Coors Light launches ‘Dad Bod’ shirts inspired by Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes

Coors Light launched a line of “Dad Bod” shirts inspired by Kansas City #Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes has seen many triumphs, including three Super Bowl titles and two league MVP awards. Although he still faces criticism from spectators throughout the seasons, his most recent call-out revolves around his self-proclaimed “Dad Bod”.

Earlier this year, Mahomes was caught with his shirt off, and much to the surprise of some commentators, he wasn’t sporting the athletic figure most expected. The reigning three-time Super Bowl MVP responded jokingly, saying: “I have a six-pack; it’s just under the dad bod. If you feel — there might be some skin there, but then underneath that, the six-pack is there. You just gotta get real close and squint a little bit. I think you’ll see it.”

Inspired by the Coors Light super fan, Coors Light is launching two new Dad Bod T-shirts in partnership with Mahomes. The t-shirts are available for pre-order now for a limited time while supplies last on CoorsLight.com for $25, with proceeds going to 15 and the Mahomies Foundation, Patrick Mahomes’ charity.

Mahomes wore his new shirt while golfing with celebs & athletes at the 15 and the Mahomies Foundation Golf Classic over the weekend, proclaiming the dad bods were “rolling strong”.

https://www.instagram.com/p/C6UtmUHPsV1/

As he prepares to return on the field later this year to defend another Super Bowl title, it appears Mahomes is focused on being the most famous “Dad Bod” in football.

Please, do not buy the Coors Light popsicles

Don’t even open them, unless you want to smell like weed. Because of a terrible beer popsicle, somehow.

Coors Light is a perfectly fine beer.

I mean, I understand the hate it gets. It doesn’t really taste like much. But that’s the point. It’s a mass appeal choice anyone (of legal drinking age) can handle. Beer is a complex subject and the wide range of styles makes it tough to find a brew that works for everyone. So while people might not be thrilled about the prospect of Coors Light, unless they’re a real jerk or a crybaby, they’re still gonna drink it.

The Coors-icle, however, is much more divisive.

The limited time offering promises to cool you down with the coldest possible approximation of Coors Light. For only $20 and change you can roll over to the brewer’s official shop and pick up a six-pack of non-alcoholic freezer pops that in no way, shape or form taste anything like the beer that inspired them.

There are several problems here, beginning with the fact a six-pack of freeze pops costs more than $20. That price is more in line with a future where barbarians wage war across the wastelands for the last drop of gasoline than 2023.

The first thing you notice when you cut open your Coors-icle — yes, you have to cut it because it’s not a normal freeze pop you can simply break open or chew the top off, creating an efficient tool for slitting the sides of your mouth — is that it smells like weed. The aroma transports you to the doorway of a dispensary. Maybe you’d think “oh wow, Coors is jumping on the trend of danky beers” but, no, this is just how the Coors-icle smells.

It is still, in fact, making my kitchen trashcan less employable 20 hours later. I can smell it, even in half-eaten melted form, from 20 feet away.

This in no way, shape or form impacts the flavor. There’s a lot of sugar involved, so you get a sweet cylinder of hard ice whose malt flavor doesn’t beer up the joint but instead leaves the whole thing tasting like tea. And at 60 calories and two ounces per pop, you wind up with something that clocks in at roughly four times more calories, by volume, as the brew it’s trying and failing to replicate.

Not tasting like Coors Light is the only thing these ice lollies have going for them. The flavor is fine. But while most freeze pops have a little aeration in their mixture, giving them a chewier, flakier texture, the Coors-icle is just a dumb block of bad-smelling ice.

It doesn’t get easier to eat as it warms up a little. It isn’t something you can crush up with your hands and slurp. It’s just the kindergarten science project of freezing orange juice and making toothpick-handled popsicles, without the sense of wonder or accomplishment.

My colleague Caroline Darney was much more optimistic with her review, even giving the quasi-dessert a 4.5 rating out of 10. Maybe you’ll like them! But my advice is not to buy the Coors-icles. Don’t even take one if offered, unless you want to smell like the parking lot of a Phish concert without any of the positive effects involved.

Molson Coors has entered the game: Brand to invest in national Super Bowl commercial in 2023

30 years later, Molson Coors is back in the Super Bowl Sunday commercial game.

Molson Coors dropped some early but heavy-hitting Super Bowl news this week, announcing the brand will have a national in-game ad or ads during Super Bowl 57 (LVII for the Roman numeral fans out there). It will be Molson Coors’ first big-game entry in some three decades.

The lull comes from an exclusivity deal that placed an advertising squeeze on beer brands in the past, limiting the number of national spots that feature beverages and brews.

While that roadblock’s origins go back to 1989—the first year of USA TODAY Ad Meter—some of Molson Coors’ portfolio has appeared after in the ratings, most notably Miller Lite, which finished 13th in 1993 with a spot starring Bob Uecker.

Since then, however, the undisputed commercial king of beers has been…well, The King of Beers.

Anheuser-Busch has been the Super Bowl Sunday advertising champion, with Budweiser, Bud Light and the other iterations winning the most Ad Meter ratings of all time, while creating some truly iconic commercial characters in television history: Frogs, dogs, and even a zebra, to name a few.

But controlling the commercial beer aisle is a lot easier when the shelves are restricted.

“Since 1989, there’s only been one official beer advertiser during the Super Bowl, and honestly, that’s no fun,” says Molson Coors Chief Marketing Officer Michelle St. Jacques. “After almost 40 years away, you can bet our brands are going to bring it this year. Game on.”

While Molson Coors has been absent from the in-game rush for the past 30 years, the company has done a solid job hanging around the pop-culture conversations during Super Bowl Sundays. Recently, the brand has taken the popular approach of introducing interactive campaigns to draw fans’ attention during such a highly trafficked event.

That level creativity adds another layer to the overall development, an exciting build as advertising’s biggest stage enters conversations with the NFL season on the horizon.

As for which brands commercial fans will see? That’s also part of the intrigue. Molson Coors does have football-centric brews in Coors Light and Miller Lite, plus a hard seltzer option from Topo Chico, and St. Jacques hinted, the decision “comes at a time when momentum behind [Molson Coors’] biggest brands – and our newest big bets – is stronger than it’s been in years, and we’re committed to investing behind them on the largest national stage there is.”

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More from the Super Bowl commercial world:

The TV dads (or their daughters) who starred in 2022 Super Bowl commercials

How much does a Super Bowl commercial cost? Here’s the average breakdown since 1967

The first horse to appear in a Super Bowl commercial in the Ad Meter ratings? It’s not what you think

Ad Meter Rewind: The 2012 Super Bowl commercial lineup was the Year of the Dog