Spuds MacKenzie

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Spuds MacKenzie in an ad
Spuds MacKenzie in an ad

Spuds MacKenzie (real name Honey Tree Evil Eye, c. 1983 - May 31, 1993) was a fictional dog created for use in an advertising campaign marketing Bud Light beer in the late 1980s. The dog first showed up in a Bud Light Super Bowl ad. By the end of the game, Spuds was a marketing success. During the height of Spuds' popularity there was many merchindise of character such as plush toys and t-shirt.

The dog, a Bull Terrier, existed not without his share of controversy. Shortly after Spuds' rise to fame it was learned that "he" was actually female. The "controversy" was spread through the media.

Because of the popularity of the ads, they were the subject of attacks and calls for censorship by temperance-oriented groups. In 1992, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, along with Mothers Against Drunk Driving, charged that Anheuser-Busch was pitching the too-cool-for-monogamy-and-sobriety dog to children. Although the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) found no evidence to support that allegation, the ads were dropped.

Spuds died of kidney failure on May 31, 1993 in North Riverside, Illinois at age 10.

[edit] Cultural References

  • On an episode of Family Guy, while at a Spring Break celebration, one drunk character sees a Bull Terrier which he replies to and says, "Hey look, it's Spuds MacKenzie". The dog mauls him.
  • In an episode of The Golden Girls, one of Sophia's boyfriends (played by Mickey Rooney) is said to have been caught spray painting "something obscene on Spuds MacKenzie", on a billboard of Spuds'. Sophia claimed he was simply making Spuds anatomically correct.
  • Spuds made two cameo appearances in the 80's comic strip "Bloom County." First as a presidential candidate running against Bill the Cat and Opus, and then again during the strip's "female crisis" where he revealed to Opus that one member of Bloom County's all male cast was actually a female in disguise, but passed out from alcohol intoxication before she could reveal who it was.
  • In his late 1980s anti-'sellout' anthem, This Note's for You (the title of which parodies Budweiser's This Bud's for You ad campaign), Neil Young says he 'ain't singing for Spuds' in the title track. The dog also appears throughout the music video for the same song.
  • In the Slum Village song "Selfish" , featuring Kanye West, West references MacKenzie in a line saying "I spotted her, like Spuds MacKenzie", a line originally used by Ghostface Killah in the track "Ice Cream"
  • In a Christmas-themed episode of the sitcom "Full House", D.J. Tanner, while confronting on and off boyfriend Steve, mentions that the only holidays he got off from college were "Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spuds MacKenzie's birthday".

[edit] External links

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