Posts Tagged ‘AB Inbev’
BUSCH IN REHAB
August A. Busch, IV, is currently in an out-of-state treatment center, confirmed a family source. The 46 year-old was the fifth member of the Busch dynasty to lead Anheuser-Busch. He signed-off on the sale of the company in 2008 to InBev and remains on the board of directors of AB InBev.
SRO
Rumors that Dr. Henry Givens may step down as chief of Harris-Stowe State University were in abundance at the Missouri MLK Statewide Celebration Kick-Off Program the other night on the campus. However, Givens was in full command as an audience of 2,000 gave enthusastic hosanahs for the Rev. Al Sharpton. The civil rights leader, who filled his keynote with humor, biblical tales and blunt street-talk, was caught twittering in Givens’ office, while Cong. Lacy Clay, Jr. and Cong. Russ Carnahan chowed-down. KSDK, Channel 5′s most-watched education reporter and the station’s young, news/weather anchor Anthony Slaughter kept the program moving in a timely and pleasant pace. InBev AB’s John Furr and honorary chair of the event introduced Rev. Sharpton as “a transformational leader, a man who has challenged the American social and political establishment.”President Obama calls Rev. Sharpton ‘the voice of the voiceless and a champion for the downtrodden,” said Furr. Rev. Sharpton mused, “You know, it’s amazing how many people marched with Dr. King. They will tell you they marched with him and they are probably lying.” Sharpton began his ministry at the age of four. Others getting their time in the spotlight were Robin Wright-Jones, Tishaura Jones, Mayor Slay, Charlie Dooley and Percy Green, who was heckled by an attendee, who was ejected from the room. MIA was Gov. Jay Nixon, who only did a brief drive-by at a private pouring and then blew the Hood. On Sunday, just getting warmed-up from his Saturday night bombastic and poignant keynote, Rev. Sharpton accepted an invite to deliver a sermon to an SRO crowd at the Friendly Temple Baptist Church on Martin Luther King Drive. Faces in the crowd: the Rev. Earl Nance, Jr., James and Susan Buford, Merdean Gales, Ruth Smith, Gwen Packnett, Betty Thompson, Anita Banks, Frankie Muse Freeman, Stacy and Judge Jimmie Edwards, Judge Charles Shaw and wife, Kay, Argus publisher Yaphett El-Amin, Joe Keaveny and Lou Brock. (See photos taken by the Metro Evening Whirl).
COLUMNIST BIDS A FOND FAREWELL TO 2009!
The columnist has made hundreds of New Year’s resolutions over the years – for himself and on behalf of many of you. Some have taken: some have not. For himself, the columnist vows better attention to health; more acceptance of the limits of medicine; greater patience with the pace of healing; and a more heartfelt gratitude to doctors, nurses, billing clerks, insurance companies, and (especially) to well-wishers. He also vows greater attention to correct spelling, accurate timing, complete quoting, standard punctuation, organized note-taking, credible attribution, flattering photography, and graceful corrections. Of course, that is an annual resolution, made with little real intention of doing anything about the habits of a lifetime gossipist. On your behalf, the columnist attributes (with no foundation and with relatively little malice) the following fantasy resolutions:
- From President Barack Obama: I’ll do my Christmas vacation next year with Claire, Joe, and their family in St. Louis, as long as Claire promises not to Tweet about it and Joe pays for the Pi.
- From Governor Jay Nixon: I’ll ask Peter Kinder, who practically lives there, to tell Georganne the best places to eat, shop, and stay in St. Louis.
- From Archbishop Robert Carlson: I’ll make more good news with Catholic Charities than bad.
- From SLU president the Rev. Larry Biondi: I’ll commission a statue of a naked Rick Majerus for Bannister House if the Billikens make the NCAA Tournament.
- From Sen. Kit Bond: I’ll use my final year to find jobs for all my staff.
