We Missed it But Bud Light Cut the Cheese

bud_light_cut_cheese.jpg

We missed this one. Perhaps you’ve all seen it already but at a count of just 20,473 on YouTube since February 5, we’re guessing not everyone has. This Bud Light video called “Cut the Cheese” was released just after the Super Bowl. If you ask us, it should have run in the game. It’s far better (better meaning funny, not necessarily having anything to do with selling beer) than some of the other spots we saw during the game. Give it a watch. And yes, it’s a very, very tired old joke but it works for us.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Research suggests the generation of self-taught workers now retiring is the last generation for whom autodidactic learning carried genuine economic power — they could enter industries without credentials, rise without degrees, and build without permission, and the closure of those pathways through credentialism means the kind of mind that built most of the infrastructure we depend on is being systematically excluded from building what comes next

Research suggests the generation of self-taught workers now retiring is the last generation for whom autodidactic learning carried genuine economic power — they could enter industries without credentials, rise without degrees, and build without permission, and the closure of those pathways through credentialism means the kind of mind that built most of the infrastructure we depend on is being systematically excluded from building what comes next

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and the most disorienting moment of my life wasn’t widowhood or retirement, it was standing in a restaurant being asked what I’d like to order and realizing I’d spent so many decades eating what was easiest, cheapest, or what everyone else wanted that I genuinely didn’t know what I liked anymore, and that small moment at a menu contained the entire story of how I lost myself

I’m 73 and the most disorienting moment of my life wasn’t widowhood or retirement, it was standing in a restaurant being asked what I’d like to order and realizing I’d spent so many decades eating what was easiest, cheapest, or what everyone else wanted that I genuinely didn’t know what I liked anymore, and that small moment at a menu contained the entire story of how I lost myself

Global English Editing

Psychology says the reason some people seem to intuitively understand human nature isn’t magic — it’s that they’ve spent decades paying attention to the gap between what people say and what they actually do

Psychology says the reason some people seem to intuitively understand human nature isn’t magic — it’s that they’ve spent decades paying attention to the gap between what people say and what they actually do

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and widowed and the hardest part isn’t the silence at night. It’s Sunday mornings, when the whole world seems organized around pairs and families and I’m standing in a coffee shop trying to look like someone who chose to be alone rather than someone whose person simply isn’t coming back.

I’m 73 and widowed and the hardest part isn’t the silence at night. It’s Sunday mornings, when the whole world seems organized around pairs and families and I’m standing in a coffee shop trying to look like someone who chose to be alone rather than someone whose person simply isn’t coming back.

Global English Editing

Psychology says parents who unconsciously compete with their adult child’s partner for closeness don’t realize they’re running a test the child can’t pass — because choosing the partner looks like betrayal and choosing the parent feels like regression, and the child eventually solves it by choosing distance, which is the one outcome nobody wanted but everyone’s behavior made inevitable

Psychology says parents who unconsciously compete with their adult child’s partner for closeness don’t realize they’re running a test the child can’t pass — because choosing the partner looks like betrayal and choosing the parent feels like regression, and the child eventually solves it by choosing distance, which is the one outcome nobody wanted but everyone’s behavior made inevitable

Global English Editing

Research suggests people who put items back exactly where they found them in stores — even when they decide not to buy them — aren’t just being considerate, they’re revealing a worldview where other people’s labor is visible and valuable, not invisible

Research suggests people who put items back exactly where they found them in stores — even when they decide not to buy them — aren’t just being considerate, they’re revealing a worldview where other people’s labor is visible and valuable, not invisible

Global English Editing