Latest Development on Alex Pretti Shooting Tears Up Another Lib Narrative
Person Injured in Border Patrol-Involved Shooting in Arizona
Tom Homan Just Announced Major Action Against Anti-ICE Protesters in Minneapolis
Zohran Mamdani's Going to Have a Hard Time Escaping the Trap Eric Adams...
Justice Department Withdraws Warrant for Don Lemon's Arrest, but He's Not Out of...
Trump Delivers Dysphoria to Davos As He Dominates the World Economic Forum...
Inside the Democrats' Crowded, Messy, Race to the Left in Iowa Senate Primary
Guess What Some Virginia Dems Are Asking People to Do When They See...
UK Officials Admit They Have No Plan as 600 Islamic Migrant Men Are...
The Trans Trend May Be Dying. But the Fallout Is Just Beginning.
Exactly What All Are We Losing in Minnesota?
The End of the Road for the Little Dinner That Could
Scott Jennings Blasts Tim Walz and Jacob Frey for Refusing to Cooperate with...
Tom Homan Slams Mika Brzezinski for Her Anti-ICE Rhetoric in Fiery Interview
The Declaration of Independence: A Framework for Limited Government
Tipsheet

UFC Is 'Setting Money on Fire' With Latest Partnership

AP Photo/John Locher

Months after Bud Light sparked a massive and ongoing boycott for its partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, the beer brand has been desperately trying to win back customers. So far, it hasn’t worked too well. 

Advertisement

Parent company Anheuser-Busch lost $27 billion in market value just two months after the marketing fiasco, hundreds of employees were laid off, and earlier this month, Bud Light’s stock closed at its lowest point since the boycott began. The brand has been dethroned as America’s No. 1 beer, and based on how they were received at the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally this summer, customers’ disdain looks like it will remain for a while.

With that backdrop, Bud Light cut a massive check to UFC for a multi-year sponsorship deal.

“Anheuser-Busch and Bud Light were UFC’s original beer sponsors more than fifteen years ago. I’m proud to announce we are back in business together,” UFC CEO Dana White said in a statement. “There are many reasons why I chose to go with Anheuser-Busch and Bud Light, most importantly because I feel we are very aligned when it comes to our core values and what the UFC brand stands for. I’m looking forward to all of the incredible things we will do in the years ahead.”

Shared core values, or a reported deal worth more than $100 million? It’s not hard to figure that one out, as conservatives noted on social media. 

Advertisement


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement