Remember the saga of Top
Totty? MPs and other Westminster Village notables lined up to find
adversely on the presence of the blonde beer from Stafford microbrewery Slater’s
back in February this year. Labour equalities spokesperson Kate Green made the
initial complaint, but Speaker’s wife Sally Bercow and Tory Louise Mensch also
weighed in. Both offending pump clip and brew were duly removed.
Top Totty had
featured as a guest beer in the Strangers’ Bar on and off since 2007, and thus
the first part of the dilemma: that guest spot helps new players in the brewing
industry to get publicity – and hopefully orders – for their products. And even
adverse publicity can be good: after the Commons ruckus, Slater’s sold out of Top Totty within hours. The MPs’
intervention turned out to be a Godsend.
That said, the Top
Totty saga has set a precedent of not allowing beer brands whose names may be
deemed to cause offence. And that puts several other brews, or brewers,
potentially in the firing line. Not least of these is Robinson’s, the old
established and independent brewery in Stockport, who have also been getting on
the blonde beer bandwagon.
And Robinson’s offering, Dizzy
Blonde, can be found with a generic pump clip similar to their other beers,
but more usually has the design seen here, which features a young woman wearing
perhaps more than on the Slater’s Top
Totty design, but not much, although there are no 70s Playboy bunny ears on
view. Would Kate, Louise and Sally be happy with this one?
If Dizzy Blonde
crosses the line, then what about brews whose names have what aficionados of
Viz magazine might call the Fnarr Factor?
Do Parliamentarians approve of brews that may induce nudge-nudgery among the
clientele? For instance, how about the only beer that may be called a Kentish
Strong Ale, Shepherd Neame Bishop’s
Finger (also available in bottled form)?
And just how far does the ban over supposedly demeaning
terminology go? For instance, is it allowed within the Palace of Westminster to
refer to a woman as a “chick”? And if
it isn’t, then how will the grammar police explain themselves to yet another
up-and-coming microbrewery, Offbeat, just another 25 miles up the M6 from
Slater’s at Crewe?
Offbeat is run by Michelle Kelsall, who gives her beers the
kind of product differentiation that comes from operating in a male-dominated
world, calling them “Great Beer Brewed By
A Chick” (the pump clip designs all have a cartoon “chick” at one corner). The problem is, once you get judgmental, you
end up having to keep on being judgmental.
What say Kate Green, Sally Bercow and Louise Mensch now? No pressure, folks.
6 comments:
That's not a problem at all. To say 'you have to keep on being judgmental once you start,' implying that when you judge that one thing crosses a boundary, you have to declare that *everything* thereafter does too, is not a logical proposition.
'Top Totty' with its (quite amateurishly drawn) woarr-look-at-the-tits-on-that imagery is a world away from the Kooky Gold branding, and it's disingenuous to link a hypothetical and deliberately ludicrous objection to Bishop's Finger with an objection to 'Top Totty.' The two are not the same, and it's a poor argument to link them.
There's a danger here that you're pitching your argument as 'tch! women, eh?'
Also, to get further grammar police about it, it's more a job for the semantics boys (or pragmatics anyway.)
Also it encourages a certain kind of bloke to say "Oho! I'll have a dizzy blonde!" and set off a chain reaction of "does The Wife know?"/"Chance would be a fine thing" etc. and that's just f*ing irritating.
Agree with Rich 100%. Pathetic smutty puns should be banished from the beer world because they are an embarrassment, long before they are banished for being sexist. And you really are verging on Daily Mail reader "you can't even call them fuzzy wuzzies any more!" territory here. Poor post.
There is a difference, Rich, between opinion and fact, no matter how assertively the opinion is delivered.
And @3 I am not doing a Daily Mail and passing judgement, mainly because that kind of thing is best left to the Daily Mail.
But I do retain my sense of humour. Thanks for the comments as ever.
I believe that Bishop's Finger was a nickname for the distinctive signposts that used to be on Kent roads. So you can all stop sniggering in the back row!
This is a particularly lazy slippery slope fallacy. Don't understand the point of this particular post other than to be contrary.
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