Anheuser-Busch Opposes Conservative Brewery’s ‘Ultra Right’ Mark
from the busch-league dept
Historically, stories we’ve covered here about the collision between the beer brewing industry and trademarks have largely been born of the creative nature of the craft beer industry specifically. Far different from the bland trade dress and naming conventions of the macro-brewing industry, the craft industry blended its beer-making with colorfully named brews and artistic art and imagery on the packaging. With all of that creativity at play, names and brands became far more elaborate and distinctive, giving rise to more trademark dispute action.
This one is different. This dispute is over a non-creative term that probably never should have been granted the broad trademark protection it has, a startup and politically conservative brewery making use of that same term, and the open question about whether the real concern is the trademark or the politics.
This all started with the ill-fated advertising campaign that partnered up the Bud Light brand and Dylan Mulvaney, an advocate for the transgender community. If you don’t recall what this was, I’ll summarize the stupidity for you. The beer giant made some cans of Bud Light that had Mulvaney’s face on it. Half the country shrugged and the other half lost their damned fool minds. Apparently this was all somehow a threat to someone, somewhere, and it needed the likes of Kid Rock to shoot Bud Light cans to stave off the threat. This is exactly as sane as the crowd that was shouting “Keep politics out of sports!” when athletes were kneeling during the — checks notes — National fucking Anthem. I’ve spent time in the past attempting to come up with a more perfect paradoxical statement than that and I’ve failed.
One of the reactions to the campaign was the creation of the Conservative Dad beer company. That company produces alcoholic beverages and spirits with exactly the sort of names you’re already imagining. There the Border Wall tequila, for instance. And its signature lager, named Ultra Right.
That last one had AB, which also owns Bud Light, opposing the brewery’s trademark application due to it owning ULTRA brand of beers and the trademarks for it.
“Applicant’s ULTRA RIGHT Mark is likely to cause confusion, to cause mistake or to deceive consumers with consequent injury to Opposer,” the beer giant, who is the opposer, continued, “The likelihood of confusion, mistake or deception that would also arise from concurrent use and registration of Applicant’s ULTRA RIGHT Mark with Anheuser-Busch’s use and registration of its ULTRA Marks is that (a) persons are likely to believe that Applicant’s products have their source in Opposer, or (b) that Applicant and its products are a version of Opposer’s ULTRA Marks or are in some way legitimately connected, associated or affiliated with, sponsored, approved, endorsed or licensed by Opposer when, in fact, they are not.”
Now, the folks over at Conservative Dad seem like the exact sort of folks I would not want to have a beer with. I can get enough of that vibe during family holidays, thank you very much. But just because I disagree with these folks on politics doesn’t mean the claims made by AB make any more sense.
AB does indeed have both word and design marks for all kinds of “ULTRA” related terms. Most of them make all the sense in the world to me, such as “Michelob ULTRA”. But why in the hell the USPTO granted word and design marks on the base word “ULTRA” is beyond me. That is a non-distinctive generic term that has all kinds of uses in the beer industry. Hell, there is a species of hops called the “ultra”, for love of Zeus.
The real work is getting that overly generic trademark canceled, at least as a word mark. Beyond that, it’s tough to see how anyone is going to get confused between these brands. The tradedress doesn’t look similar.


The names aren’t all that similar either, once we stipulate that “Ultra” is generic itself. The fonts aren’t the same, either. So, what is this actually all about?
“Anheuser-Busch is furious we helped expose their woke disaster with Bud Light, so now they’re using their billion-dollar legal machine in an attempt to financially bleed us dry. But unlike them, we’re not just a corporation looking to maximize profit — we’re a movement of Americans who have had enough.”
Oh, calm down, you make beer. But at the same time, if there isn’t a real trademark issue here, or at least not one born of likely customer confusion, then there are three likely posibilities. AB’s lawyers are wielding the broad trademark the company has because that’s what big companies do, regardless of anything else, AB’s lawyers have been instructed to do this because of the animosity the two breweries have for one another, or some combination of both.
Chances are the first of those is all or mostly right, I would say. But when companies go trademark bullying using marks that never should have been granted in the first place, particularly in this highly charged political environment, it’s no surprise to see the victim of the bullying pointing to politics as the cause.
So do I think the folks over at Conservative Dad kind of suck? Yeah, totally. Do I think it should be prevented from trademarking the name of its beer? Not at all. Trademark bullying sucks, too.
