A man peeks out his apartment’s peephole and discovers a hallway full of lurkers staring at his closed door. Another man looks up from his phone on a street corner to see a crowd of doppelgängers staring back waiting for his next move. Both men react by running in the opposite direction, chased by throngs through the streets. A woman is seen dashing through a department store as an army of look-alikes follows suit.

No, it’s not the latest Black Mirror commentary on the darker side of our digital lives.

It’s a new Miller Lite ad.

The new campaign ad, “Followers,” by agency DDB Chicago, is using the age-old idea of Miller Time and positioning it as an antidote to our collective social feed fatigue. The brand is complementing this notion with a promotion that will reward drinkers who unfollow Miller Lite on Facebook and Instagram with free beer. Just text a photo or screenshot to an SMS short code and include keyword “Unfollow,” and the brand will send you a link to upload a receipt from buying some Miller Lite, and the brand will credit your PayPal account. Miller Lite is also taking two weeks off from any social media of its own.

The company’s research found that people will spend five and a half years of their lives on social media, and 50% of 21-to-27 year olds only meet up with their close friends a few times a month. “We have this amazing history with ‘It’s Miller Time,'” says MillerCoors CMO Michelle St. Jacques, adding that the goal here was to tap into the brand’s past to evoke the power of personal connection. “We thought that was an awesome opportunity to kind of relaunch it and redefine what Miller Time means today. As the original social media, we think that we want to get more people into bars and where they have genuine real-time connections over a beer, ideally a Miller Lite, and we loved the idea of taking something from our past but reinventing it in a really new and modern way.”

Welcome to the new beer wars

Beer ads—and particularly light beer ads—have traditionally been among the most fertile ground for comedy and general silliness—look no further than Dilly Dilly. But years of slow, stagnant, and overall declining sales, whether to the craft beer insurgency or now the hard seltzer phenomenon, has put the pressure on beer brands not just to win new market share but also to hold onto customers they already have. It’s led to an amped-up competition, where brands are directly calling out their rivals. This year Bud Light used the Super Bowl to call out MillerCoors duo Miller Lite and Coors Light for using corn syrup as an ingredient. MillerCoors took them to court—and won. More recently, Bud Light parent Anheuser-Busch accused MillerCoors of stealing recipe secrets.

Welcome to the new beer wars.