Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bud Light ad a trademark infraction, Yuengling says

- MICHAEL RUBINKAM

A trademark tiff between America’s oldest beer maker and its best-selling beer brand appears to be over before it really began.

Last week, D.G. Yuengling & Son, the nearly 200-year-old Pennsylvan­ia-based brewer, demanded that its much larger rival, Anheuser-Busch, stop using a tagline for its forthcomin­g Bud Light Next zero-carb beer, noting that it closely resembled one already trademarke­d by Yuengling.

“Get ready for the next generation of beer,” read the Dec. 14 post from Bud Light’s Twitter account, according to a screenshot provided by Yuengling. The same graphic appeared on Bud Light’s Instagram and Facebook accounts that day, Yuengling said.

Yuengling objected, pointing out its own low-carb brew — Flight, introduced in February 2020 — is marketed as the “next generation of light beer.” Yuengling registered that phrase with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office more than a year ago.

The brewer had a little fun with Bud Light, tweeting an image of a cartoon burglar — masked and lowered by ropes — pilfering Flight’s catchphras­e. “We know imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but this is going a bit too far,” Yuengling tweeted at Bud Light.

Then Yuengling got serious, sending the St. Louis-based beer giant a cease-and-desist letter.

“Flight by Yuengling is one of our lead brands,” Yuengling spokespers­on Paul Capelli said Wednesday.

Anheuser-Busch did not issue a formal response to Yuengling, but this week, Yuengling officials saw that Bud Light had scrubbed its social media accounts of the disputed posts and replaced them with ones that teased, “Get ready for what’s next.”

“We had hoped they would do the right thing, and in the spirit of the holiday season, they gave us back what belonged to us. We say thanks and happy holidays and have a Flight on us,” Capelli quipped.

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