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Robert Parker (wine critic)

Robert McDowell Parker Jr. (born July 23, 1947) is a retired American wine critic. His wine ratings on a 100-point scale and his newsletter The Wine Advocate are influential in American wine buying and are therefore a major factor in setting the prices for newly released Bordeaux wines. This made him the most widely known and influential wine critic in the world.[1][2][3][4]

Robert Parker
Parker in Las Vegas, 2005
BornRobert McDowell Parker Jr.
(1947-07-23) July 23, 1947 (age 76)
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
OccupationWine critic
SubjectWine
Notable awardsChevalier de L'Ordre de la Legion d'Honneur, Gran Cruz de Orden Civil from King Juan Carlos May 2011-first wine writer to receive Spain's highest civilian honor

Biography edit

Parker was born in Baltimore, Maryland. His father was a construction equipment salesman.[5] He is an honors graduate of the University of Maryland, College Park, with a major in history and a minor in art history. He continued his education at University of Maryland School of Law at the urban campus of the University of Maryland, Baltimore, graduating in 1973 with a Juris Doctor degree. He discovered wine as a student visiting Alsace, where Patricia, now his wife, was studying.[5] For over ten years, he was assistant general counsel for the Farm Credit Banks of Baltimore; he resigned in March 1984 to focus on writing about wine.

In 1975, Parker began writing a wine guidebook. Taking his cue from consumer advocate Ralph Nader, Parker wanted to write about wine without the conflicts of interest that might taint the opinions of other critics who also make a living selling wine. In 1978, he published a direct-mail newsletter called The Baltimore-Washington Wine Advocate, which was later renamed The Wine Advocate. The first issue was sent free to consumers from mailing lists Parker purchased from several major wine retailers. Six hundred charter subscribers paid to receive the second issue published later that year.

Parker received worldwide attention when he called the 1982 vintage in Bordeaux superb, contrary to the opinions of many other critics, such as San Francisco critic Robert Finigan, who felt it was too low-acid and ripe. While there is still debate about the timelessness of the vintage, prices of 1982 Bordeaux remain consistently higher than other vintages.[6]

More than twenty years later, The Wine Advocate has over 50,000 subscribers, primarily in the United States, but with significant readership in over 37 other countries. While other wine publications have more subscribers, The Wine Advocate is still considered to exert a significant influence on wine consumers' buying habits, particularly in America. New York Times wine critic Frank Prial asserted that "Robert M. Parker Jr. is the most influential wine critic in the world."[7]

A lengthy profile of Parker entitled "The Million Dollar Nose" ran in The Atlantic Monthly in December 2000. Among other claims, Parker told the author that he tastes 10,000 wines a year and "remembers every wine he has tasted over the past thirty-two years and, within a few points, every score he has given as well."[8] Yet, in a public blind tasting of fifteen top wines from Bordeaux 2005—which he has called "the greatest vintage of my lifetime"—Parker could not correctly identify any of the wines, confusing left bank wines for right several times.[9] (In general, "left bank" wines are grown in regions west of the Gironde Estuary, and "right bank" in the regions east.)[10]

In addition to writing and tasting for The Wine Advocate, which is published six times a year in Monkton, Maryland, Parker has been a contributing editor for Food and Wine Magazine and BusinessWeek. He has also written periodically for the British magazine The Field and has been the wine critic for France's L'Express magazine, the first time a non-Frenchman has held this position.[11]

Among the books and films that have focused on the influence and effects of Parker on the global wine industry are the 2004 book The Accidental Connoisseur, by Lawrence Osborne,[12] the 2004 documentary film Mondovino by Jonathan Nossiter,[13] a 2005 unauthorized biography The Emperor of Wine by Elin McCoy, the 2008 book The Battle for Wine and Love: Or How I Saved the World from Parkerization by Alice Feiring,[14] and the 2010 French language bande dessinée comic book, Robert Parker: Les Sept Pêchés capiteux.

Parker's nose and palate are insured for $1 million.[15]

Parker disclosed at the end of 2012 that he would sell a "substantial interest" in his newsletter and step down as editor in chief. His new partners were a trio of Singapore-based hedge fund investors.[16] Parker formally retired from The Wine Advocate at the age of 71 in 2019.[17]

Impact of Parker on the world of wine edit

A new role for the wine critic edit

Until the 1970s, wine criticism was usually complementary to the production or trade of wine. The conflict of interest that might ensue from this close relationship was accepted by consumers, as they consulted wine reviews to gain an introduction to the world of wine, and not necessarily for advice on getting good value for their money. Hence, before Robert Parker, wine critics almost always had some link to the production or trade of wines.[18]

Two wine critics were particularly influential in inspiring and defining Robert Parker:

  • Robert Lawrence Balzer's charisma inspired Parker. Like his contemporaries, Balzer rarely wrote negative statements about wines. He even once published a book under his name that had actually been written by wine grower Paul Masson.[19]
  • Robert Finigan was Parker's forerunner in consumer-oriented wine reviewing. In the monthly Robert Finigan's Private Guide to Wine, launched in 1972, Finigan offered consumer-oriented, independent wine criticism, just as Parker did after him.[20] Finigan helped consumers make decisions by developing standard evaluation criteria; his qualitative comments were straightforward and understandable, and each wine was ranked on a quality scale (exceptional, above average, average, below average).

Parker is a consumer advocate who admires Ralph Nader and has been critical of most wine critics, who traditionally have been part of the wine industry and have had vested interests.[21]

According to Mike Steinberger,[22] Parker has inadvertently made becoming a wine critic in the future almost impossible, since— in part because of the success of his scoring system—it is now prohibitively expensive to taste the very wines one should criticize. If it behooves a critic to understand, say, Château Lafite 1982, 2000, 2003, and 2005 before assessing the latest vintage: the critic must drink wine worth tens of thousands of dollars before beginning the review.

Parker's 100-point rating system edit

One of the most influential and controversial features of Parker's wine criticism is his 100-point rating system, which he popularized in conjunction with his friend Victor Morgenroth. Parker designed the system to counter what he believed to be confusing or inflated ratings by other wine writers—many of whom he accused of a conflict of interest, as they often had a financial interest in the wines they rated. The scale, now widely imitated in other publications (such as Wine Spectator[23]), ranks wine on a scale from 50 to 100 points based upon the wine's color and appearance, aroma and bouquet, flavor and finish, and overall quality level or potential. Therefore, 51 rather than 100 different ratings are possible. Although some critics, such as Jancis Robinson,[24] argue that numerical rating systems are questionable—given the subjectivity of wine tasting and the variance in scores that a wine's age and the circumstances of tasting can cause—similar 100-point scoring systems are widely used by American reviewers. Many British reviewers, such as Jancis Robinson and Clive Coates, still prefer a 20-point system.

Retailers in North America often mark wines with Parker's point scores, using printed cards attached to the shelves. Parker cautions buyers that they should read the tasting notes to determine whether or not the wine is made in a style they will like; he states on his website:

Scores, however, do not reveal the important facts about a wine. The written commentary that accompanies the ratings is a better source of information regarding the wine's style and personality, its relative quality vis-à-vis its peers, and its value and aging potential than any score could ever indicate.

— Robert M. Parker Jr., The Wine Advocate Rating System[25] (emphasis in original)

No scoring system is perfect, but a system that provides for flexibility in scores, if applied by the same taster without prejudice, can quantify different levels of wine quality and provide the reader with one professional's judgment. However, there can never be any substitute for your own palate nor any better education than tasting the wine yourself.

— Robert M. Parker Jr., The Wine Advocate Rating System[25] (emphasis in original)

Parker argues that he scores wines on how much pleasure they give him. He, and others, have said that it is the obscurity, corruption, and other problems of the appellation system that made his consumer-oriented approach necessary. For example, the Bordeaux Wine Official Classification of 1855 was based entirely upon the château's reputation and trading price in 1855. However, since then many châteaux have sold much of their vineyards; others have bought additional vineyards far away. The original winemakers are long dead. Parker says that this state of affairs was responsible for creating an injustice for consumers, causing mediocre wine to be sold at too high a price, and good wine to be sold at too low a price. He says of the 1855 classifications, "At most, these classifications should be regarded by both the wine connoisseur and novice as informational items of historical significance only."[26]

Parker has admitted that emotions do matter, contrary to the seeming objectivity of the 100-point scale: "I really think probably the only difference between a 96-, 97-, 98-, 99-, and 100-point wine is really the emotion of the moment."[27]

Parker is considered an unusually fast taster, and during an initial assessment he may keep a wine in his mouth for only four or five seconds before determining whether it is potentially a wine of 80 points or above. Mediocre wines will then be dismissed while those with potential are tasted twice or three times in succession before the final score is determined.[28]

Impact on the supply: the "Parkerization" of wine edit

Parker's impact on the style of fine wines has generated controversy. Parker is highly critical of "those who make 'industrial wines with little flavor and no authenticity'"[29] and he believes that there are still undiscovered regions and wines that can successfully challenge the wine establishment. Critics such as Golo Weber claim that Parker likes less-acidic, riper wines with significant amounts of oak, alcohol, and extract. This supposed "Parker taste" may be less the result of Parker's own preferences than of a trend initiated by Émile Peynaud, the French oenologist and father of the so-called "international wines".[30] In the 1970s, winemakers avoided the late harvests, when the grapes were mature, in order to avoid the risks of end-of-season rains. Peynaud proposed that winemakers should wait to harvest until the grape was fully mature, or even over-mature. He also insisted on control of malolactic fermentation through the use of stainless steel vessels.[citation needed]

The globalist domination of the oenological press by Parker's ideas has led to changes in viticulture and winemaking practices, such as reducing yield by green harvesting, harvesting grapes as late as possible for maximum ripeness, not filtering the wine, and using new techniques—such as microoxygenation—to soften tannins.[31] These widespread changes in technique have been called "Parkerization", also sometimes known as "The International Style", and have led to fear of a homogenization of wine styles around the world as Parker's "tastes are irrevocably changing the way some French wines are made",[32] according to the BBC's Caroline Wyatt. Indeed, certain low-producing "boutique" wineries, among others, have received high scores from Parker for wines made in this style. Parker disputes the notion of growing homogeneity and argues for the opposite: "When I started tasting wines, in the 1970s, we were on a slippery slope. There was a standardization of wines, where you couldn't tell a Chianti from a cabernet. That's pretty much stopped now."[8]

Jacques Hebrard, the manager of Château Cheval Blanc, was once outraged at Parker's evaluation and asked Parker to re-taste the wine. Upon his return, Hebrard's dog attacked Parker as the manager stood by idly and watched. Parker says that when he asked for a bandage to stop the bleeding from his leg, Hebrard instead gave him a copy of the offending newsletter. Hebrard denies that Parker was bleeding.[33] Wine critic Prial says "The Bordeaux wine establishment feels threatened by these new-style wines... and is engaged in an increasingly bitter fight against Parker and his influence."[7]

Impact on the market edit

Impact on prices edit

There is evidence that Parker's rating scale has a dual effect on prices and sales, with claims from the wine industry that a Parker top score is valued at potentially £5 million.[4]

  • When Parker declined to review the 2002 Bordeaux vintage "in barrel," the vintners were forced to drop their prices.[citation needed]
  • According to one Bordeaux shipper cited by McCoy, "the difference between a score of 85 and 95 [for one wine] was 6 to 7 million Euro", and a "bottle rated 100 can multiply its price fourfold."[21]
  • Château Quinault, which used to have hard time selling its wine at 100 francs a bottle, saw its 1998 vintage rise in price in half a day to 125 francs after Parker gave it a 92 rating.[34]
  • According to a 2005 economic analysis, Parker's scores would inflate the prices of already highly rated wines[35] but, for the less good ones, it would not decrease their sales nor even increase their prices.[36]

Whatever his influence, Parker alone cannot impact the market price for a wine if he is alone against the mainstream. The famous controversy around the Château Pavie 2003 is an example of this: despite Parker's positive ratings, the wine in bottle sold 30% cheaper than en primeur.[34]

In a statistical analysis published in New Political Economy, political scientist Colin Hay suggests that Parker has a significant impact on the price of en primeur Bordeaux wines:

Taking the Saint-Émilion grands crus, for instance, Parker ratings alone account for 33 per cent of the variance in release price and a staggering 50 per cent of the variance in increase in release price between 2004 and 2005. Very similar effects are seen for the Médoc classed growths, with Parker score alone accounting, again, for just over a third of the total variance in release price and 38 per cent of the variance in increase in release price between these consecutive vintages. Moreover, even if we control for position in the official classification, with which Parker ratings are strongly correlated, they account for an additional 8 per cent of the variance in release price and an additional 9 per cent of the variance in increase in release price.[37]

Hay also argues that

Parker's ratings are more influential, and prices more sensitive to his en primeur scores, where—as in Saint-Émilion—the official system of classification is more flexible and less prestigious. But it also suggests how Parker scores may play a crucial role, alongside well-established and highly respected classification systems (as for instance in the Médoc), in building up and, in particular, restoring the reputations of châteaux generally regarded to have fallen below their official place in the classification. In this respect, rather than overturning local classificatory schema, Parker's external influence may well work in parallel with them.[37]

Hay notes that Parker's influence on consumer preferences is not so great as it is on prices.[37][38]

Creation of new market segments edit

Parker strongly influenced the creation of garagiste wines, created by a group of innovative winemakers in the Bordeaux region of France.

Limits to Parker's influences edit

Parker is an avid fan of Bordeaux, and some of his critics[who?] observe that his focus is largely limited to French wine. In recent years, he has taken on additional staff for The Wine Advocate, which has enabled the publication to expand into other areas, such as Greek and Israeli wines. Still, his influence is most keenly felt by Bordeaux, California, and Rhône wines.

Parker's influence on Burgundy wines was lessened as the result of a libel lawsuit filed against him by Domaine Faiveley. In the third edition of his Wine Buyer's Guide,[39] Parker reported that "the Faiveley wines tasted abroad would be less rich than those one can taste on the spot [...]".[40] In other words, Parker accused Faiveley of cheating. Faiveley sued Parker for libel; in February 1994, Parker was requested to appear in front of the Paris superior court (tribunal de grande instance). The case was settled out of court. It was eventually discovered that the difference in taste that Parker identified was due to improper storage of the wine at the American importer's warehouse, causing the wine to be "cooked."[41] Parker delegated coverage of the Burgundy and Alsace regions to Pierre-Antoine Rovani in April 1997.[42]

Controversy edit

Parker has stated very clearly, both in The Wine Advocate and his books, that his advice stands on high ethical standards, and that independence and impartiality constitute his two most important values. By abiding by these standards, he says, he seeks to guarantee that his valuations will be pro-consumer, and not pro-industry.[citation needed]

Several published sources offer accounts that may call Parker's independence and impartiality into question.

In her book Emperor of Wine, Elin McCoy describes a positive article Parker wrote in the second issue of The Baltimore/Washington Wine Advocate about MacArthur Liquors and its manager, Addy Bassin. That article fails to mention that Mr. Bassin sold Parker a list of MacArthur's customers for use in mailing out the first, free issue of the Advocate, a potential conflict of interest.[43]

In issue 164 of The Wine Advocate, Parker wrote a long article about Jeffrey Davies, a wine trader based in Bordeaux. As Hanna Agostini and Marie-Françoise Guichard point out in their book Robert Parker, Anatomy of a Myth, what Parker failed to mention was that he tasted wines with Davies, not by himself—yet Parker has repeatedly stated that an impartial wine critic should taste wines alone.[44] Davies advised Parker not to publish his comments on the 2004 Bordeaux in issue 164, as Parker had planned, because they would have suffered from their comparison with the much better 2003 and 2005. Parker followed Davies' advice, and published those comments in the following issue instead.

The second issue of The Baltimore/Washington Wine Advocate stated "Robert Parker has no interest, direct or indirect, financial or any other, in importing, distributing or selling wines."[45] In the late 1980s, Parker invested in an Oregon vineyard with his brother-in-law, Michael G. Etzel, called The Beaux Frères Vineyard ("The Brothers-in-Law"), which would soon after become a commercial winery under the same name.[46] He promised never to review any wines produced there in The Wine Advocate.[47]

Two of Parker's tasters had, or still have, an interest in the distribution or the sale of wines, according to published accounts.

  • Until January 1, 2007, David Schildknecht spent half of his time importing and distributing wines, and the other half critiquing wine for The Wine Advocate. He subsequently became a full-time critic for The Wine Advocate.[48]
  • Kevin Zraly is the vice-president of Smith and Wollensky Restaurants, a group of 17 restaurants with a substantial wine list.[49]

Robert Parker's goddaughter, Marie Raynaud, is the daughter of Alain Raynaud—the co-owner of Château la Croix-de-Gay in Pomerol and former owner of Château Quinault in Saint-Émilion. Mr. Raynaud was the President of the Union des Grands Crus de Bordeaux, an advocacy group for the Grand Crus of Bordeaux, between 1994 and 2000.[50]

Yale University professor, econometrician, and lawyer Ian Ayres wrote about Robert Parker's conflict with Orley Ashenfelter, the publisher of Liquid Assets: The International Guide to Fine Wines,[51] in his book Super Crunchers. Ashenfelter devised a formula for predicting wine quality based on weather data such as rainfall and temperature that Parker characterized as "ludicrous and absurd." Ashenfelter was able to show that Parker's initial ratings of vintages had been biased upward, requiring him to revise his rankings downward more often than not. Says Ayres, "Both the wine dealers and writers have a vested interest in maintaining their informational monopoly on the quality of wine." Ayres pointed out that Ashenfelter's predictions have proven to be remarkably accurate, and claimed the wine critics' "predictions now correspond much more closely to [Ashenfelter's] simple equation results."[52]

Bibliography edit

  • Parker, Robert M. Jr. (1987). The Wines of the Rhône Valley and Provence. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-63379-0.
  • Parker, Robert M. Jr. (1990). Burgundy. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-63378-3.
  • Parker, Robert M. Jr. (1997). The Wines of the Rhône Valley. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-80013-4.
  • Parker, Robert M. Jr. (2003). Bordeaux (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-2946-3.
  • Parker, Robert M. Jr. (2005). The World's Greatest Wine Estates. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-3771-0.
  • Parker, Robert M. Jr. (2008). Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide (7th ed.). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-7199-8.
  • Parker, Robert M. Jr. (2009). Parker's Wine Bargains. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4391-0190-2.

Awards and recognition edit

Robert Parker is one of only a few foreigners to have received France's two highest Presidential honors, and is the first wine critic to have received such recognitions in France and in Italy.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Colman, Tyler (2008). Wine Politics: how governments, environmentalists, mobsters, and critics influence the wines we drink. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: University of California Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-520-25521-0. Why does one man's palate decide the winners and losers in the world of wine?
  2. ^ Charlie Rose, interviewer (April 24, 2001). "Segment: "The Nose."". 60 Minutes. CBS. "He is the most important wine writer that we have ever seen since the grape was invented." —Michael Aaron to Charlie Rose
  3. ^ Steinberger, Mike, Slate.com (June 17, 2002). The Great and Powerful Shnoz
  4. ^ a b Bruce-Gardyne, Tom, The Herald (August 9, 2010). The world's leading wine critic October 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Edgecliffe-Johnson, Andrew (December 14, 2012), "Robert Parker, the American Bacchus", Financial Times, archived from the original on December 10, 2022, retrieved December 16, 2012
  6. ^ "Wine Prices". wine-searcher.com. Wine-Searcher. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  7. ^ a b Prial, Frank J. (2001). Decantations: Reflections on wine by the New York Times wine critic. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-28443-8.
  8. ^ a b Langewiesche, William (December 2000). "The Million-Dollar Nose". The Atlantic Monthly. 286 (6): 42–70. ISSN 1072-7825. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  9. ^ Colman, Tyler (October 2, 2009). "Blind tasting is tough – tasting Bordeaux 2005 with Robert Parker". Dr. Vino. Retrieved August 22, 2010. he thought the actual L'Eglise to be Cos, a wine that is not only from across the river, but from St. Estephe, an appellation known for the extreme tannic structure of the wines
  10. ^ Hindle, Georgina (April 22, 2020). "Left and Right Bank Bordeaux: What is the difference?". Decanter. Retrieved January 5, 2021.
  11. ^ About Robert M. Parker Jr.
  12. ^ Hendra, Tony (March 28, 2004). "The Reign of Terroir". The New York Times.
  13. ^ Asimov, Eric, The New York Times (March 22, 2006). Decanting Robert Parker
  14. ^ Asimov, Eric, The New York Times (May 21, 2008). Good Wine Reading With Mellow Aftertaste
  15. ^ Charlie Rose, interviewer (April 24, 2001). "Segment: "The Nose."". 60 Minutes. 3:01 minutes in. CBS. He says he can describe the more than 200,000 wines he's tasted… and his hypersensitive nose and palate are insured for $1 million.
  16. ^ Lettie Teague: Wine Advocate Will Stay Put, and in Print The Wall Street Journal, December 12, 2012
  17. ^ Richard Woodward: Robert Parker formally retires from The Wine Advocate Decanter, May 17, 2019
  18. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. pp. 54–58. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  19. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. p. 60. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  20. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. pp. 61–65. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  21. ^ a b McCoy, Elin (2005). The Emperor of Wine: the rise of Robert M. Parker Jr. and the reign of the American taste. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-009368-4.
  22. ^ Steinberger, Mike (March 2008). (PDF). The World of Fine Wine (19). Sittingbourne, Kent, UK: Quarto Group. ISSN 1743-503X. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 19, 2011.
  23. ^ "Wine Spectator's 100-Point Scale". Wine Spectator. M. Shanken Communications. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  24. ^ Robinson, Jancis (September 16, 2002). "How to score wine". JancisRobinson.com. Jancis Robinson. Retrieved August 24, 2010. But, perhaps strangely for someone who studied mathematics at Oxford, I'm not a great fan of the conjunction of numbers and wine. Once numbers are involved, it is all too easy to reduce wine to a financial commodity rather than keep its precious status as a uniquely stimulating source of sensual pleasure and conviviality.
  25. ^ a b Parker, Robert M. Jr. . eRobertParker.com. The Wine Advocate. Archived from the original on December 29, 2010. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  26. ^ Parker, Robert M. Jr. (2005). "Who's on first?". Bordeaux: a consumer's guide to the world's finest wines (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. p. 1156. ISBN 978-0-7432-2946-3.
  27. ^ "The lone wolf: A conversation with wine critic Robert Parker". Naples Daily News. E. W. Scripps. January 25, 2007.
  28. ^ Shaw, David (February 23, 1999). "He Sips and Spits—and the World Listens". Los Angeles Times. p. 4. Each wine is in his mouth for maybe four or five seconds.
  29. ^ Hughes, Samuel (2005). "The wine advocate and his empire". The Pennsylvania Gazette. 103 (5). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania. ISSN 1520-4650.
  30. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. pp. 195–196. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  31. ^ Taber, George M. (2005). Judgement of Paris: California vs. France and the historic 1976 Paris tasting that revolutionized wine. New York: Scribner. ISBN 978-0-7432-9732-5.
  32. ^ "Wine competition pits France v US". BBC News. BBC. May 25, 2006. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  33. ^ McCoy, Elin (2005). The Emperor of Wine: the rise of Robert M. Parker Jr. and the reign of the American taste. New York: HarperCollins. pp. 159–160. ISBN 0-06-009368-4.
  34. ^ a b Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. p. 185. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  35. ^ Hadj Ali, Hela; Lecocq, Sebastien; Visser, Michael (September 2005). The Impact of Gurus: Parker grades and en primeur wine prices (PDF). Royal Economic Society Annual Conference at Nottingham University. Retrieved August 22, 2010. ...we find an overall effect equal to almost 3 euros per bottle.
  36. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. p. 186. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  37. ^ a b c Hay, Colin (2007). "Globalisation and the institutional re-embedding of markets: The political economy of price formation in the Bordeaux en primeur market". New Political Economy. 12 (2): 185–209. doi:10.1080/13563460701302976. S2CID 154569719.
  38. ^ Hay, Colin (August 21, 2008). "When points mean prices". Decanter. IPC Media. Retrieved August 22, 2010. For Stephen Browett at Farr Vintners: 'Customers buying solely or mainly for investment will always follow Parker for as long as they see the market following him. Those who buy for their own drinking and who know what they like are much less likely to be influenced.'
  39. ^ Parker, Robert M. (November 1, 1993). Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide (3rd ed.). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-79914-4.
  40. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. p. 209. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4. [...] les vins de Faiveley dégustés à l'étranger sont moins riches que ceux que l'on peut goûter sur place [...]
  41. ^ "Cooked Wine". Bloviatrix. May 21, 2008. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  42. ^ Rose, Anthony (April 29, 2006). . The Independent. Independent Print. ISSN 0951-9467. OCLC 185201487. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  43. ^ McCoy, Elin (2005). The Emperor of Wine: the rise of Robert M. Parker Jr. and the reign of the American taste. New York: HarperCollins. p. 73. ISBN 0-06-009368-4.
  44. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. pp. 82–83. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  45. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. p. 80. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4. Robert Parker n'a pas d'intérêt, direct ou indirect, financier ou autre, dans l'importation, la distribution et la vente de vins.
  46. ^ Steiman, Harvey (March 31, 2020). "The Birth and Building of Beaux Frères", Wine Spectator
  47. ^ Elson, John (December 14, 1987). . Time. p. 2. Archived from the original on April 16, 2009. Retrieved August 22, 2010. When his brother-in-law bought a vineyard in Oregon, Parker informed his Advocate readers and promised never to review any wines produced there.
  48. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. p. 84. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  49. ^ Agostini, Hanna; Guichard, Marie-Françoise (2007). Robert Parker, anatomie d'un mythe; portrait non autorisé du plus grand dégustateur de tous les temps (in French). Paris: Scala. p. 85. ISBN 978-2-35012-186-4.
  50. ^ McCoy, Elin (2005). The Emperor of Wine: the rise of Robert M. Parker Jr. and the reign of the American taste. New York: HarperCollins. p. 155. ISBN 0-06-009368-4.
  51. ^ "Liquid Assets". Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  52. ^ Ayres, Ian (August 26, 2008). Super Crunchers: Why thinking-by-numbers is the new way to be smart (Reprint ed.). Random House. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-553-38473-4.