Filed Under: beer, bud light, dylan mulvaney, likelihood of confusion, trademark, ultra right
Companies: anheuser-busch, conservative dad


Comments on “Anheuser-Busch Opposes Conservative Brewery’s ‘Ultra Right’ Mark”
This is a situation where the parties involved are acting like shitheads and any potential ending will leave at least one side unhappy.
So! Who wants butter on their popcorn?
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Nah.
Who wants Tequila with their beer?
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letthemfight.gif
Can we just have both sides lose, so everyone has something to be happy about?
Streisanded
And now I know Conservative Dad Beer exists, thanks a lot.
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Yeah, thanks for nothing, AMBev!
Because all beer is the same to people who aren’t obsessed with it. Seriously, if somebody sent me to the store to buy the stuff, I think I could be confused by any of these beer things on here.
Overestimates
It might have looked like that but, in reality, it was mote like half the country didn’t hear about it, 49% shrugged and rest 1% made it look like half the country lost their damn fool minds.
Gimme a beer
If I squint really hard I can kind of see a tiny bit of confusion if someone goes to a bar and says, “I’ll have an Utra.”
These are both beers. Where do you even draw the line anymore?
Man, I’m so tired of these activist corporations shoving their politics down our throats!
… Am I doing it right? Or is it only a problem when it’s politics you don’t like? Absolute clowns.
Jeeze, that Ultra Right beer’s can design is the most generic thing I have ever seen, it makes the old Tesco Value packaging seem like a premium product. I know the right struggle with art but surely they could have paid someone from fiverr to do better and just changed the name.
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The design almost looks like it was AI-generated.
While I certainly agree that we need some very serious reforms to trademarks (and copyrights) I do not think AB has a choice here.
If you own a trademark and fail to enforce your rights on someone else using that said trademark your trademark becomes diluted. This is especially the case with products or services that compete with yours. (such is the case here with the trademark being used on beer.)
This is likely a dilution lawsuit instead of a infringement lawsuit. Dilution applies even if consumers are not likely to confuse the source of particular goods or services with those sold in connection with the famous mark. In an infringement suit, there must be a likelihood of confusion.
If AB fails to sue, their ULTRA trademark will likely be lost due to their lack of trying to protect it.
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Yet this is a mark which never should have been granted in the first place. Probably a FAFO moment for AB.
Ultra Right Beer; Every batch is pissed in by Donald for that extra MAGA and Gacy clown burger flavour.
Two points here.
First and foremost, this is absolutely an example of a trademark that should not have been granted, as “Ultra” is, on its own, overly general. An error was made in granting that original trademark, which is having ripple effects that include this particular battle.
However, they DID grant that trademark, and Anheuser-Busch has spent the intervening decades building up Ultra as a brand. A new brewing company is now putting out a product that not only uses Ultra in its name, but is also a beer and also uses similar colors in its trade dress. While we can argue about what should have been done originally, the fact is that there IS an established trademark, and that this competitor is not only using the word “Ultra” but is using it as the product’s name. And based on the merits, the legal case appears quite strong for AB. If we want to address the validity of the trademark itself, it would be best to do so directly, not just in response to such a strong case.
Secondly, I think it’s foolish to say that one side or the other is being “politically motivated” when another isn’t. It wouldn’t shock me if Ultra Right was chosen as the brand for this beer not only for the plain meaning of the term “Ultra Right”, but also as a shot at AB. As mentioned, AB was the brewer wrapped up in the Bud Light “scandal”/nonsense. Given the other elements similar to the AB beer and it’s trade dress, it is feasibly possible (though the odds are very up for debate) that Conservative Dad had done this intentionally to target AB, knowing that they would need to target their Ultra Right beer to avoid dilution of their trademark. You could just as well claim that political motivations began with AB and their advertising campaign with Dylan Mulvaney. The parties are both opposed to one another politically, above and beyond being competitors. But that political stance does not tender their case null and void.
So, yes, the mark is overly broad and should not have been granted, but once it has been, we should be more careful in dismantling it. To correct the error at the time would have been a simple thing – a new application, perhaps a new batch of labels printed, and all is well. But correcting it now requires rebranding a major beer, erasing much of the value from decades of manufacturing and advertising and potentially dealing a massive blow to a business.
It is a situation best avoided, but given the law and the circumstances, I find it likely that AB will emerge successful (assuming this doesn’t get turned into a circus by national politicians – then all bets are off, they’re as likely to name Ronald Reagan the new owner of the trademark as anything else).
Personally, I would love for Anheuser-Busch to win its lawsuit if not for the worrying precedent that would set.