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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

We are in Marc Suit's Journal BLOG

In the middle of March The Journal began running a new strip on its comics page and it has quite a connection to Edmonton and beer.

Betty is drawn by Gerry Rasmussen and written by Gary Delainey both Edmontonians.

The pair are familiar to longtime Journal readers as the creators of Bub Slug, a homegrown hit with comic fans from 1985 to 1989. In 1990, they sent Bub off to a comic syndicate, but it was Bub's wife Betty who grabbed the syndicate's attention.

That's the Edmonton connection, here's where the beer connection comes in.

Bub, in his earlier incarnartion, was Edmonton's favourite waterfall maintenance man. Edmonton's Amber's Brewing brews a beer named after the loveable lug. The brew is Bub's Lunch Pail Ale.

The packaging is cleverly made to look like a lunch pail too!

The beer is a nicely hopped pale ale with a malty, caramel flavour, some floral elements and a smooth satisfying finish.

Now you can read and Edmonton comic strip in your Edmonton newspaper and drink a beer brewed in Edmonton named after one of Edmonton's comic strip icons.

Cheers

Thursday, April 23, 2009

We were on Global Television. They asked about our recycling efforts...

http://www.edmontonjournal.com/multimedia/video/embedded.html?v=OiTntBMWf2XRbO88LjN47lSVX0h2SybX&z=news/videos/index&s=ej_news.com&sa=canedmonton&WIDTH=311&HEIGHT=300




































Wednesday, April 15, 2009

A Quick Response and what happened with `The Calendar`

in 30 seconds

Greenpeace approached us about appearing in a recycling calendar with some of Alberta`s `Green` companies and they told us the City of Edmonton was already taking part. We thought it would be interesting so we allowed them to use the brewery for some shots - we were guaranteed approval of any images before inclusion (we have that right by law regardless).

They came to the brewery, they took some shots, they left.

Several weeks later they showed up with a completed Calendar. We were taken aback and refused to sign off on our inclusion in the calendar for two reasons:
1) it included many inappropriate images (very little clothes) that were designed only to shock and titilate.
2) we had been misled. It was not a `recycling` calendar but a VERY different calendar which would lead people to believe that we agreed with its primary message.

We asked them to remove our image from the calendar and they refused.

We do not have the kind of funds required to take them to court to withdraw the calendar (or at least the page with our image on it) and, frankly, that would have been pointless since Greenpeace has disavowed ALL involvment.

So we left it to fade into oblivion until the Edmonton Journal decided to bring it to people`s attention. They made it clear that The City of Edmonton was unhappy and (without contacting us) made it look like we approved of the overall message. So we contacted the Journal to do a follow up on our side but we were informed that it was unlikely since that wasn`t very interesting.

Thankfuly Global Edmonton interviewed us and allowed us to tell our side.
Here is a link to the page:
http://www.globaltv.com/globaltv/edmonton/video/index.html
click on Noon News Hour April 15th

We hope this clears things up.

Please do not send any more threatening letters.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

From the Edmonton Journal


City might sue over anti-tarsands calendar

Reuse Centre image obtained without official permission, GM says

By Jennifer Fong, The Edmonton JournalApril 14, 2009Comments (15)

The cover shot of the fundraising Stop the Tarsands calendar has drawn some controversy.
Photograph by: Supplied, Edmonton Journal

The city of Edmonton is considering legal action after officials discovered the Edmonton Reuse Centre, a city facility, is featured in an anti-oilsands calendar created by local environmental activists.

"We're quite disappointed in the misleading approach that was taken," said Lorna Rosen, general manager of city of Edmonton asset management and public works. "We're reviewing our procedures and we're also examining the legal options." The calendar in question was created as a fundraising initiative for Stop the Tar Sands, a campaign supported by a number of local environmental groups, including Greenpeace. The campaign's goal, according to the Greenpeace website, is to lobby the Alberta government to halt new oilsands development.

The calendar cover features a model, wearing only black underwear, smeared head to toe with what appears to be oil. She's holding what's supposed to look like a duck. In the background is the Stop the Tar Sands logo.

Inside, more scantily clad models pose at or for local businesses and organizations, including University of Alberta radio station CJSR, Amber's Brewing Co., and the Edmonton Bicycle Commuters Association. Blurbs describe each featured establishment and its environmental connections.

The month of May features a photo of a woman, dressed only in a swath of white cloth, posing among the Reuse Centre's blue bins.

Fraser Porter, a Stop the Tar Sands campaign volunteer who spearheaded the calendar project with fellow volunteer Amy Goudie, said the calendar was meant to spark discussions about sustainable businesses and the development of a green economy, and to motivate Edmontonians to support local environmental initiatives.

She said staff at the Reuse Centre were "great to talk to and to deal with." Told city officials were concerned about the anti-oilsands link, she said, "I feel bad for the people at the Reuse Centre now." Rosen said volunteer staff at the Reuse Centre were approached to participate in what was described as a locally produced "eco-calendar" last year, and were told they would be able to approve all photos taken before publication. A release was to also be signed, she said, but "none of that happened." The photo shoot took place at the centre after hours. "It wasn't mentioned at all that ... it would be a calendar with the theme of stopping the oilsands," Rosen said.

"This calendar isn't an environmental calendar. It's a calendar with an agenda," Rosen said. "The city of Edmonton has a long, proud history, particularly in waste management services, of being extremely environmental and being environmentally conscious. Our actions speak very, very loudly, and for a group that has political motivation to use our stellar reputation against it, that doesn't sit well with me." Porter declined to comment on whether centre staff had requested to sign a release or whether they sought approval of the photos taken.

So far, Porter said, those who have seen the calendar are less bothered by the product than about the impact of the oilsands on the environment.

"The calendar cover is not pretty," Porter said.

"People were fine after they got past the cover. They thought it was hip, sexy, fun." About 300 copies of the calendar were made, with around 100 still available for $20 apiece at Earth's General Store, clothing store Lucid Lifestyles, Amber's Brewery, and the Greenpeace warehouse.

The project has almost broken even, Porter said, but so far has generated no profit that could benefit the Stop the Tar Sands campaign.

City councillors Tony Caterina and Don Iveson were surprised to hear about the calendar when they were contacted by The Journal.

"I don't know if the city of Edmonton would be prepared to take a position in implied support to Greenpeace and their actions at this point," Caterina said.

jfong@thejournal.canwest.com
© Copyright (c) The Edmonton Journa

Wednesday, April 01, 2009
























BUBS LINCH PAIL ALE IS GOING ON TAP AT THE LIONS'S HEAD!!!!!!!