I became disenchanted with domestic beer brands when I spent 5 years in Oklahoma. They had this weird law about selling beer having an "excess of 3.2% alcohol by volume."
Most beer is in the 6.0% alcohol range. I guess OK wanted to limit drunk driving by their redneck population, so if you bought beer in grocery stores or convenience marts, it had to be 3.2% or less. My first experience with that was when my future Ex and I bought 2 six packs of beer and sat on a towel by Lake Hefner to enjoy it. After cracking open the second 6pk, I looked at her and asked, "You feel anything from this?" She said, "Not even a little bit." I read the 3.2% notice on the label, but wasn't sure what it meant.
Next, we went to a liquor store. They explained the law, and said any beer, wine or liquor over 3.2% had to be purchased from a place like theirs.
Luckily, the base had a Class VI store that sold booze cheaper than off base (no state taxes). The only domestic beer that was 6.0 was the generic "BEER" -- white can with black lettering that just said "BEER."

Not bad, but not really good. They also had "LITE BEER".

The only other 6.0 domestic brand was Pabst Blue Ribbon. So, we spent a little more and bought the imports. St Pauli Girl, Moosehead, Heineken, Corona, Dos Equis, ... anything imported, and it was all "in excess of 3.2% alcohol by volume."
There was a restaurant chain in OKC called Garfield's that had a Beer-Of-The-World Club. You get a card (like a punch card, only they initialed it), with a list of about 100 beers. You order a beer on the card, and they mark it for you. Once you had 25 marked, you got a free appetizer. 50 got you a free prime rib meal. 100 got you a special glass beer mug. 500 got your name engraved on a bar stool. They changed it up no and then, like the Silver Bullet Club, where the only beer listed on the card was Coors. Same rewards, just limited to Coors brand.
Anyway, Sam Adams is probably my favorite domestic beer now. All the rest are "Meh."