External links edit

  • eRobertParker.com official site
  • Hedonistic Fruit Bombs, a February 2005 article in London Review of Books, with biographical information.
  • "Big Shake-Up at Robert Parker's Wine Advocate," Lettie Teague, The Wall Street Journal, December 9, 2012 [1]

robert, parker, wine, critic, other, people, named, robert, parker, robert, parker, disambiguation, robert, mcdowell, parker, born, july, 1947, retired, american, wine, critic, wine, ratings, point, scale, newsletter, wine, advocate, influential, american, win. For other people named Robert Parker see Robert Parker disambiguation Robert McDowell Parker Jr born July 23 1947 is a retired American wine critic His wine ratings on a 100 point scale and his newsletter The Wine Advocate are influential in American wine buying and are therefore a major factor in setting the prices for newly released Bordeaux wines This made him the most widely known and influential wine critic in the world 1 2 3 4 Robert ParkerParker in Las Vegas 2005BornRobert McDowell Parker Jr 1947 07 23 July 23 1947 age 76 Baltimore Maryland U S OccupationWine criticSubjectWineNotable awardsChevalier de L Ordre de la Legion d Honneur Gran Cruz de Orden Civil from King Juan Carlos May 2011 first wine writer to receive Spain s highest civilian honor Contents 1 Biography 2 Impact of Parker on the world of wine 2 1 A new role for the wine critic 2 2 Parker s 100 point rating system 2 3 Impact on the supply the Parkerization of wine 2 4 Impact on the market 2 4 1 Impact on prices 2 4 2 Creation of new market segments 3 Limits to Parker s influences 3 1 Controversy 4 Bibliography 5 Awards and recognition 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBiography editParker was born in Baltimore Maryland His father was a construction equipment salesman 5 He is an honors graduate of the University of Maryland College Park with a major in history and a minor in art history He continued his education at University of Maryland School of Law at the urban campus of the University of Maryland Baltimore graduating in 1973 with a Juris Doctor degree He discovered wine as a student visiting Alsace where Patricia now his wife was studying 5 For over ten years he was assistant general counsel for the Farm Credit Banks of Baltimore he resigned in March 1984 to focus on writing about wine In 1975 Parker began writing a wine guidebook Taking his cue from consumer advocate Ralph Nader Parker wanted to write about wine without the conflicts of interest that might taint the opinions of other critics who also make a living selling wine In 1978 he published a direct mail newsletter called The Baltimore Washington Wine Advocate which was later renamed The Wine Advocate The first issue was sent free to consumers from mailing lists Parker purchased from several major wine retailers Six hundred charter subscribers paid to receive the second issue published later that year Parker received worldwide attention when he called the 1982 vintage in Bordeaux superb contrary to the opinions of many other critics such as San Francisco critic Robert Finigan who felt it was too low acid and ripe While there is still debate about the timelessness of the vintage prices of 1982 Bordeaux remain consistently higher than other vintages 6 More than twenty years later The Wine Advocate has over 50 000 subscribers primarily in the United States but with significant readership in over 37 other countries While other wine publications have more subscribers The Wine Advocate is still considered to exert a significant influence on wine consumers buying habits particularly in America New York Times wine critic Frank Prial asserted that Robert M Parker Jr is the most influential wine critic in the world 7 A lengthy profile of Parker entitled The Million Dollar Nose ran in The Atlantic Monthly in December 2000 Among other claims Parker told the author that he tastes 10 000 wines a year and remembers every wine he has tasted over the past thirty two years and within a few points every score he has given as well 8 Yet in a public blind tasting of fifteen top wines from Bordeaux 2005 which he has called the greatest vintage of my lifetime Parker could not correctly identify any of the wines confusing left bank wines for right several times 9 In general left bank wines are grown in regions west of the Gironde Estuary and right bank in the regions east 10 In addition to writing and tasting for The Wine Advocate which is published six times a year in Monkton Maryland Parker has been a contributing editor for Food and Wine Magazine and BusinessWeek He has also written periodically for the British magazine The Field and has been the wine critic for France s L Express magazine the first time a non Frenchman has held this position 11 Among the books and films that have focused on the influence and effects of Parker on the global wine industry are the 2004 book The Accidental Connoisseur by Lawrence Osborne 12 the 2004 documentary film Mondovino by Jonathan Nossiter 13 a 2005 unauthorized biography The Emperor of Wine by Elin McCoy the 2008 book The Battle for Wine and Love Or How I Saved the World from Parkerization by Alice Feiring 14 and the 2010 French language bande dessinee comic book Robert Parker Les Sept Peches capiteux Parker s nose and palate are insured for 1 million 15 Parker disclosed at the end of 2012 that he would sell a substantial interest in his newsletter and step down as editor in chief His new partners were a trio of Singapore based hedge fund investors 16 Parker formally retired from The Wine Advocate at the age of 71 in 2019 17 Impact of Parker on the world of wine editA new role for the wine critic edit Until the 1970s wine criticism was usually complementary to the production or trade of wine The conflict of interest that might ensue from this close relationship was accepted by consumers as they consulted wine reviews to gain an introduction to the world of wine and not necessarily for advice on getting good value for their money Hence before Robert Parker wine critics almost always had some link to the production or trade of wines 18 Two wine critics were particularly influential in inspiring and defining Robert Parker Robert Lawrence Balzer s charisma inspired Parker Like his contemporaries Balzer rarely wrote negative statements about wines He even once published a book under his name that had actually been written by wine grower Paul Masson 19 Robert Finigan was Parker s forerunner in consumer oriented wine reviewing In the monthly Robert Finigan s Private Guide to Wine launched in 1972 Finigan offered consumer oriented independent wine criticism just as Parker did after him 20 Finigan helped consumers make decisions by developing standard evaluation criteria his qualitative comments were straightforward and understandable and each wine was ranked on a quality scale exceptional above average average below average Parker is a consumer advocate who admires Ralph Nader and has been critical of most wine critics who traditionally have been part of the wine industry and have had vested interests 21 According to Mike Steinberger 22 Parker has inadvertently made becoming a wine critic in the future almost impossible since in part because of the success of his scoring system it is now prohibitively expensive to taste the very wines one should criticize If it behooves a critic to understand say Chateau Lafite 1982 2000 2003 and 2005 before assessing the latest vintage the critic must drink wine worth tens of thousands of dollars before beginning the review Parker s 100 point rating system edit One of the most influential and controversial features of Parker s wine criticism is his 100 point rating system which he popularized in conjunction with his friend Victor Morgenroth Parker designed the system to counter what he believed to be confusing or inflated ratings by other wine writers many of whom he accused of a conflict of interest as they