A cowboy and a trans walk into a bar could be the beginning line of a joke. Dylan Mulvany is in the spotlight again with cowboy brokeback talk; he’s finally talking about his Bud Light controversy. Dylan attended a festival in Austin called South by Southwest and was a panelist on a discussion titled When Beer Goes Viral.
He admits to pitching some cartoonish lame idea about a cowboy and a trans person sharing a beer as an idea with the marketing people at Bud Light. It still would have bombed and come off sideways, but it would have been better than Dylan in an Audrey Hepburn Breakfast at Tiffany’s iconic look-a-like dress while fake gushing over a beer with his mug on the can.
If you want a refresh, here’s the video:
Dylan is right when he says comedy can be healing. I’ll give him that.
“I think humor can be very healing, and I think it can appeal to both sides,” Mulvaney said of her “idea of how to fix last year’s situation” during a panel titled “When Beer Goes Viral” at South by Southwest. – New York Post
First, let me address the New York Post for assisting in the brainwashing of its readers by calling Dylan a girl and using the pronouns her/she in its article. Stop it.
Secondly, we need to quit pretending that it is okay for men to dress up as women and try to pass themselves off as women to gain access to our spaces. This misogyny needs to end.
Now, let’s address Dylan’s claim of bullying. He says the outcome would have been different if Bud Light had stood up to bullying. He also had a few things to say in the summer of 2023.
“I think of it [Bud Light] kind of like a parent, where the parent doesn’t put a stop to something, then the bullying can continue,” Mulvaney said during the panel discussion earlier reported on by the Daily Mail.
“These brands need to step up,” the 27-year-old social media personality said, noting that “certain brands didn’t even continue speaking with me” after her controversial Bud Light ads. – New York Post
What?
The Trans-influencer Dylan said that Bud Light’s treatment of him after the boycott and fallout was tormenting. Since Bud Light didn’t stick up for Dylan, it was way worse than not hiring a trans person at all, Dylan claims.
Oh, but Carol, you’re being a big bully right now by not bowing down to Dylan’s mental illness and coddling the trans by using their preferred pronouns! Shame on you.
I guess I need to treat this person like a dog, then? Going by their standards and them wanting me to cave and give in to their demands.
I identify as a dog — I go to the bathroom outside, sleep in a crate and have handlers https://t.co/pDnpADDQxi pic.twitter.com/Xo0tJL4awA
— New York Post (@nypost) March 14, 2024
No, Dylan is the bully here. Or not just Dylan but all the men who want to put on a pair of panties, paint their lips, and curl their hair to try to look like a woman or their idea of what a woman looks like to them.
Dylan’s 365 Days of Girlhood should have been admonished by everyone. But nope, what happened? Ulta praised him. Rolling Stone and Variety wrote about him. And TikTok—well, you can imagine.
Mulvaney says he has learned a hard lesson and now includes a boycott clause into his contracts. He also thinks he might be working on a rom-com about trans joy. You do that, Dylan. Let the people decide with ratings. You may consider adding another new clause regarding ratings or box office flops.
But he’s not finished. He has a new song out, don’t you know. Here is what we are talking about with these warped men’s ideas of women.
Girlhood is apparently about the most misogynistic and condescending sterotypes that girls and women have fought against for fifty years. Great job, everyone. https://t.co/eDi8mJPE74
— Joanne Mason (@JoanneMason11) March 14, 2024
I would go even further and say that Dylan, being an influencer, has caused thousands of children to want to try the path of transgenderism. If Dylan gets love online with Likes and Shares, they will love me, too.
Seeing Dylan out there being all influence-y makes me wonder how many children he led to mutilating their bodies by bullying their parents into thinking their child may kill themselves if they don’t go along.
And I am thankful to women like J.K. Rowling, Riley Gaines, Megyn Kelly, and Kellie-Jay Keen, who continually speak out about this horrendous fad that has taken over the world.
Thankfully, there is good news, albeit from the U.K., with their blocking of prescribing puberty blockers to kids. The United States is catching up to these bans but not nearly fast enough.
Feature Image: dollyhaul/Flickr/Barbie blonde/CC BY-NC 2.0/edited in Canva Pro
Shame on those who put these trans-freaks in the spotlight. Being a freak should not give anyone celebrity status.
This goon doesn’t even understand the fundamentals of marketing. Rule 1 is don’t piss your customers off (which Bud Light did when it ignored the fact that the trans customers are only a fraction of a fraction of their normal clientele without mental/emotional troubles). It’s impossible to defend angering the larger percentage of your customers in favor of a controversial majority and still guarantee profits to make stock holders want to invest. People, as a whole, follow winners not losers.
What ever happened to Alyssa Heinerscheid the conceited architect of the Bud Lite debacle? Is she still employed or is she unemployable?
Honestly, though, if you’re expanding your appeal to a different group, it shouldn’t really upset your current group of customers. UNLESS the group to which you’re expanding is in direct opposition to your current base of customers.
Really, the failure was in understanding that the current base would actually care when you said “Hey, let’s add in a freak who actually disturbs the people in the current base.” The company didn’t understand their customers, and their “diversity” people in marketing couldn’t see it because (for them) it was a religious issue.
I think of it [Bud Light] kind of like a parent
And right here we might have an inkling of the problem in Mulvaney’s head….
Men like Dylan Mulvaney are the worst kind of toxic masculinity
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