- From County Executive Charlie Dooley: I’ll ask the nice Greg Boyce for a couple of lumps of clean coal to put into a certain former staffer’s Christmas stocking.
- From Mayor Francis Slay: I’ll give a Key to the City to Lady GaGa.
- From KMOV GM Alan Cohen: I’ll do infomercials 24/7.
- From “Donnybrook” founder Martin Duggan: I’ll start a blog. What’s a blog?
- From Emerson CEO David Farr and celebrated attorney Linda Martinez: We had no idea we were named “man and woman of the year” by the Variety Club until we read it in Berger’s column. We hope he’ll be seated with us at the April 24th dinner.
- From Congressman Lacy Clay: I’ll check “finally single” on my Census form next year.
- From former GOP consultant Rod Jetton: I’ll use the hot air
- From the Robin Carnahan campaign to fill a bouquet of green balloons.
- From Gateway Foundation donor M. Peter Fischer: I think I’ll do another two blocks.
- From Build-A-Bear boss Maxine Clark: I’ll stuff the first marketing person who suggests a children’s video on national health care reform, immigration, or gun control.
- From former Engineered Air’s Mike Shanahan: Since that fancy country club in Naples, Fla., has blackballed me and sent me a check that bounced, I think I’ll remain at Old Warson.
- From the St. Louis Beacon’s Bob Duffy: We now have our own space in the KETC-TV offices and hope we’ll open an Illinois bureau in Pontoon Beach.
- From television reporter Alex Fees: Maybe I can get Donna Wilkinson to follow Steve Schankman on my “Conversations with. . .” in January on HEC-TV – if her stockings aren’t falling.
- From Congressman Russ Carnahan: I’ll use my frequent flier miles to send mouthy Ed Martin on a long trip to country without the Internet.
- From Blues owner Dave Checketts: I’ll play Ed Goltermann in goal for home games.
- From Gerard Craft: I’ll open a Niche on every corner.
- From WashU chancellor Mark Wrighton: I’ll get that Top 10 ranking back.
- From Chief Tim Fitch: I’ll find a new badge for Floyd Warmann.
- From KSDK GM Lynn Beall: I’ll retire or replace any face viewers might conceivably recognize.
- From Rams owner Chip Rosenbloom: I’ll fire the coach if he blows our number one draft choice by actually winning another game.
- From Bob Baer: I’ll ride the last Metro bus to Chesterfield if the County tax campaign fails in April.
- From would-be Rams owner Rush Limbaugh: I’ll buy the Arch Rival Roller Girls instead.
- From north St. Louis developer Paul McKee: I’ll mow all my yards and rake yours too.
- From entrepreneurs Mike and Steve Roberts: We’ll suggest changing the name of St. Louis City to Roberts St. Louis City.
- From Symphony music director David Robertson: I’ll buy KFUO and program it with hip-hop, uh. . .classical music.
- From Cardinals president Bill DeWitt III: I’ll change the name of Ballpark Village to Holliday Haven.
- From the Loop’s Joe Edwards: I’ll open a successful venue on the actual Moon.
- From Lee CEO Mary Junck: I’ll improve morale by signing a good contract with the Newspaper Guild.
- From AmerenUe officials: I’ll use the phrase “a warm holiday glow” in our next filing with the Public Service Commission to soften them up on a nuclear power rate increase.
- From Art Museum honcho Brent Benjamin: I’ll expand.
- From AB Inbev boss Carlos Britto: I’ll find out if Clydesdales go better with a little lime.
- From grocer Greg Dierberg: I’ll open the most popular grocery in a decade and call it. . .Culinaria Too.
- From the Caseyville and Collinsville police: Next time we hope we’ll get it right. (At Teezers Bar in Collinsville, a guy walked in with a silver handgun over the holidays and fired off a few rounds and marched out. Police began looking for a 70 year-old man known to them and after much searching, they decided that the gunman they really needed to look for had the same name but was just 52. Then, the Caseyville police gave their Collinsville counterparts an entirely different suspect’s name. The guy, who allegedly committed the explosive act, was none of the above: he had been hiding out all that time at Jessi’s Hideout in Collinsville.)
