monday Night Football on December 20 1999. It was actually based on a short film called True by "Charles Stone III, that featured Stone and several of his childhood friends - Fred Thomas, Paul Williams, Terry Williams, and Kevin Lofton. The characters sat around talking on the phone and saying "Whassup!" to one another in a comical way. The short was popular at a number of film festivals around the country and eventually caught the attention of Vinny Warren, a creative director at the Chicago based ad agency DDB, who took the idea to August A. Busch IV, vice president of Anheuser-Busch, and signed Stone to direct Budweiser TV commercials based on the film. Scott Martin Brooks won the role of "Dookie" when Kevin Lofton declined to audition. "Whassup!" won the Cannes Grand Prix award and the Grand Clio award, among others). In May 2006, the campaign was inducted into the CLIO Hall of Fame." The phrase spread like wildfire and Wikipedia has a good list of where "whassup" appeared as a pop culture reference.

On Friday, a new Whassup political ad appeared on YouTube, using actors who resembled the original Whassup guys, showing where they are eight years later, thanks to current administration policies. It was created by 60 Frames, a film company that creates internet content. Whatever your political leanings, it's a great use of satire in casting archtypes in specific light to make a point. Really, it's as poignant and sad as it is funny. The version below was added to YouTube on Saturday and begins with the original Whassup ad, which I think gives better context to it, since you can compare and contrast the original with the newer satirical one. Genius  — True.

 

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That was excellent satire. I'm impressed with the humor and right on social commentary. It is funny and sad.