The accommodation is in tents or prefabs, there's no beer in the stadiums, the temperatures are uncomfortably hot and the whole event is mired in controversy over alleged human rights abuses.
Qatar's last-minute decision to ban alcohol at World Cup stadiums has left Budweiser with loads of beer left on its hands. The company has an innovative solution to offload it.
In the pantheon of sodas, Dr Pepper is the odd one out: It doesn't have the popularity or sales of Coca-Cola or Pepsi, you can't use it in a standard cocktail, and it doesn't fall neatly into a category like cola or root beer.
A TikToker shared a viral video of a fight that broke out between an influencer wannabe — who apparently cut a beer line — and another woman who confronted her.
Startling video footage shows a Texas man who had allegedly just killed his wife calmly stroll into the store where she worked, steal a beer and then chug it outside.
"Southern star brewery is an apolitical organization. But we feel that this event doesn't reflect our own values and we could not in good faith continue to rent our space for the event on 1/26. We don't do rallies, we make beer for people who like...
Proving that good beer can make anything better, Miles Teller cheers his wife, Keleigh, as she waits on hold by busting out the dance moves in Bud Light's Super Bowl LVII spot.
The rise to the top for spirit-makers was fueled in part by the resurgent cocktail culture — including the growing popularity of ready-to-drink concoctions.