Entertainment

Budweiser's Super Bowl Ad Is A Giant Middle Finger To Trump's Muslim Ban

by Tim McGovern
YouTube

Budweiser is turning up the heat, and I'm freaking loving it.

In their most recent Super Bowl ad, the beer company focuses on a young Adolphus Busch as he emigrated from Germany to America, a feat that was actually done in 1857 when he was just 18 years old.

And if you thought an immigrant such as Adolphus received only warm welcomes when he arrived on our shores, you'd be very, very wrong.

Aside from having a rough journey over the Atlantic, the co-founder of Budweiser gets asked by a friend why he'd want to leave Germany. Aldophus provides a simple, but driven response...

"I want to brew beer." Mic. Dropped.

At this point in the ad, Adolphus finally reaches America where citizens tell him to "go back home" and shove him.

This type of xenophobia feels extremely familiar, doesn't it?

That's because the most recent immigrant ban ordered by President Trump is the purest form of that xenophobia, which also currently has the force of law.

According to two law professors who wrote a piece on the unconstitutionality of the Muslim ban for Slate, the executive order violates the 1st Amendment, the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause, Due Process, Habeas Corpus and Family Unification Rights.

While the commercial was produced months before Trump's executive order, it was not produced months before Trump announced his desire as a presidential candidate to institute a ban on all Muslims from entering the US.

Although AdAge points out the "ad by Anomaly might be perceived by some viewers as making a subtle political statement, that was not the intent" and how Anheuser-Busch InBev executives only wanted "themes of hard work and the pursuit of dreams," I can't help but wonder how accurate that truly is.

After all, the whole premise of the ad is an immigrant can face a slew of hardships and still accomplish great things while defying expectations of those who fear and even hate them.

When Adolphus meets his business partner Eberhard Anheuser, you realize the promise of the American dream is based on the success stories of those who came in search of a better life and met their goal.

Citations: Budweiser's Super Bowl commercial is a beautiful tribute to its immigrant co-founder (SB Nation)