One month has passed since the last beer was sold in Whiteclay. In that time, it has seen plenty of changes.
"Nearly 32 million adults in the United States (13 percent of the U.S. population aged 18 and older) consumed more than twice the number of drinks considered binge drinking (four or more drinks for women and five or more drinks for men) on at least one occasion," according to a recently released 2013 survey conducted by the NIAAA.
Utah is facing backlash after passing one of the strictest drunk driving laws in the country. The legislation lowers the legal blood alcohol limit to 0.05 from 0.08, the lowest threshold in the United States.
The Wisconsin Tavern League, along with two other lobby groups want to narrow how the state regulates companies that manufacture, distribute and sell alcoholic beverages and create a new government office with broad discretion to regulate the industry.
These old ads provide a window into a world where the message is the same: alcohol can positively transform you and your universe from the inside out.
A landmark study on alcohol in Northern Territory Aboriginal communities, which was kept under wraps, found well-managed social clubs can reduce harm associated with drinking.
2016 isn't a year that the beverage alcohol industry will be toasting.
Lithuania on Thursday banned alcohol advertising and raised the legal drinking age to 20 from 18 as part of efforts to curb consumption in one of the world's hardest-drinking nations.
The overall global drinks market shrunk by 1.3% in 2016, according to the IWSR.
The American Craft Spirits Association, a trade group representing small-scale distillers, is pressing for lower excise taxes on its increasingly popular products—and it has a historic example that helps make its case.