Beer Cans And Bottles Will Start Displaying Nutrition Facts
Beer isn’t the healthiest thing in the world. Everyone from your mom to high school health teachers has been telling you that for years. But now, thanks to a new initiative from the Beer Institute, you may have to face the facts about the nutritional information of your beer.
From NPR:
Brewers will list calories, carbs, alcohol by volume — ABV — and other nutrition information right on their bottles and cans.
This new initiative, which will be taken up by companies that make roughly 80% of the beer sold in the United States, will provide consumers with information like calories, carbohydrates, and alcohol by volume on all bottles and cans. Additionally, a QR code will provide you with a freshness date, ingredients lists, and other nutritional information.
The intent behind this whole initiate if transparency and to adapt to the changing demands of an increasingly more health-conscious society. In my opinion, it’s not a good idea.
For one thing, I feel like a lot of this stuff is definitely already present. ABV percentages and “born on” dates seem pretty ubiquitous. Moreover, if you’re trying to sell more beer, you want people to drink more beer. If people out there are so concerned about counting calories, they’ll be far less likely to drink an entire six pack in one night if the nutritional information is right there on the can for them to see.
As for the readers of this site, soemthing tells me that displaying calorie counts on the sides of cans isn’t going to change much..
[via NPR]
If this is going to change somebody’s consumption habits, they don’t deserve beer.
8 years ago at 7:54 amThe QR code that tells you the freshness date is gonna hurt college-town liquor stores nationwide.
8 years ago at 7:59 amI’m a type 1 diabetic and I think putting carb counts on a beer can is stupid
8 years ago at 8:01 amDibeetus
8 years ago at 8:46 amI’ll put a jelly filled turkey baster in your ass
8 years ago at 9:23 amStop it. You’re going to make me cum in front of everyone.
8 years ago at 11:26 amI refuse to read any article that isn’t fail Friday at this point of the weekend
8 years ago at 8:14 amI’ve joked that this site is going down hill before, but I seriously think it is now. Money (shitty ads) talks. The site’s most iconic articles and series’ have been halted or aren’t being published regularly anymore. Bullshit.
8 years ago at 9:06 amPretty sure they hold off on posting the articles and columns that we actually want to read and see just to generate more clicks from us looking for them.
8 years ago at 10:28 amWhat? You think posting a weekly article titled “Fail Friday” mid-Sunday, which fades away come Monday content, generates more clicks than posting it early Friday and broadcast as top article throughout the weekend? And what about skipping a post entirely; are you convinced more people click after a post following a missed week than two combined weekends?
8 years ago at 11:20 amShould have said “more visits to the site from people looking for them.”
8 years ago at 11:40 amIt’s about click bait now and phasing out vulgar/partially nude content (i.e. pleasing angry advertisers). That being said, I’ll read up on my beer’s nutritional value before I ever click a Wally article.
8 years ago at 11:09 amKramer must be thrilled. Vegan cunt
8 years ago at 8:57 amFuck you guys
8 years ago at 12:45 pmWow you really packed the hard hitting facts into this one
8 years ago at 9:04 amIf the taco truck down the road did this, it might chamge my consumption habits. But everybody already knows that a can of Natty Light is roughly 100 calories. So 20 cans a day makes up a decent 2000 DV diet. Its just science.
8 years ago at 9:16 amWhere are the comments of the week you degenerate cucks
8 years ago at 9:21 amUgh. How much did Weight Watchers spend to lobby for this?
8 years ago at 9:32 amI’m a diabetic I actually appreciate this.
8 years ago at 12:38 pm