"Great people talk about ideas, average people talk about things, and small people talk about wine."--Fran Lebowitz
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Dirty Little Secret
There are a lot of dirty little secrets in the wine business. Stuff nobody likes to talk about. Some of it is even true. Though it's hard to tell which. Like how common it is in California to pick grapes very ripe and then add water in the winery--it's the Tang Method of winemaking. Hey, if it's good enough for the astronauts, it's good enough for you. But wineries hate to talk about it, are loathe to admit it. And then there is all the hush-hush about how much importers might mark up their wines from Europe. Most folks think they all work on the same margin, but that ain't the case. Someone's got to pay for producing the importer's latest vanity music CD. And then there's the biggest little secret of all, the truth no one likes to read about or talk about or do anything about, the shameful fact of sexual discrimination in the wine business, the unspeakable, relentless, and ongoing persecution of men in the wine business. I, myself, have been a victim.
I don't recall exactly when I noticed it. At first I was treated like everyone else in the wine business who is new--that is, disdainfully. I suffered through the usual hazing. Learning how to remove Champagne corks in the "traditional method" by squatting naked over them. Being forced to prove my loyalty by killing rival wine shop owners with an unregistered price gun. Proving my wine virility by sleeping with six Budweiser girls, three of them Clydesdales. I fell for all of that, and just thinking of it now makes me feel all dirty and ashamed and strangely happy to watch the Rose Parade. But I didn't realize it was just the beginning of my humiliation.
When I was first hired as a sommelier I was told I had to wear a "special" uniform. I didn't think anything of it, really. I had noticed how at the time there weren't any female sommeliers, but I just assumed that was because there wasn't any money or prestige in the job so it was left to men to do it. But the "special" uniform which I was forced to wear began my humiliation as a man in the wine business. Imagine being forced to wear nicely tailored pants, a form-hugging clean white shirt that "accidentally" revealed my hairy chest, and a bright, shiny medallion called, ironically, a "tastevin!" I had to parade around the restaurant every night in front of several hundred people dressed as some kind of Sammy Davis, Jr. impersonator. Women took the liberty of staring directly at the bulge in my pants (I was still packing the price gun for protection) as I walked by, summoning me with their wine lists and asking me, "Could you recommend something big for me?" Night after night I was subjected to this kind of sexual humiliation, forced to bend over a woman's shoulder as I helped her select a wine, her lips next to my neck, her eyes locked on my white shirt, her sizing me up as if I were one of the meat selections on the menu, the one that came with a bone. And I was expected to take this and like it. It's why I only lasted nineteen years.
I came to find out that my experience wasn't at all unique, it was happening to all the men in the wine business. Constantly being treated like we have no brains to offer, just our penises. Assaulted daily by female wine reps who shamelessly use us, treat us as fools and lechers only to further their own wine sales, not caring about us at all, but instead playing us until we drop a three-case load. Enduring the endless sarcastic and sexist remarks aimed at guys who sell wine. "I'm sure you like this wine, that's great, but is there a woman around here who can help me?" "Can you just point me to where the woman who owns the store works?" "Women have a more developed sense of taste, though I love the way those jeans fit you--they're tighter than a newly bottled Syrah." Endless shit like that, remarks that make you feel like you're nothing more than a plaything, a sex toy, a ribbed and lifelike Gary Vaynerchuk.
It's the dirty little secret that won't die. Men in the wine biz being constantly and relentlessly sexually harassed. Look at the endless worship that Jancis Robinson receives compared to the vitriol aimed at Robert Parker. And, why? It's that teeny thing hidden in his pants that Jancis doesn't have. And I don't mean Mark Squires. Women have it easy in the wine business. They have better senses, they aren't subjected to the constant humiliation the men in power endure. They have the gift of invisibility. How I envy them.
Ethcuse me ath my tongth relaxes from being jammedth into my cheekth while I wasth readingth thith.....
ReplyDeleteAs a matter of neuroscience, it's not that women have better senses but rather (and as a generality) greater accessibility to language which allows them to articulate what they smell and taste. This is first and foremost. There are other differences between the brains of both sexes that underlie these discrpeancies which are attributed to variances of "acuity"
Yes, senisitvities may vary in the span of an arbitrary 28 days, but it's the greater degree of interconnectedness between the different parts of their brains that allows women to describe what they sense.
Quite the tractor you're pulling there big boy. Howz about you saunter to the back....walk slow, and grab a bottle of your biggest Pinot. If you smile I might even give you a big...tip.
ReplyDeleteArthur, I swear, if you ever do that again, I am going to give up reading blogs. Psychobabble followed by sciencebabble. Heimoff goes off on Vaynerchuk and you just go off. What is this world coming to?
ReplyDeleteA clever and sly way to poke fun at your main blog squeeze(bleeze?)without mentioning her directly. Harkens back to the days of a kinder, gentler hosemaster.
ReplyDeleteCharlie
ReplyDeleteThat is not "babble", it's science. It's what I do to pay my bills. Call me and I'll explain.
The notion that women have greater sensory "acuity" is babble and is unfounded in what we know about sensation, perception and neuroscience.
Anon,
ReplyDeleteI know right?!That Millie Ennial over at Wine Wiped can be a bit of a whinny bitch huh? Wonder if she'll get it?
Hey Arthur,
ReplyDeleteNo room here for science, my friend. And very clever the way you proved your point about female brain acuity with your very sentences!
Puff Daddy,
You made me nervous talking about Heimoff going off on Vaynerchuk until I realized they've never met so you meant something else. Whew. And you give up reading blogs? More likely we all give up writing them. Don't give me any ideas.
Anonymous,
Kinder, gentler HoseMaster? Why I am nothing but filled with the milk of human kindness, and gentle as a bladder press. Whatever do you mean?
My Gorgeous Samantha,
Millie is a lot better now that she's gettin' it regular from Wark.
As to your first post, "Yes, Mistress, my Pinot is your Pinot."
I adore you!
"Millie is a lot better now that she's gettin' it regular from Wark".
ReplyDeleteHey!!
Tom,
ReplyDeleteOops. I meant that in a virtual way.
That Millie is a real gossip for an imaginary blogger.
Remember, I'm the kinder, gentler HoseMaster.
You're going to get me in trouble, Hosemaster!
ReplyDeleteArthur--
ReplyDeleteNothing that gets said on Washam's blog is to be taken seriously. That was just me poking fun at you for being serious in the " Washam House of Mirth".
Charlie:
ReplyDeleteFair enough.
Good Lawd! It sounds like the Algonquin Round Table in here. That would make HMW Dorothy Parker, right? (Or would you prefer a visiting Tallulah Bankhead?) And I guess then George Kaufman is …Charlie …or Tom? (I dare not guess what part Arthur plays…!)
ReplyDeleteMaybe you prefer the Rat Pack instead, given your nod to Sammy. If so, I’m sure Samantha wants Shirley MacLaine’s part. ;-)
Marcia,
ReplyDeleteI think Shirley might be too fancy, and spiritual...Angie Dickinson seems a better fit.
Yes, Samantha, I think you're quite right! I thought about that one, too, but had rejected the option since Angie didn't hang around with the pack (or get it) as much as wild Shirley. But then again there is that Policewoman thing from years later...
ReplyDeleteStill love HMW's piece as counterpoint to yours!
Marcia,
ReplyDeleteMe too. I read it and was like, "Oh crap he's breaking my bawls now..." have a feeling no one's bits are safe around The HoseMaster