- From restaurateur Sam Kacar: I hope to open a third Trattoria Branica in Chesterfield Valley by mid-January and then focus on a fourth in the CWE or Webster Groves.
- From former airport director Dick Hrabko: I’m going to get those slots installed at the Spirit of St. Louis Airport.
- From Wind Capital exec Tom Carnahan: I’ll use the hot air
- From the Roy Blunt campaign to generate electricity.
- From uber-flack Joan Quicksilver: I’ll nominate Jerry Berger as Media Person of the Year.
- From affable CVC’s Kitty Ratcliffe: I resolve I’ll ask for another convention center. (The woman has garnered kudos for signing such major confabs as the Church of God in Christ, that brought 40,000 here and has inked its convention for St. Louis in 2011 and 2012 – away From Memphis.
- From all of this column’s many sources: We’ll not turn a blind eye to any item that might amuse St. Louis in Jerry Berger’s website.
Caveat lector and Happy New Year!
WHAZZAT?:
Merck & Co., Inc. reps around town are buzzing about upcoming layoffs. Many of the more than 2,000 reps of cardio, respiratory, women’s health and oncology meds will be pink-slipped in January and most of the district
managers will be gone by December’s end. they aver. Merck is one of the seven largest pharmaceutical firms in the world by revenue… That was grocer Scott Schnuck with Murray’s Cheese rep Liz Thorpe and her boss, Robert Kaufelt at Tony’s. Liz has been featured in People magazine (last week) and with Martha Stewart on the tube; Kaufelt also owns Murray’s Village (in NYC’s west Village), which had been singled out by Forbes magazine as “the best cheese store in the world.” Coming soon and hopefully at Schnucks Stores: the French, seasonal, creamy cheese in spruce bark boxes – Vacheron Mont D’Or Speaking of great delicacies, look for Viviano’s on
The Hill to begin vending pannetone (Italian fruit cake) in time for the holidays. Tony and John Viviano are now catering Saturday wine-tastings with gratis portions of homemade pasta dishes… According to guessips on Pestalozzi Street, AB InBev is in huddles with Home Depot to carry some of its products… Former St. Louis counselor Eric Banks is now calling Kansas City his home, where he works at Kutak Rock law firm of 400 barristers.
NO NEWS IS GOOD NEWS
We read the job statistics and the news is only about layoffs, not adds; whole
industries have been wiped out in finance and real estate; employees are working on furloughs a week each month; unemployment stats inch up into the double digits; in places like A-B Inbev they are tossing people out the door without ceremony or assistance; companies are doing away with 401(k) matches and retirement plans; the formerly well-employed are taking less-than jobs; the retired are taking jobs at Trader Joe’s. Business folks quote recovery dates between 2010 and 2017. Enter Rose (“the job doctor”) Jonas, who said, “People like me who do this work are experiencing battle fatigue. Our clients need us (and many of us are providing certain services for free).” Jonas said that usually there are 20-30 people at either Businesspersons between jobs or the new Go! Network. Last month there were 200. “It’s taking my clients longer to find job,” she noted. “Several CEO’s have been out for almost two years. Offers get cancelled before the employee shows up for work.” Her most persistent advice? “Go back to school; look on it as character-building. You might have to move or take a way-less job.” Jonas has turned to the importance of networking before confabs of the International Coach Federation on marketing their businesses.
