
Post-WWII GIs made bourbon the drink of choice. Big distillers like Jim Beam and Wild Turkey scaled nationally with better production and advertising. Bourbon outsold scotch in America.
Baby boomers saw bourbon as granddad's drink in the '60s and switched to gin and vodka. Supply from the '50s boom flooded the market just as demand crashed. Distillers slashed prices and quality, making bourbon cheap and outdated. By 1990, sales were down nearly two-thirds.
Craft cocktail movement and millennial demand sparked a 2010s boom. Now supply is flooding back — 14.3M barrels aging, but sales down 1.8% in 2024. Small distillers closing. Big players fine, but growth era over.