A judge in Wisconsin has temporarily paused Bud Light's trolling of MillerCoor's use of corn syrup, by ordering Anheuser-Busch to stop making the suggestions in its advertising campaigns.
The #corntroversey began in February, when Bud Light used its bumper buy of Super Bowl spots to launch it's 'ingredient transparency' campaign.
This prompted MillerCoors to respond with a full-page newspaper ad addressed to ‘Beer Drinkers of America’ which defended its use of the ingredient.
After Bud Light penned a more comical response from 'King John Barley IV,' MillerCoors pulled out of a ‘beer alliance’ meeting – a collective of beer brewers united by the aim of winning back customers who have defected to wine and spirits.
The public spat heated up when MillerCoors sued Anheuser-Busch, claiming it supposedly misled consumers into believing there is corn syrup in Coors Light and Miller Lite, when it says there is no corn syrup in either beer by the time it reaches consumers.
Although Bud Light uses rice syrup, other Anheuser-Busch beer brands, Stella Artoise and Busch Light Beer, uses corn syrup - the ingredient it pulled MillerCoors up for using.
MillerCoor's said its rivals had spent as much as $30 million on "false and misleading" campaigns.
As a result, Anheuser-Busch has had temporary ads bans on any that say Bud Light contains '100% less corn syrup,' describe corn syrup as an ingredient in Coors Light and Miller Lite or mention crown syrup without reference to the brewing process.
Despite this, the ruling didn't cover all of Anheuser-Busch's advertising as the beer maker says it doesn't affect its Super Bowl ad which started the corn-syrup spat.