Lyft and the eroticism of emasculation: confronting the baroque body of the castrato summaryAnheuser-Busch want to give people rides to stop drunk driving.
The two companies are partnering to give out 5,000 $10 ride vouchers per week from this Friday through the end of 2016. The campaign, planned to coincide with the holiday season, will distribute 80,000 ride vouchers total.
The vouchers will become available on Thursdays and expire at the end of the weekend in an effort to provide people with an alternative to taking their car for a night out.
The rides, available in cities throughout New York, Illinois, Colorado and Florida, are only available to people over 21 years old. Customers have to claim them in advance through Budweiser's and Lyft's Facebook and Twitter pages, so they won't be a last-minute late-night solution.
"It encourages planning ahead," said Katja Zastrow, vice president for corporate social responsibility at Anheuser-Busch. "This is an opportunity for people to make really positive choices."
The companies are distributing their first rides on Friday to coincide with Anheuser-Busch's Global Beer Responsible Day. It also ties into a marketing campaign, "Give a damn, don't drive drunk," from Anheuser-Busch flagship brand Budweiser.
For the campaign, Budweiser is buying 16 weeks of advertising targeting 21- to 34-year-olds.
Ride-hailing companies have tried to bring attention to drunk driving before. In 2015, Uber released a report with Mothers Against Drunk Driving in which 78 percent of survey respondents said that "friends are less likely to drive drunk since the arrival of ride-sharing services like Uber to their city."
Uber also ran a short-term promotion to donate $1 to MADD for every ride taken.
But a study from the University of California and Oxford University found that ride-sharing services actually didn't reduce drunk driving deaths.
Lyft says it has also partnered with MADD in the past. One of the company's early use cases centered on a night out, Lyft Vice President of Partnerships Oliver Hsiang told Mashable.
"Drunk driving is a really important issue for us. We think that Lyft is also a solution to this," Hsiang said.
The Budweiser partnership is one of Lyft's biggest, Hsiang said.
Lyft and Budweiser partnered earlier this year to offer rides at SXSW in Austin and Budweiser's Made in America in Philadelphia.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Target Circle Week 2025: Shop deals on Peacock, Beats, Lego, and more
Facebook managed to screw up its ban on 'dangerous' individuals
Watch this Roomba scream in pain when it collides with things
Best Presidents' Day deal: Save $250 on Peloton Bike
Instagram to demote posts based on fact
Moving moment Kate Middleton hugs crying mum of autistic boy
No, voting machine hackers probably didn't steal this election for Trump
NYT mini crossword answers for December 20
Teens have officially gone off the deep end with the #BackpackChallenge
CES 2025: The best smart glasses
Feast your eyes on this spectacular Hubble photo of a spiral galaxy
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。