often had a financial interest in the wines they rated The scale now widely imitated in other publications such as Wine Spectator 23 ranks wine on a scale from 50 to 100 points based upon the wine s color and appearance aroma and bouquet flavor and finish and overall quality level or potential Therefore 51 rather than 100 different ratings are possible Although some critics such as Jancis Robinson 24 argue that numerical rating systems are questionable given the subjectivity of wine tasting and the variance in scores that a wine s age and the circumstances of tasting can cause similar 100 point scoring systems are widely used by American reviewers Many British reviewers such as Jancis Robinson and Clive Coates still prefer a 20 point system Retailers in North America often mark wines with Parker s point scores using printed cards attached to the shelves Parker cautions buyers that they should read the tasting notes to determine whether or not the wine is made in a style they will like he states on his website Scores however do not reveal the important facts about a wine The written commentary that accompanies the ratings is a better source of information regarding the wine s style and personality its relative quality vis a vis its peers and its value and aging potential than any score could ever indicate Robert M Parker Jr The Wine Advocate Rating System 25 emphasis in original No scoring system is perfect but a system that provides for flexibility in scores if applied by the same taster without prejudice can quantify different levels of wine quality and provide the reader with one professional s judgment However there can never be any substitute for your own palate nor any better education than tasting the wine yourself Robert M Parker Jr The Wine Advocate Rating System 25 emphasis in original Parker argues that he scores wines on how much pleasure they give him He and others have said that it is the obscurity corruption and other problems of the appellation system that made his consumer oriented approach necessary For example the Bordeaux Wine Official Classification of 1855 was based entirely upon the chateau s reputation and trading price in 1855 However since then many chateaux have sold much of their vineyards others have bought additional vineyards far away The original winemakers are long dead Parker says that this state of affairs was responsible for creating an injustice for consumers causing mediocre wine to be sold at too high a price and good wine to be sold at too low a price He says of the 1855 classifications At most these classifications should be regarded by both the wine connoisseur and novice as informational items of historical significance only 26 Parker has admitted that emotions do matter contrary to the seeming objectivity of the 100 point scale I really think probably the only difference between a 96 97 98 99 and 100 point wine is really the emotion of the moment 27 Parker is considered an unusually fast taster and during an initial assessment he may keep a wine in his mouth for only four or five seconds before determining whether it is potentially a wine of 80 points or above Mediocre wines will then be dismissed while those with potential are tasted twice or three times in succession before the final score is determined 28 Impact on the supply the Parkerization of wine edit This article is about homogenization of wine supply For the historical phosphating process see Parkerization Parker s impact on the style of fine wines has generated controversy Parker is highly critical of those who make industrial wines with little flavor and no authenticity 29 and he believes that there are still undiscovered regions and wines that can successfully challenge the wine establishment Critics such as Golo Weber claim that Parker likes less acidic riper wines with significant amounts of oak alcohol and extract This supposed Parker taste may be less the result of Parker s own preferences than of a trend initiated by Emile Peynaud the French oenologist and father of the so called international wines 30 In the 1970s winemakers avoided the late harvests when the grapes were mature in order to avoid the risks of end of season rains Peynaud proposed that winemakers should wait to harvest until the grape was fully mature or even over mature He also insisted on control of malolactic fermentation through the use of stainless steel vessels citation needed The globalist domination of the oenological press by Parker s ideas has led to changes in viticulture and winemaking practices such as reducing yield by green harvesting harvesting grapes as late as possible for maximum ripeness not filtering the wine and using new techniques such as microoxygenation to soften tannins 31 These widespread changes in technique have been called Parkerization also sometimes known as The International Style and have led to fear of a homogenization of wine styles around the world as Parker s tastes are irrevocably changing the way some French wines are made 32 according to the BBC s Caroline Wyatt Indeed certain low producing boutique wineries among others have received high scores from Parker for wines made in this style Parker disputes the notion of growing homogeneity and argues for the opposite When I started tasting wines in the 1970s we were on a slippery slope There was a standardization of wines where you couldn t tell a Chianti from a cabernet That s pretty much stopped now 8 Jacques Hebrard the manager of Chateau Cheval Blanc was once outraged at Parker s evaluation and asked Parker to re taste the wine Upon his return Hebrard s dog attacked Parker as the manager stood by idly and watched Parker says that when he asked for a bandage to stop the bleeding from his leg Hebrard instead gave him a copy of the offending newsletter Hebrard denies that Parker was bleeding 33 Wine critic Prial says The Bordeaux wine establishment feels threatened by these new style wines and is engaged in an increasingly bitter fight against Parker and his influence 7 Impact on the market edit Impact on prices edit There is evidence that Parker s rating scale has a dual effect on prices and sales with claims from the wine industry that a Parker top score is valued at potentially 5 million 4 When Parker declined to review the 2002 Bordeaux vintage in barrel the vintners were forced to drop their prices citation needed According to one Bordeaux shipper cited by McCoy the difference between a score of 85 and 95 for one wine was 6 to 7 million Euro and a bottle rated 100 can multiply its price fourfold 21 Chateau Quinault which used to have hard time selling its wine at 100 francs a bottle saw its 1998 vintage rise in price in half a day to 125 francs after Parker gave it a 92 rating 34 According to a 2005 economic analysis Parker s scores would inflate the prices of already highly rated wines 35 but for the less good ones it would not decrease their sales nor even increase their prices 36 Whatever his influence Parker alone cannot impact the market price for a wine if he is alone against the mainstream The famous controversy around the Chateau Pavie 2003 is an example of this despite Parker s positive ratings the wine in bottle sold 30 cheaper than en primeur 34 In a statistical analysis published in New Political Economy political scientist Colin Hay suggests that Parker has a significant impact on the price of en primeur Bordeaux wines Taking the Saint Emilion grands crus for instance Parker ratings alone account for 33 per cent of the variance in release price and a staggering 50 per cent of the variance in increase in release price between 2004 and 2005 Very similar effects are seen for the Medoc classed growths with Parker score alone accounting again for just over a third of the total variance in release price and 38 per cent of the variance in increase in release price between these consecutive vintages Moreover even if we control for position in the official classification