Topic: Heineken

5 chapters across the catalog

Douche Mobile
Episode 1676 2:56:49 - 3:01:44

1676: Douche Mobile

Birthdays, Meetups and The Heineken WOBO Bottle

Birthdays are celebrated for Tina Marie Curry and others. The "WOBO" (World Bottle) by Heineken is explained as a brick-shaped beer bottle designed for the African market to be used as a building material. Numerous upcoming No Agenda meetups are listed for Raleigh, Denver, McKinney, and Amsterdam.

Undercount of Color
Episode 1020 1:20:58 - 1:23:39

1020: Undercount of Color

Heineken, Racist Commercial Controversy

Heineken pulled a commercial for its light beer after it was labeled racist by Chance the Rapper and other critics. The ad featured a bartender sliding a beer past several Black people to a lighter-skinned woman, accompanied by the slogan "Sometimes lighter is better." While the company apologized, the hosts debate whether the racial subtext was intentional or a marketing oversight.

Get Ready to Rubble
Episode 606 2:12:32 - 2:15:50

606: Get Ready to Rubble

Heineken Haiti Investment, Bill Clinton and Skunky Beer

Heineken is investing $100 million in a Haitian brewery, a move the hosts criticize given the country's lack of basic infrastructure like electricity and sanitation. They link the investment to the "Clinton money" influence in Haiti and mock the idea of selling beer to people living in tents without power.

Codeword Austin
Episode 500 1:45:12 - 1:48:38

500: Codeword Austin

Peerage Map, Bill Clinton and Heineken Haiti Investment

Heineken announced a $40 million investment in Haiti following a $15 million commitment to the Clinton Global Initiative. The hosts suggest this is a "pay-to-play" scenario involving Bill Clinton. Additionally, a new "peerage map" is introduced at DailySkew.com to track No Agenda knights and dames.

Pooper & Blitzer
Episode 378 2:12:23 - 2:16:12

378: Pooper & Blitzer

Dutch Finance Scandal and the Heineken Kidnapper Distraction

In the Netherlands, the release of Freddie Heineken's kidnapper is identified as a "distraction of the week" to cover up a financial scandal. The hosts report that the Dutch government admitted to overpaying for the ABN AMRO bank bailout by billions of euros due to a valuation error, while simultaneously imposing austerity measures on the public.