BIZ BUZZ
Anheuser-Busch InBev CEO Carlos Brito was mum as he walked through a hallway at the Renaissance Grand Hotel the other day. He headed straight to the confab of white, middle-age, tweedy men, who vend the brewery’s products. “Carlos gave a boring, off-the-cuff speech that lasted 45 minutes,” grumbled a Floridian, during a break at Pablo Weiss’s Kitchen K, where most drank iced tea or coffee along with Hawaiian chef Bobbi Wasabi‘s new, tantalizing menu.) Another attendee added, “But, we did learn that the company is setting its sights on distributing Jimmy Buffett‘s Margarita Green Tea.” Said a distributor, “We were also told that the company will be supplying us with some new technology – cell phones, that will allow us to take instant orders”. . . Don Ingerson and his employees are now offering “home modification so that people can have easy access in their homes.” Their company, MediEquip, not only sells medical equipment in all their stores, but now offers simulated environments, replete with bedrooms and bathrooms, so that customers can practice using the products “Rather than lose money on the sale of their houses and moving into apartments, they will be able to function properly in their own homes,” said Ingerson. . .Also, Suzanne and Phil Heckmann have bowed Universal Home Modification, which serves people to age in place and not at a nursing facility or assisted living venue. The firm is located at Forum Shop Center in Chesterfield, . .`Then, there’s Jim Blatt, who with Dan April, has launched Mortgage Retention. “We help mortgage originators capitalize on customer retention on existing relationships,” said Blatt. “There has been a lot of weeding out of lower performing mortgage companies and those out-of-business.” Blatt is the son of celebrated photographer Elaine Blatt and Harold Blatt, senior counsel at Bryan Cave, where he practices corporate tax planning and reorganization as well as being a guru for company benefits. . . Sweet tooth? Mike Karandzieff’s Crown Candy Kitchen has dreamed up another, futuristic taste-treat: chocolate and peanut butter-covered pretzels.
A CHAIN OF FRESTA & TUCCI’S PIZZERIA & BAR, CHEAPO DEPOT AND DIERBERGS MAY BE COMING TO A NEIGHBORHOOD NEAR YOU
SCOOPLETTES: Re-development of the former Raffie Vending Co. warehouse on the north side of Forest Park Parkway between Spring and Grand – proposed by the St. John-based Sasak Corp. to be a relatively low-end Holiday Inn Express – has hit an important, likely fatal roadblock. St. Louis University prez Larry Biondi, whose views regarding construction around the perimeter of his midtown campus are highly regarded around City Hall, is withholding his figurative “nihil obstat”… Keep your ears open for more corruption indictments, where something is brewing on the ninth floor of the county government center (not Chaz Dooley)… Mike Reap has done such an outstanding job as acting U.S. Attorney seven months into Prez Obama’s term, insiders are wondering if U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill would show her independence by nominating a career prosecutor for the permanent position. . .The Covalence Ethical Ranking attempts to measure the ethical reputations of 541 multinational companies based in 45 different criteria, including labor practices and product social utility.

Stelli Siteman's role in a touring production, "Unbelievable," about cancer and written by a cancer survivor.
The 2009 rankings were great news for some St. Louis titans, bad news for others. Large St. Louis employers Boeing Co. at number 40 and Anheuser-Busch InBev at number 56 appeared near the top of the reputation list, ahead of Emerson Electric at number 374 and Peabody Energy at number 396. Firmly anchoring the bottom of the list was Creve Coeur-based Monsanto. which finished at 541st… A former St. Louis priest moves up in the church hierarchy in an unusual shake-up of the Scranton, Pa., diocese in which its bishop is suddenly stepping down because a number of controversies. Msgr. Joseph Bambera has been tapped as administrator of the diocese, taking the reins immediately. Who tapped him for the post? Another former St. Louis Catholic cleric, Justin Rigali, who as Philadelphia’s Cardinal is the top church official in Pennsylvania… Fred Teutenberg has been frozen out of the Dirt Cheap stores despite his 25 percent interest in the shops. So, he has turned around to launch another chain – Cheapo Depot – which will bow soon in metro-east… Downtown, some grumblers note that planning details for the revitalization of the Kiel Opera House have slowed to a snail’s pace as its developers re-examine their financing… Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey (@jack) rarely travels unnoticed. Like millions of other users of his popular micro-blogging service, the Bishop DuBourg alumn takes the time to tell the world – in 140 characters or less – what he is doing at any given moment. Dorsey, who now lives in San Francisco (but is apartment hunting in Manhattan), has made private trips to St. Louis in the past. Later this month, however, Dorsey will make an even more public visit to his hometown with stops on the pitcher’s mound at Busch Stadium to throw out the first pitch at a Cards/Cubs contest, at a gathering of social media experts at Webster U. – and, reportedly, at City Hall to visit with tweeting Mayor Francis Slay (@mayorslay)…. Some residents in Lake St. Louis are wondering when Dierbergs is going to build a store on the vast plot of land it owns.
