Go ahead and blast me, but I find these kinds of lists to be pretentious and tiresome.
Goose Island made fabulous craft beer. InBev made them an offer that they couldn't refuse, but Goose Island still retains recipe and quality control. By all indications, the beer continues to be excellent. I will happily continue to buy their beer - and apparently, I'll have way more chance to do so now, seeing as I don't live in the Chicagoland area.
I'm not saying that the OP is going this far, but lots of beer snobs seem to think that being successful somehow makes your beer inferior. These guys are living the American dream, are they not?
As for 3rd Shift - I've had exactly one of their beers (the Amber lager). It wasn't amazing, but it was reasonably tasty, and I'll happily buy it again. Oh noes! MillerCoors is going to get money from me!
I honestly do not "get" the hangup over the whole "craft versus crafty" debate. If the big boys are pushing unfair monopolies by preventing the little guys from having the chance to sell their product (say, by unfair manipulation of the three tier system), then they should be smacked down and fined heavily by the government.
But the thing is, drinking beer is supposed to be about pleasure. Leave your politics and your economics at the door. Choose with your taste buds, not your pretentions.
I don't drink typical BMC becaue I don't care for it. Likewise, I avoid quite a few craft beers because I don't care for them. Most of the beer I buy *is* craft beer, but a good chunk is "crafty", and I don't apologize for that. To me, the fact that BMC is buying up craft brands/starting their own crafty brands shows that they get that there is a niche to fill. If they answer that need by ensuring that more quality beer is available, how is that bad?
Drink what you like, and leave the snobbery to the world of wine.