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A Wine Company Is Taking On Anheuser-Busch During The Super Bowl

Anheuser-Busch has been the exclusive alcohol advertiser for the Super Bowl for decades.
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When you think back on past Super Bowl commercials, you might remember mini Darth Vader or that time Betty White really needed to eat a Snickers bar.

"Mike, you're playing like Betty White out there."

"That's not what your girlfriend says."

But there's a reason you probably remember the puppy and Clydesdales.

At this point, Budweiser and the Super Bowl are practically synonymous.

It's because Budweiser's brewing company, Anheuser-Busch, has been the exclusive alcohol advertiser for the big game for decades.

But one wine company, Yellow Tail, isn't taking no for an answer.

Because it can't purchase national ad time, it instead bought local ad time in 70 TV markets. So the majority of Super Bowl watchers will still see Yellow Tail's wine commercial Feb. 5.

"As a general rule, a viewer in Chicago has no idea if they are seeing a national spot or a local spot. Unless you are a savant of the industry, you don't know where the local break is versus the national break," a chief media investment officer told Ad Age.

Because Anheuser-Busch got exclusive rights in 1989, it's been decades since we've seen a wine company advertise during the Super Bowl, like Paul Masson Vineyards did in 1980.

And buying up local ad time wasn't cheap. Yellow Tail's marketer told Ad Age the total cost ended up being more than a national Super Bowl ad. A 30-second time slot during the big game has an estimated price tag of about $5 million.