MR. NITELIFE: “We are going to introduce a new concept from our Pasta House Company in St. Charles,” said J. Kim Tucci, “and it will be called Fresta and Tucci’s Pizzeria and Bar.” His partner in the new venture and also in PHC is Joe Fresta. When boniface Vince Bommarito stopped by to laud Tucci and his wife, Sharon, on their wedding anniversary. Kim tipped that he is supporting state rep Rachel Storch (D-64th Dist.) to fill the seat previously held by beleaguered Jeff Smith. Kim is also taxi commissioner for our town and said, “We’ll allow no taxi on the streets more than six years.” Nearby were psychologist Mitch Alvey with his wife, Yael, who also were toasted on their wedding anniversary. Turning to anxieties, Alvey said that “We use cognitive therapy.. “Some people are afraid to get on an airplane; others afraid of crashing. I usually tell them to change their perspective and it changes how they feel.” Making the rounds in the room, many were spotted dining on Tony’s new creation: cold lobster with white peaches, artichokes and citrus vinaigrette. Famed thoracic surgeon Dr. Nick Kouchoukos and his wife, Judy, pulled up steaks, while colon/rectal surgeon Dr. Ira Kodner with his wife, Barbara, were toasted on their special wedding anniversary. Dr. Kodner, also a WashU Med School prof, tipped that he is closing the school’s Center for the Study of Ethics and Human Values of which he has been the director. . .Over at Chez Leon, Alvin and Ruth Siteman, benefactors of the Siteman Cancer Center, enthused about their daughter/actress Stelli Siteman’s role in a touring production, “Unbelievable,” about cancer and written by a cancer survivor. The show hits the boards on Oct. 16 at Westport Playhouse.
Bossman at Chez Leon, Leon Bierbaum said, “If the sale of the restaurant (to Gerard Craft) is a done-deal, I will scout for a location in Clayton.” And, at Truffles, Peggy and Jerry Ritter lamented that a repeat of the BMW Golf Tournament at Bellerive C.C. is not in the future. “The members don’t want it,” said Jerry. Also seen there were Lenny Landsbaum with his wife and heiress to Moog Industries, Donna Moog Landsbaum, said they commute between Phoenix and their condo in a high-rise on Hanley Road. “Laura Orthwein lives there,” chuckled Donna. “It’s time for creativity,” said Paul Chesterton of his switch from attorney to real estater. With Paul was his glammy wife, Beth. And, other faces in the crowd were those of Susan Bonano with her boyfriend, Dennis Geoghegan, who were waiting for the Dolph Busches.
