Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Overall sales of Coors Light fell last year nearly 2% to roughly $2.7 billion and volume slipped 3.5%. As a result of the sluggish sales for many of its beers, Molson Coors trimmed its 2024 sales ...
Coors Light is not the only company in recent memory to debut an alter ego. In October 2024, Goldfish temporarily changed its name to the much more mature “Chilean Sea Bass” to appeal to adults.
And more commercially available low-ABV beers like Pabst Blue Ribbon (4.7% ABV), Montucky Cold Snacks (4.1% ABV), and Bell's Light Hearted (4% ABV) pop up regularly on grocery and beer store shelves.
Coors Light is a 4.2% ABV light American lager beer sold by Coors (currently Molson Coors) of Chicago, Illinois. It was first produced in 1978 by the Coors Brewing Company . They had briefly produced a different low-alcohol beer by the same name in 1941.
In Canada, regular beers typically have 5% ABV, while a reduced-alcohol beer contains 2.6%–4.0% ABV and an "extra-light" beer contains less than 2.5%. [21] In the United States, most mass-market light beer brands, including Bud Light, Coors Light, and Miller Lite, have 4.2% ABV, less than ordinary beers from the same makers which are 5% ABV. [19]
Coors Light was introduced in 1978. [2] The longtime slogan of "Silver Bullet" to describe it does not describe the beer, but rather the silver-colored can in which Coors packaged the beer. Coors once produced Coors Light in "yellow-bellied" cans like the full-strength Coors. However, when the yellow coloring was removed, the can was left ...
Coors Light has been a fixture in beer coolers since 1978. Coors Light was first brewed in 1941 but was soon discontinued. It was reintroduced in 1978 as a "diet-beer" alternative to Miller Light ...
The first use of the term in marketing was in 1941 when the Coors Brewing Company sold a low-abv beer called Coors Light for less than a year. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] In 1967 New York's Rheingold Brewery introduced a 4.2% pale lager, Gablinger's Diet Beer , brewed using a process developed in 1964 by chemist Dr. Hersch Gablinger of Basel, Switzerland.