Sunday, February 21, 2010
Why Wine Blogging is Important-redux
I touched on this issue about a year ago, but I'd like to revisit based on a recent article in the Sf Chronicle. According to the Chronicle, there are hundreds of voices out there, but their actual impact on the world of wine is difficult to gauge. This is not completely inaccurate. How do you measure the impact of wine blogs? If you are looking for direct influence of wine case sales, that will probably never happen. How do you take the collective voices of hundreds of "wine writers" and determine the tidal shifts? Also impossible. Should all wine bloggers be measured by the narcissism and bad writing that exists at the lowest levels? No. None of these are the actual issue.
The editorial spin could have been: "What influence do wine bloggers have on the young demographics, and how are their wine sensibilities shaped by the bloggers?" I speak with young wine drinkers weekly. The vast majority of them read wine blogs. They are on Facebook, Twitter and they follow wineries and wine writers in each of these arenas. Facebook and Twitter have become intertwined with blogs and have a ton of cross pollination. This generation has become very resourceful, and they realize the insincerity of the glossy publications. They're much more interested in winemaking theories than your typical collectors that read the print rags. Blogging, while often frustrating and amateurish, represent the truly passionate wine lovers. Their collective voices help inform those that are ramping up their love in the entry ranks from Wine Library, which yes, is a blog. All the way up to Alder Yarrow and Alice Feiring.
Further, these collective voices accelerate theory and give a forum for a very sophisticated discourse on all things wine. Even if the only people reading wine blogs are bloggers, wouldn't Darwinism help propel the upper echelon of wine theory by sheer numbers alone? Creating a think tank for wine? That is exactly what the wine blogoshpere has become. a "think tank for wine". This also could have been an interesting take on the subject. Their take that wine bloggers don't go after themselves is inaccurate, Parker is obviously a bigger target, but he has been the most successful individual wine writer/ influence.
Very few products exist in our lives that have such a diverse impact as wine. It's international and spans language barriers. It holds culturally influenced methodology. It is impacted heavily by the environment as well as geo-politcial situations. It can be produced today and live for 100 years. It is a leading indicator of business and economic health, and involves complex sales strategies. It is intertwined with food, which has become a wealth of creativity and personality unto itself. And most importantly, wine is awesome. The aggregation of all of these factors make for a very vibrant and colorful discussion that may be only partially about wine, or can be about wine as a microcosm of other more globally significant events.
The final impact that wine blogging has had on our wine culture is this-It has helped to sharpen the collective wine profession's reliance on creating their own opinions. This can't be overstated. As a collective, we have been able to distance ourselves from conventional wisdom very quickly. Robert Parker can exist in this universe, but his opinion has no more weight than the typical blogger in this world. Wine blogging has turned into the great society.
As we blog, the sincerity that creeps into the wine world cannot be measured easily. We see this everyday on the streets when 22 year-old novices say things like "Sancerre is how Sauvignon Blanc is supposed to taste". We didn't hear that 10 years ago, and Wine Spectator certainly didn't teach anyone that. It teaches people that wine is about your opinion, and having your own constantly evolving opinion is one of the amazing things about wine.
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Well said.
ReplyDeleteTough to guge the effects in sales but there is an effect.
Parker Blames you guys for the dearth of Big Shiraz on the market now.
Nice and thanks for the response.
ReplyDeleteExcellent response. I was just formulating a rebuttal to that post myself. At the risk of offending some, I'll leave it at this "Those with their heads in the sand have their ass in the air."
ReplyDeleteJosh @nectarwine on twitter
I think you are leaving out something very important: websites for the said "rags." They teach all kinds of things, allow you to look up a database of information, and generally have way more breadth than a random wine blog. They have a younger audience, those of us in our 20s that aren't going to believe the crap written by bloggers who are paid to write glorious reviews or have blogs tied to their retail outlets. If I'm spending my little income on wine, I'm going to make sure its something that a person with a critical sense toward wine has deemed quality. Not some other 20-something girl that thinks she's changing the wine landscape.
ReplyDeleteI think the term "Think Tank" is most spot on description I've heard for the wine blog scene.
ReplyDeleteTo me it works like an interconnected web of wine enthusiasts who are interested in expressing their thoughts and enthusiasm for wine in a creative way- making their collective enthusiasm into something that lifts those involved into being a larger part of the wine world than they would be alone.
Blogs are probably more important to those involved in blogging than to the average wine enthusiast- but its an important and relevant way to exchange information and to educate yourself.
I blog, keep up with others' blogs, and use it for information. But I still like to read every wine rag I can get my hands on. It's a big tent, and there's an ocean of information. Might as well take some of everything that's out there.
Nice post- Cheers!