with which Parker ratings are strongly correlated they account for an additional 8 per cent of the variance in release price and an additional 9 per cent of the variance in increase in release price 37 Hay also argues that Parker s ratings are more influential and prices more sensitive to his en primeur scores where as in Saint Emilion the official system of classification is more flexible and less prestigious But it also suggests how Parker scores may play a crucial role alongside well established and highly respected classification systems as for instance in the Medoc in building up and in particular restoring the reputations of chateaux generally regarded to have fallen below their official place in the classification In this respect rather than overturning local classificatory schema Parker s external influence may well work in parallel with them 37 Hay notes that Parker s influence on consumer preferences is not so great as it is on prices 37 38 Creation of new market segments edit Parker strongly influenced the creation of garagiste wines created by a group of innovative winemakers in the Bordeaux region of France Limits to Parker s influences editParker is an avid fan of Bordeaux and some of his critics who observe that his focus is largely limited to French wine In recent years he has taken on additional staff for The Wine Advocate which has enabled the publication to expand into other areas such as Greek and Israeli wines Still his influence is most keenly felt by Bordeaux California and Rhone wines Parker s influence on Burgundy wines was lessened as the result of a libel lawsuit filed against him by Domaine Faiveley In the third edition of his Wine Buyer s Guide 39 Parker reported that the Faiveley wines tasted abroad would be less rich than those one can taste on the spot 40 In other words Parker accused Faiveley of cheating Faiveley sued Parker for libel in February 1994 Parker was requested to appear in front of the Paris superior court tribunal de grande instance The case was settled out of court It was eventually discovered that the difference in taste that Parker identified was due to improper storage of the wine at the American importer s warehouse causing the wine to be cooked 41 Parker delegated coverage of the Burgundy and Alsace regions to Pierre Antoine Rovani in April 1997 42 Controversy edit Parker has stated very clearly both in The Wine Advocate and his books that his advice stands on high ethical standards and that independence and impartiality constitute his two most important values By abiding by these standards he says he seeks to guarantee that his valuations will be pro consumer and not pro industry citation needed Several published sources offer accounts that may call Parker s independence and impartiality into question In her book Emperor of Wine Elin McCoy describes a positive article Parker wrote in the second issue of The Baltimore Washington Wine Advocate about MacArthur Liquors and its manager Addy Bassin That article fails to mention that Mr Bassin sold Parker a list of MacArthur s customers for use in mailing out the first free issue of the Advocate a potential conflict of interest 43 In issue 164 of The Wine Advocate Parker wrote a long article about Jeffrey Davies a wine trader based in Bordeaux As Hanna Agostini and Marie Francoise Guichard point out in their book Robert Parker Anatomy of a Myth what Parker failed to mention was that he tasted wines with Davies not by himself yet Parker has repeatedly stated that an impartial wine critic should taste wines alone 44 Davies advised Parker not to publish his comments on the 2004 Bordeaux in issue 164 as Parker had planned because they would have suffered from their comparison with the much better 2003 and 2005 Parker followed Davies advice and published those comments in the following issue instead The second issue of The Baltimore Washington Wine Advocate stated Robert Parker has no interest direct or indirect financial or any other in importing distributing or selling wines 45 In the late 1980s Parker invested in an Oregon vineyard with his brother in law Michael G Etzel called The Beaux Freres Vineyard The Brothers in Law which would soon after become a commercial winery under the same name 46 He promised never to review any wines produced there in The Wine Advocate 47 Two of Parker s tasters had or still have an interest in the distribution or the sale of wines according to published accounts Until January 1 2007 David Schildknecht spent half of his time importing and distributing wines and the other half critiquing wine for The Wine Advocate He subsequently became a full time critic for The Wine Advocate 48 Kevin Zraly is the vice president of Smith and Wollensky Restaurants a group of 17 restaurants with a substantial wine list 49 Robert Parker s goddaughter Marie Raynaud is the daughter of Alain Raynaud the co owner of Chateau la Croix de Gay in Pomerol and former owner of Chateau Quinault in Saint Emilion Mr Raynaud was the President of the Union des Grands Crus de Bordeaux an advocacy group for the Grand Crus of Bordeaux between 1994 and 2000 50 Yale University professor econometrician and lawyer Ian Ayres wrote about Robert Parker s conflict with Orley Ashenfelter the publisher of Liquid Assets The International Guide to Fine Wines 51 in his book Super Crunchers Ashenfelter devised a formula for predicting wine quality based on weather data such as rainfall and temperature that Parker characterized as ludicrous and absurd Ashenfelter was able to show that Parker s initial ratings of vintages had been biased upward requiring him to revise his rankings downward more often than not Says Ayres Both the wine dealers and writers have a vested interest in maintaining their informational monopoly on the quality of wine Ayres pointed out that Ashenfelter s predictions have proven to be remarkably accurate and claimed the wine critics predictions now correspond much more closely to Ashenfelter s simple equation results 52 Bibliography editParker Robert M Jr 1987 The Wines of the Rhone Valley and Provence Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 63379 0 Parker Robert M Jr 1990 Burgundy Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 63378 3 Parker Robert M Jr 1997 The Wines of the Rhone Valley Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 80013 4 Parker Robert M Jr 2003 Bordeaux 4th ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 2946 3 Parker Robert M Jr 2005 The World s Greatest Wine Estates Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 3771 0 Parker Robert M Jr 2008 Parker s Wine Buyer s Guide 7th ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 7199 8 Parker Robert M Jr 2009 Parker s Wine Bargains Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4391 0190 2 Awards and recognition edit1993 Chevalier de l Ordre National du Merite 1993 Wine and Vine Communication Award from Moet Hennessey 1995 Declared Honorary Citizen of Chateauneuf du Pape 1997 James Beard Foundation Wine and Spirits Professional of 1997 1999 Chevalier de l Ordre de la Legion d honneur 2002 Commendatore dell Ordine al merito della Repubblica Italiana 2005 Officier de la Legion d honneur 2008 Elected to the Wine Media Guild Hall of FameRobert Parker is one of only a few foreigners to have received France s two highest Presidential honors and is the first wine critic to have received such recognitions in France and in Italy See also editGaragistes List of wine personalities List of celebrities who own wineries and vineyardsReferences edit Colman Tyler 2008 Wine Politics how governments environmentalists mobsters and critics influence the wines we drink Berkeley and Los Angeles California University of California Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 520 25521 0 Why does one man s palate decide the winners and losers in the world of wine Charlie Rose interviewer April 24 2001 Segment The Nose 60 Minutes CBS He is the