- The Wine Advocate
Infobox Magazine
title =The Wine Advocate
image_size = 250px
image_caption =
publisher = The Wine Advocate, Inc.
category = Wine newsletter
total_circulation =
circulation_year =
frequency = Bimonthly
language = English
editor =
editor_title =
founded =
firstdate = August, 1978
country =United States ,
website = [http://www.erobertparker.com www.erobertparker.com]
issn ="The Wine Advocate", informally abbreviated "TWA" or "WA", is a U.S. bimonthly
wine publication featuring the consumer advice of winecritic Robert M. Parker, Jr. Cite web|last= Elson |first=John, "Time" |title=The Man with a Paragon Palate | url= http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,966261-1,00.html |date= December 14, 1987 ]Initially titled "The Baltimore-Washington Wine Advocate" the first issue was published in 1978.Cite web|last= Fraser |first= Laura, "San Francisco Chronicle" |title=Days of wine and noses|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/07/31/RVG3LDR0HF1.DTL |date= July 31, 2005 ] Cite web|last=Parker |first= Robert M. Jr. "Business Week" |title=Parker, At Your Service| url= http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_26/b3990095.htm| date= June 26, 2006 ] Accepting no advertising, the newsletter publishes in excess of 7,500 reviews per year, utilizing Parker's rating system that employs a 50-100 point quality scale. These ratings may have a significant effect on the economic performance of the reviewed wine.Cite web|last= Gray |first= W. Blake ,"San Francisco Chronicle"|title= Are ratings pointless? |url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/06/15/WIGOOQ5IGD1.DTL|date= June 15, 2007 ] [Wine-searcher.com [http://www.wine-searcher.com/html/montauk.html Robert Parker Scores and Wine Prices] ]
Background and history
Robert Parker was born near
Baltimore in the late 1940s. He first developed an interest in wine on a trip to France while in college studyinglaw . In the 1970s, Parker was influenced by the activistconsumerism philosophy ofRalph Nader and saw in the wine industry a lack of independent wine criticism that was not sponsored by the distributors or wineries being reviewed. He released his first edition of "The Baltimore-Washington Wine Advocate" in 1978, originally as acomplimentary bi-monthly feature. [C. Platman " [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-124360048.html Emperor of Wine] " The Birmingham Post, May 31st, 2006 ] It soon changed to a subscription periodical and by 1984 was successful enough that Parker could quit practicing law full time and focus on wine reviews. J. Robinson (ed) "The Oxford Companion to Wine" Third Edition pg 507 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0198609906 ]Parker and "The Wine Advocate" first garnered international, mainstream attention for his early prediction of the superiority and quality of the 1982
vintage ofBordeaux wine . Parker's enthusiastic endorsement created a spike of interest from American wine buyers in purchasingwine futures of this vintage, prior to its release to the public. This had the effect of raising the price dramatically for 1982 Bordeaux wines. Subscriptions to "The Wine Advocate" continued to grow and by 1998 had over 45,000 subscribers in 35 different countries.Influence on the wine industry
While not the first American wine publication, nor the first to use a numerical
wine rating scale , "The Wine Advocate" was the first to widely adopt the 50-100 scale and use it as parallel to the American educational grading system. This system was familiar to his original target audience of the average American consumer and provided a guideline for quantifying a wine quality in a standardize format. Retailers have used "The Wine Advocate's" "Parker scores" to aggressively market wines with high scores. The scores have also become focal points for collectors and wine spectators (investors) who purchase highly rated wines in the hopes that the Parker scores will increase the value of the wine.Throughout various
wine region s, most notably Bordeaux, "The Wine Advocate" early vintage evaluation-sampled while the wine is still in oak barrels-can have a dramatic effect on the eventual prices of all the region's wine upon their release.L. Murphy " [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/10/21/WIG0L9C1UG47.DTL Robert Parker pops the corks on a dozen 100-point wines] " San Francisco Chronicle, October 21, 2004 ] Individual scores of wine can also affect whether or not distributors or retailers will order the wine to sell with some retailers refusing to order wine rated below 85 points.F. Prial " [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE3D6143FF935A35751C1A96F948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=1 WINE TALK; When He Sips, Vintners Tremble] " The New York Times, December 6, 1989 ]Criticisms
The influence of "The Wine Advocate" on the demand and commercial interest of wine has met with some criticism, with wineries being accused of making wines tailored to Parker's tastes. In the late 1980s, wine expert
Jancis Robinson noted that Parker and "The Wine Advocate" were "...in danger of controlling the international fine wine market." The subject of scoring wines in the manner of "The Wine Advocate" has also been criticized by wine writers, such as Hugh Johnson, who has stated thatwine tasting and evaluation is intrinsically subjective, with the wine having the potential to dramatically change and evolve over time. In partial response to these criticisms, "The Wine Advocate" publishes on the cover of every issues its philosophy that "...wine is no different from any consumer product. There are specific standards of quality that full time wine professionals recognize."The effects of "The Wine Advocate" scores can be pronounced in the retail sphere, with wine rated above 90 points usually selling well while those even in the 85-89 range, which is rated "good to very good", will often be ignored by consumers.
References
External links
* [http://www.erobertparker.com/info/WineAdvocate.asp "The Wine Advocate" info] erobertparker.com
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