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Tallboy beer can, a 16 US fl oz (473 ml) beer beverage can in the United States; Tall Boy, a lager-style beer produced in Vietnam by Bier Hoi Brewing Company; Air dancer, an inflatable moving advertising device originally called the Tall Boy; Mountain bike made by Santa Cruz Bicycles; Spanker (sail), a type of sail also known as a tallboy; Tall ...
A collection of drink cans in Dunsmuir, California. Beer can collecting was a minor fad in the late 1970s and 1990s. However, the hobby waned rapidly in popularity. The Beer Can Collectors of America (BCCA), founded in 1970, was an organization supporting the hobby, but has now renamed itself Brewery Collectibles Club of America to be more ...
Bier Hoi Brewing Company produces lager-style beer in Vietnam for export to foreign markets, notably Australia. [1] The company first produced beer for the Woolworths Group in 330 mL cans (4.3% ABV). [2] It currently produces 500 mL "Tall Boy" cans (4.5% ABV) for the Coles Group. [3]
Some years later, however, Ontario (like some other provinces) began to allow the sale of "tall boy" cans containing 740 ml of beer. [146] [better source needed] Then-Minister of Foreign Affairs John Baird (left) hands over a case of Molson Canadian beer cans to his American counterpart, then-Secretary of State John Kerry, at a meeting in 2013 ...
In the past, the custom was to serve beer in 330ml or 500ml in the original beer manufacturer's glass. The tax on alcohol was doubled in July 2012 to ₪ 4.2 per litre. [ 20 ] In order to avoid raising prices at pubs, and as a result, the loss of customers, a new standard beer measurement appeared; the "pint". [ 21 ]
These special cans are branded with Bally Sports’ name, but they have beer made by a Kansas City brewery. Kansas City brewery is selling ‘Short Boy’ beer cans seen in Bally Sports KC ...
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Beer bottles are sometimes used as makeshift clubs, for instance in bar fights. As with pint glasses, the use of glass bottles as weapons is known as glassing. Pathologists determined in 2009 that beer bottles are strong enough to crack human skulls, which requires an impact energy of between 14 and 70 joules, depending on the