most important wine writer that we have ever seen since the grape was invented Michael Aaron to Charlie Rose Steinberger Mike Slate com June 17 2002 The Great and Powerful Shnoz a b Bruce Gardyne Tom The Herald August 9 2010 The world s leading wine critic Archived October 6 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Edgecliffe Johnson Andrew December 14 2012 Robert Parker the American Bacchus Financial Times archived from the original on December 10 2022 retrieved December 16 2012 Wine Prices wine searcher com Wine Searcher Retrieved August 22 2010 a b Prial Frank J 2001 Decantations Reflections on wine by the New York Times wine critic New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 28443 8 a b Langewiesche William December 2000 The Million Dollar Nose The Atlantic Monthly 286 6 42 70 ISSN 1072 7825 Retrieved August 22 2010 Colman Tyler October 2 2009 Blind tasting is tough tasting Bordeaux 2005 with Robert Parker Dr Vino Retrieved August 22 2010 he thought the actual L Eglise to be Cos a wine that is not only from across the river but from St Estephe an appellation known for the extreme tannic structure of the wines Hindle Georgina April 22 2020 Left and Right Bank Bordeaux What is the difference Decanter Retrieved January 5 2021 About Robert M Parker Jr Hendra Tony March 28 2004 The Reign of Terroir The New York Times Asimov Eric The New York Times March 22 2006 Decanting Robert Parker Asimov Eric The New York Times May 21 2008 Good Wine Reading With Mellow Aftertaste Charlie Rose interviewer April 24 2001 Segment The Nose 60 Minutes 3 01 minutes in CBS He says he can describe the more than 200 000 wines he s tasted and his hypersensitive nose and palate are insured for 1 million Lettie Teague Wine Advocate Will Stay Put and in Print The Wall Street Journal December 12 2012 Richard Woodward Robert Parker formally retires from The Wine Advocate Decanter May 17 2019 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala pp 54 58 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala p 60 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala pp 61 65 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 a b McCoy Elin 2005 The Emperor of Wine the rise of Robert M Parker Jr and the reign of the American taste New York HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 009368 4 Steinberger Mike March 2008 Everyone a Critic the future of wine writing PDF The World of Fine Wine 19 Sittingbourne Kent UK Quarto Group ISSN 1743 503X Archived from the original PDF on May 19 2011 Wine Spectator s 100 Point Scale Wine Spectator M Shanken Communications Retrieved August 22 2010 Robinson Jancis September 16 2002 How to score wine JancisRobinson com Jancis Robinson Retrieved August 24 2010 But perhaps strangely for someone who studied mathematics at Oxford I m not a great fan of the conjunction of numbers and wine Once numbers are involved it is all too easy to reduce wine to a financial commodity rather than keep its precious status as a uniquely stimulating source of sensual pleasure and conviviality a b Parker Robert M Jr Robert Parker s Rating System eRobertParker com The Wine Advocate Archived from the original on December 29 2010 Retrieved August 22 2010 Parker Robert M Jr 2005 Who s on first Bordeaux a consumer s guide to the world s finest wines 4th ed Simon amp Schuster p 1156 ISBN 978 0 7432 2946 3 The lone wolf A conversation with wine critic Robert Parker Naples Daily News E W Scripps January 25 2007 Shaw David February 23 1999 He Sips and Spits and the World Listens Los Angeles Times p 4 Each wine is in his mouth for maybe four or five seconds Hughes Samuel 2005 The wine advocate and his empire The Pennsylvania Gazette 103 5 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania ISSN 1520 4650 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala pp 195 196 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 Taber George M 2005 Judgement of Paris California vs France and the historic 1976 Paris tasting that revolutionized wine New York Scribner ISBN 978 0 7432 9732 5 Wine competition pits France v US BBC News BBC May 25 2006 Retrieved August 22 2010 McCoy Elin 2005 The Emperor of Wine the rise of Robert M Parker Jr and the reign of the American taste New York HarperCollins pp 159 160 ISBN 0 06 009368 4 a b Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala p 185 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 Hadj Ali Hela Lecocq Sebastien Visser Michael September 2005 The Impact of Gurus Parker grades and en primeur wine prices PDF Royal Economic Society Annual Conference at Nottingham University Retrieved August 22 2010 we find an overall effect equal to almost 3 euros per bottle Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala p 186 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 a b c Hay Colin 2007 Globalisation and the institutional re embedding of markets The political economy of price formation in the Bordeaux en primeur market New Political Economy 12 2 185 209 doi 10 1080 13563460701302976 S2CID 154569719 Hay Colin August 21 2008 When points mean prices Decanter IPC Media Retrieved August 22 2010 For Stephen Browett at Farr Vintners Customers buying solely or mainly for investment will always follow Parker for as long as they see the market following him Those who buy for their own drinking and who know what they like are much less likely to be influenced Parker Robert M November 1 1993 Parker s Wine Buyer s Guide 3rd ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 79914 4 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala p 209 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 les vins de Faiveley degustes a l etranger sont moins riches que ceux que l on peut gouter sur place Cooked Wine Bloviatrix May 21 2008 Retrieved August 22 2010 Rose Anthony April 29 2006 Wine The power of Robert Parker The Independent Independent Print ISSN 0951 9467 OCLC 185201487 Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved August 22 2010 McCoy Elin 2005 The Emperor of Wine the rise of Robert M Parker Jr and the reign of the American taste New York HarperCollins p 73 ISBN 0 06 009368 4 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala pp 82 83 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala p 80 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 Robert Parker n a pas d interet direct ou indirect financier ou autre dans l importation la distribution et la vente de vins Steiman Harvey March 31 2020 The Birth and Building of Beaux Freres Wine Spectator Elson John December 14 1987 The Man with a Paragon Palate Time p 2 Archived from the original on April 16 2009 Retrieved August 22 2010 When his brother in law bought a vineyard in Oregon Parker informed his Advocate readers and promised never to review any wines produced there Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala p 84 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 Agostini Hanna Guichard Marie Francoise 2007 Robert Parker anatomie d un mythe portrait non autorise du plus grand degustateur de tous les temps in French Paris Scala p 85 ISBN 978 2 35012 186 4 McCoy Elin 2005 The Emperor of Wine the rise of Robert M Parker Jr and the reign of the American taste New York HarperCollins p 155 ISBN 0 06 009368 4 Liquid Assets Retrieved August 22 2010 Ayres Ian August 26 2008 Super Crunchers Why thinking by numbers is the new way to be smart Reprint ed Random House p 6 ISBN 978 0 553 38473 4 External links editeRobertParker com official site Hedonistic Fruit Bombs a February 2005 article in London Review of Books with biographical information Big Shake Up at Robert Parker s Wine Advocate Lettie Teague The Wall Street Journal December 9 2012 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Parker wine critic amp oldid 1218193315 Impact on the supply the Parkerization of wine, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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