Cool
So I got paid to consult with the Goose team once they got all the lab results in (or at least the most important ones at that time) about the BCS infection. The basic question was, "what's the best information we give our customers, and how do we share the info?" I think we'd all agree that a basic press release wouldn't have cut it.
After talking to Jared and getting a pretty quick education in microbiology, it became pretty clear to me that there was a lot of valuable information to be shared, not just with customers, but also with the industry. We just needed a simple way of putting it all together. And being brewers, they were keen on that. So I went to work with the team trying to translate Jared's knowledge into something digestible for a beer drinker. It was a communications challenge and I enjoyed the work with the team.
The I recommended that instead of a press release, that he just get on the mics with me and talk about it. That's a lot of responsibility for a brewer to handle in general, but to do it on a recording was a bit nerve-wracking for sure. In the end, I think it made a huge difference to a lot of people to hear it straight from him. And I know for a fact, because I got the emails, that a number of brewers that we all pay top dollar to for barrel-aged beers were having the same problem, but didn't know what to do about it. Listening to Jared's in-depth explanation gave them a place to start looking for a solution.
So for me, my journalistic integrity wasn't really up for trades here. I was super clear with everyone
on that podcast about what I was hired to do, and why I decided to do it. In that scenario, I felt my responsibility was in helping one of the world's biggest barrel-aging programs share critical information with the industry at large, as well as get information to drinkers about one of the biggest disappointments in craft beer history.
If someone thinks I shouldn't have done that, that's for them to have an opinion, I guess. They weren't standing where I was standing. And they certainly don't know the positive impact that had on a ton of people. If there's a divide on my decision to do that episode, it's between people who already hate Goose or GBH for one reason or another, and the rest of the professional community and beer drinkers who were hugely appreciative of it.
Even if we just look at the numbers, it's our most listened-to podcast episode of all time.