You can't, they were bought out by Heinekin Ireland and there are currently no plans to sell in the U.S.
Guinness makes more than one type of beer. For example, draught and extra stout (as well as others). The draught beer sold in the widget cans and the draught beer you get at a pub supposedly come from the St. James Gate brewery in Dublin, Ireland. There are Guinness breweries all over the world including one in Canada run by Labatt that makes Guinness Extra Stout for US and Canada. One distributor said that they supply "Guinness" mostly for markets west of the Mississippi. It should also be noted that the Extra Stout brewed in Canada for the Canadian and US markets has a higher alcohol content than what is sold in Europe (5% vs. 4.1-4.3%). By most accounts this Canadian brewed stout tastes different than the Irish brewed stout, but the draught version supposedly all comes from the same place. The answer it seems, depends on what type of Guinness you mean (Draught, Extra Stout, Foreign Extra Stout, etc) and where in the US you are.
5%
5% in US Extra Stout.
The Irish in Us was created in 1935.
The duration of The Irish in Us is 1.4 hours.
Guinness! (In the good old days, when it was still brewed in Ireland.) Now...Bailey's Irish Whiskey?
Punk is not Irish. He is from the US. I think his grandmother is Irish but I am not sure.
The Irish potato famine led to the influx of huge numbers of Irish immigrants into the US.
not much they all died
they danced
The appropriate term is an Irish Pub, and most cities in the US have at least one Irish-Style Pub, particularly in areas with a significant Irish Immigrant Population (New York City, Boston)
The Irish in Us - 1935 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-G USA:Approved (PCA #1049)