THITHER & YAWN:Heartland Banks’ Larry Schiffer is telling friends, that he’s bought a dude ranch in Colorado for his grandchildren and “It was expensive,” declared Shiffer to pals… Memo to mouthy mourners:: If you don’t want to spend $50 for a $20 per-person catered buffet at the visitation, don’t write a check and don’t complain to me, but to Peggy Ross, Barbara Smith or superflack Joan Quicksilver, *whom I’ve known since the Boer War, which she handled. . .How’s this for a paper chase? Left-leaning pundits at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch complain that the charming righty Colleen Carroll Campbell is paid more than twice the column rate of her colleagues. . .Gossips at the paper-less St. Louis Beacon wonder about the disposition of a 5,000-word probe submitted by scribe John McGuire two weeks before he died. Spiked is the word.. .Retired Maritz exec Philip Moses – one l, really – who works for the BBB and his wife, Pat, of the Ladue Galleries are beaming – and nervous. Their offspring are stars, Mark Moses, who has been in “Desperate Housewives” and “Mad Men” for the last two years: Burke Moses was in the original Broadway cast of “Beauty and the Beast” as Gaston. “It’s a scary ‘mom’ thing’ – and they’re always looking for jobs,” said Pat. . .Employees of The Shoe Box in South County Center recently found themselves in a kind of show business. Owner Dave Kaplan confirmed that – yes, a young, blonde woman had a double wardrobe malfunction while leaning over during a shoe fitting and no, he’s not enough of a heel (or has too much sole?) to give up the name of the buxom beauty.
PLAYING THE NAME GAME: One favorite: the St. Louis telephone directory contains a Hitler (and a bunch of Hittlers), a
Tojo two Roosevelts, 12 Churchills, nine Trumans.. There are also eight Schmucks and 11 Dierbergs. (That’s not a food fight, not a World War.). . .Cindy Lieber, the better half of entrepreneur Lester Miller’s household, confirmed that Lester “has traded in his Rolls-Royce for two Bentleys,” she said. Lester is owner of the popular Lester’s eateries. . .Expatriates Mary and Allyn Glaub were spotted at Beffa Bros. cafeteria and Mary and Al Baker of yesteryear’s leading restaurant, Al Baker’s, were doing the Miss Sheri’s thing..
PHANTOM OF THE OPERA: Over the years, many big egos have trod the boards at the fabulous Fox Theatre – though, for sheer chutzpah, few of them have rivaled the megalomaniacs above the stage in the owners’ box. That box is a little less heavy these nights after co-owner Harvey Harris was unceremoniously dropped from the partnership by Mary Strauss.
HOUSE PROUD: Triple-murder suspect Christopher Coleman was so closely tied to televangelist Joyce Meyer that he was the only person not named “Meyer” to get a home free of charge from the televangelist’s ministry. It was only after an investigation into the federally-banned setup that paid all living expenses for Coleman, his wife Sheri, and their two sons, that Coleman had to go out and buy his own home . Coleman went to Columbia, Ill., to buy the new home – the scene of the ghastly murder of Coleman’s family. Coleman is alleged to have killed them to avoid being fired for getting a divorce. Joyce Meyer has been known to fire workers who have decided to get divorces. Coleman had hoped to pin the murders on someone who hated Joyce Meyer so badly, that the person would kill his entire family. His plan was to then marry one of Sheri’s friends – a dancer with whom Coleman hung out with while out-of-town at Joyce Meyer’s conferences. In addition, Meyer was the first on the scene of the crime in Columbia, Ill., the morning that police found the strangled bodies of Coleman’s wife and two sons.
JUST SKIP IT?: If it were possible to combine bad timing with worse timing, you’d have to tip your hat to former state senator Maida Coleman for a fund-raising letter arriving in some west St. Louis county mailboxes over the weekend. Coleman, who ran unsuccessfully for mayor last April against St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay, is asking for $55, $155 or $255 contributions to help settle a tremendous campaign debt. The bad timing of the letter – months after her losing campaign – is compounded by the worse timing missive appearing the same week that former senior Coleman advisor Milton “Skip” Ohlsen made political news.. .And I won’t skip the Sept. 17th fete at the Top of the Met in honor of Jim Cloar’s retirement after eight years atop the Partnership for Downtown St. Louis. Cloar, who arrived in our town from Tampa, is credited with untangling the financial and administrative messes he found at the then Downtown St. Louis Partnership. He plans to return to the Sunshine State.








