originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
Well, the connotation of calling a wine spoofed is that the end is not to achieve a wine that matches the winemakers taste but that matches his economic needs.
I don't think that's the connotation. Many producers spoofulate to make the kind of wines they like. And they're not suffering from false consciousness, either!
I didn't say the connotation was accurate (I explicitly said it wasn't). But I think it's there and I think a survey of sentences in which the word appears without the kind of self-consciousness going on here would show it.
I don't think so - I think the survey would more likely show that the term is deployed to attack the bad taste of the winemaker, not his business judgment.
Your proposed synonym, Parkerized, would be meaningless without that connotation since it denotes that the wine was made according to criteria that would please Parker. If they also pleased the winemaker, that would be a mere accident or the label is worthless.
Not really a proposed synonym, but a proposed alternative to describe a similar aesthetic sensibility precisely, necessary precisely for those cases when the terms are
not synonymous since spoofulation is but one route to Parkerization. Why is it worthless in those cases where Parker's tastes and the winemaker's coincide? You can have willing Parkerizers or grudging Parkerizers, but Parkerizers just the same.