You may have never heard of this company. I had a while back but never thought much about them until my friend Doug who reads the WSJ daily sent me this article. I hope I am not stepping on any toes at the WSJ by posting this. Every Veteran needs to read this. I’ve not tasted their brew, but plan to. What is interesting is how the company was (is) treated by some of our major commercial banking institutions and prestigious law firms. I do business with one of those banks, and you can bet your sweet bippy they are going to hear from me. How about you?
If you’ve tasted their brew, let us hear your comments on it.
A Socially Conscious but Politically Incorrect Company
You might call Black Rifle Coffee Co. a socially conscious enterprise. “This is a veterans’ corporation,” founder and CEO Evan Hafer, a former Green Beret, says in a Zoom interview. More than half of Black Rifle’s employees have served in the military or are family of veterans. In 2021 the company put $5.3 million in shares toward starting the BRCC Fund, a charity dedicated to helping wounded or traumatized veterans and their families. That was on top of $1.2 million in charitable contributions and $3 million worth of coffee and related products to active-duty military and first responders.
But Mr. Hafer says Black Rifle struggled to find banks and law firms to help it arrange an initial public offering. Since he founded the company in 2014, companies have told him that it was “too irreverent” and poses “reputational risk.”
You can see why Black Rifle wouldn’t be everyone’s cup of tea. Its blends include AK- 47 and Silencer Smooth, and its social media presence is colorful, to say the least. The company’s YouTube channel features a shooting contest that ends with Mr. Hafer trying to get a bull’s-eye after taking a direct shot of bear spray to the eyes and a video titled “Could You Be a Pregnant Man?” Mr. Hafer’s personal politics have also drawn outrage from the media—he voted for Donald Trump twice—as has the company’s popularity with some controversial figures on the right. Kyle Rittenhouse was photographed wearing a Black Rifle T-shirt. But none of this seems to have hurt the company’s revenue, which reached $233.1 million last year.
Mr. Hafer thinks the numbers should be evidence enough that Black Rifle’s reputation isn’t a material risk. But his company “started hitting a lot of resistance” from high-level finance companies and law firms, although they claimed they were interested in working with veteran- run corporations.
In 2019 and 2020, a Black Rifle spokeswoman says, company leaders were talking to Chase, Bank of America and Macquarie Group about raising capital. After initially showing interest, all three companies declined to work with Black Rifle, citing the company’s image. In 2018 Black Rifle had tried to open an account at a Chase branch in San Antonio and had been turned away over reputational concerns. The spokeswoman says that Macquarie was particularly fixated on the name of its in-house magazine, Coffee or Die, which covers military issues and won the Military Reporters & Editors Association’s 2022 journalism contest for overseas coverage.
Bank of America and Chase declined to comment. Macquarie said in an email: “We take into account a broad range of factors in making financing and investment decisions. We do not comment on confidential commercially sensitive discussions, including those that did not move beyond a very preliminary stage like this one.”
Black Rifle hit similar roadblocks in 2019 and 2020 with Skadden Arps, Latham & Watkins and Simp-son Thacher & Bartlett. All three law firms passed on working with the coffee company because of its image. According to the Black Rifle spokeswoman, Latham & Watkins said that its reputational risk committee thought no one from top law schools would be willing to work at the firm if it took on Black Rifle as a client, especially because its name included the word “rifle.” The name “is an homage to the service rifle,” Mr. Hafer says. Like the guns he taught special-operations soldiers to shoot, he says, coffee is “ lifesaving equipment.”
Simpson Thacher declined to comment. Skadden Arps and Latham & Watkins didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Despite these obstacles, Black Rifle is thriving. The company went public in February through a special- purpose acquisition merger with SilverBox Engaged Merger Corp and this summer rolled out marketing partnerships with the Dallas Cowboys and Amazon Prime Video.
Yet Mr. Hafer worries what the seemingly arbitrary treatment he experienced will mean for other veterans. “I think it’s going to be really important for those guys—men and women both—to understand, these are the types of doors that are going to be slammed in your face if you’re not conforming to a very specific narrative,” he says. “I don’t want them to go through some of the same issues that we’ve had to go through to get access to capital.”
Ms. Keller is an assistant editorial features editor at the Journal.
Originally posted 2022-09-17 11:01:29.
here is an article about BRCC
https://nationalfile.com/busted-black-rifle-coffee-magazines-editor-donated-to-biden-high-profile-employees-gave-to-democrats/
I don’t think so. BRCC threw the kid who shot the three people under the bus and pretty much spit on the veteran 2A community, donated to a leftist organization that supported
BLM and donated to at least one leftist politician. Hafer also gave an interview to the NYT. slamming the very people he allegedly represents.
This article as far as I can see is a complete fabrication to rehabilitate BRCC.
Hmm, interesting. Wouldn’t be the first time someone or some company used the Veterans to build themselves up.
We have a BRCC in Boerne, Texas and I was advised a film crew will be here Monday-Wednesday next week.
Let us know what transpires as there seems to be some serious allegations against this company. Good discussion , I love it.
Bought things from Black rifle like the ammo storage box but just didn’t care for the Silencer Smooth coffee. I did get the first few issues of coffee or die and some of their videos are funny. I’ve found more T shirts I love from a site called Warrior 12. Also run by vets. One of my favorites that I wear often says In God We Trust, the guns are just backup.
LOL, Love ya Hazel!
Another Warrior 12 T shirt shows an archangel holding an AR15 and says ” God gave archangels weapons because he knows you can’t fight evil with kindness and understanding. And BRCC DID say most of their customers are wannabe’s. Probably true but insulting and bad for business and that’s why I stopped shopping with them.
I consider BRCC to be arrogant grifting posers. I say that because I have never known real grunts, operators or whatever you want to call them act like they do. Maybe my sample size is too small. No matter how tough you think you are, you will run out or close to the end of your tether and abilities at some time or later. Here is just one of several videos about them.
Don’t hold back James. Good point.
As a WSJ subscriber, I missed this op/ed and thank you for bringing it to the blog’s attention. How many wake-up calls do we need to put wokeness to sleep — permanently?
Been drinking BRCC coffee for several years, favorites are Just Black and Coffee or Die.
Great company, great causes.
BZ BRCC. Love it!