(Below is an excerpt from Tales From a Roundabout: Volume 4. Enjoy!)

Doug Murphy paced back and forth in the

reception area of the Aztec Hillbilly Brewery

headquarters in Carmel, Indiana. It was only

a month until the Fourth of July, and Doug was the city

employee in charge of corporate sponsorships for both

the parade and the Carmelfest event that accompanied

it. Carl Bernard had called him for an urgent meeting

that morning. Bernard was the vice president of

marketing at Aztec Hillbilly and the man who had

committed $100,000 worth of sponsorship to the

mayor’s favorite event. Murphy was worried they were

about to pull their commitment. After the Bud Light

fiasco, beer companies were reevaluating all their partnerships,

no matter how safe they might seem.

Doug started to take off his jacket, but realized his

armpits were soaked with nervous sweat and pulled it

back on to hide his stains and embarrassment. He

continued to mutter to himself about the counterarguments

he intended to use. “We’re as American as apple

pie. It’s a Fourth of July parade. Who’s going to boycott

you for that? Think of the children. How can we afford

rides if there’s not a beer sponsor for the Tilt-a-Whirl?”

Regina Simpson tapped her feet and hoped her

boss would hurry up. Doug’s muttering under his

breath made her nervous. This guy is about to come

unhinged, she thought. And the frat boys running this

brewery don’t pay me enough to take a bullet from a nut job.

She dug pepper spray out of her purse and kept an eye

on Doug.

A light blinked on her phone. “Mr. Bernard will see

you now,” she practically shouted. She stood up,

adjusted the Dashiki slipcover on her office chair, and

motioned for him to walk in front of her. No way she

was going to turn her back on the guy who had just

talked to himself for 15 minutes in her lobby. This was

her lobby. Her place of Zen. No muttering white boy

was going to mess that up.

At the last second, she stepped in front of Doug and

opened the door to Mr. Bernard’s office. “You can go in.”

She shut the door behind him and returned to her desk.

She replaced the pepper spray and dug out some weed

edibles that she drove to Michigan to buy every other

month. Regina took a deep breath and decided it was

all Mr. Bernard’s problem now.

“Douglas, have a seat. Welcome.” Carl Bernard

360 JEFF STANGER

motioned to a set of leather chairs in front of his oversized

cherry desk. “Thanks for seeing me on short

notice.”

“Oh, no problem. Unless there is a problem?” Doug

was sweating and already losing his composure.

“Do you want a drink? Some water or a beer? I think

we can make that happen.” Bernard laughed and indicated

the window behind his desk that overlooked the

production floor of the brewery below.

“No, I’m fine.” He wasn’t fine.

“Let me get to the point.” Bernard frowned and that

made Doug sweat even more. “I know that lots of

banners and whatnot have been printed for the parade.

Lots of marketing already done.” He paused for

moment and then leaned forward. “But we want to

make a change.”

There it was. The news Doug had been worried

about since he got the call from Bernard’s assistant the

previous afternoon. The news that had kept him up all

night. He forgot all the objections he practiced and

went right to begging.

“Oh, Mr. Bernard. Please don’t do this to us now. I

don’t have time to secure another sponsor.”

“Another sponsor? What the hell are you talking

about?”

“You said make a change.”

“In products! Did you think we were dropping the

event?” He laughed, and Doug felt embarrassed. “No, we

just don’t want our beer brand to be the sponsor.” He

Tales From a Roundabout 361

got up and walked over to a small fridge next to a fully

restored coin-operated deer hunting game. The

graphics on the side of the game showed a deer in the

crosshairs of a hunting rifle. Doug thought the deer

looked like him.

Bernard pulled out a white can and tossed it to

Doug. He ducked instead of catching it. The can

skidded off the desk and onto the floor.

Bernard shook his head. “Doug, relax for heaven’s

sake.” He grabbed another can from the fridge and

walked it over to him. Bernard pointed to the labeling.

“What do you think of that?”

Doug looked it over. It was white with a metallic

grey silhouette of a person holding a can and a cell

phone.

“We want to know how quickly we can change all

the banners, signage, and social media marketing to

Trendy Booze. It’s the newest lifestyle brand in the

Aztec Hillbilly family of products. We’re still in, we just

want to promote this product instead.”

Doug’s initial panic had started to subside. “You

mean this stuff is actually called Trendy Booze?”

“Yes.”

“You’re kidding me. When you first handed it to me,

I thought that was a placeholder.”

“No, that’s the name.”

Doug looked from the can to Bernard. His initial

fear of being dropped by the sponsor had given way to

disbelief. “Did you come up with this yourselves or did

362 JEFF STANGER

you pay some outside firm for this? Because if you did,

you got ripped off.”

“What do you mean? Our in-house people came up

with this campaign and it’s brilliant. Today’s young

people want you to get right to the point. They don’t

want to sort through a bunch of options on the shelf.

Sure, we could go the craft beer route and come up with

all sorts of names like Rail Splitter Lager and Dragon’s

Breath IPA. But this is about social proof and influencer

marketing and all that shit.”

“Huh? Can you repeat that in English?”

“We put a silhouette of pretty people with a can in

one hand and a cell phone held up in a selfie pose in

the other and we sell the hell out of it to teens and

twenty-somethings.”

“Teens? It’s alcohol.”

Bernard replied, “Oh, don’t be naive. You didn’t get

drunk when you were in high school?”

“Well, yeah, but …”

“No buts. Any booze manufacturer that tells you

they aren’t considering the vast underage drinking

market is full of shit.”

“Okay, but what’s in it?”

“Does it matter what’s in it?” He answered himself.

“No, of course not. What matters is which influencers

we get to swallow it on TikTok.”

CLICK THE COVER TO KEEP READING!