originally posted by Rahsaan:
Sure, that has to be part of it as well. Although I'm not one for wild mood swings. Usually, I'm pretty much in the same emotional state every time I open a wine: excited to drink it.
originally posted by David from Switzerland:
originally posted by Yixin:
What it really means to me is something like "got the gist, on to something new".
People should stop speedfuckingTM wines.
When I say it has something to do with putting an end to contemplation, what makes you think that need springs from tasting quickly and superficially?
You should have been in NYC Friday and Saturday nights. From the reports on WB, the town was awash in semen.originally posted by Yixin:
originally posted by David from Switzerland:
originally posted by Yixin:
What it really means to me is something like "got the gist, on to something new".
People should stop speedfuckingTM wines.
When I say it has something to do with putting an end to contemplation, what makes you think that need springs from tasting quickly and superficially?
SpeedfuckingTM: "Another notch on the post, on to someone new"
It's the state of mind, rather than the physical act. It's masturbation masquerading as sex - different partner, same intent, fundamentally the same motion(s), and ultimately the same result.
originally posted by Yixin:
SpeedfuckingTM: "Another notch on the post, on to someone new"
It's the state of mind, rather than the physical act. It's masturbation masquerading as sex - different partner, same intent, fundamentally the same motion(s), and ultimately the same result.
Hmm, don't think I'd touch that one with a ten-foot . . .originally posted by David from Switzerland:
I personally have no such "post"
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Hmm, don't think I'd touch that one with a ten-foot . . .originally posted by David from Switzerland:
I personally have no such "post"
. . . well, whatever.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
I’ve been grappling with how to chime in non-boorishly against points. I think I know where David is coming from, and respect his tenacity in hanging on to his position and the depth of experience that underlies it. My sense is that the scoring mentality, in society in general, is a legacy of sports, where it is not only appropriate, but part of the, well, point. It may also be a legacy of statistical thinking, which only increases the merit of the scientists and statistician here who don’t mix tracks. In education, i.e., grading papers, it may well be a necessary evil, but the profs on this side of the Atlantic have also foresworn points. In the cultural fields, I think it is demeaning to the object of our affection to grade it numerically. We wouldn’t think to use point scores for a novel, a play, a symphony, a ballet, and I think it is equally reductive to do so with wine (if we can agree that wine is culture). I agree with David that, consciously or unconsciously, we are constantly assessing the value of our experiences, but evaluation is not the same as awarding points, which I find disrespectful of complexity.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
I’ve been grappling with how to chime in non-boorishly against points. I think I know where David is coming from, and respect his tenacity in hanging on to his position and the depth of experience that underlies it. My sense is that the scoring mentality, in society in general, is a legacy of sports, where it is not only appropriate, but part of the, well, point. It may also be a legacy of statistical thinking, which only increases the merit of the scientists and statistician here who don’t mix tracks. In education, i.e., grading papers, it may well be a necessary evil, but the profs on this side of the Atlantic have also foresworn points. In the cultural fields, I think it is demeaning to the object of our affection to grade it numerically. We wouldn’t think to use point scores for a novel, a play, a symphony, a ballet, and I think it is equally reductive to do so with wine (if we can agree that wine is culture). I agree with David that, consciously or unconsciously, we are constantly assessing the value of our experiences, but evaluation is not the same as awarding points, which I find disrespectful of complexity.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
100 points is crazy talk, however. Especially when judging "from afar."
I can think of compelling restaurant or film or theater or art critics who give stars (often from 1 to 4), but to split hairs at the level of wine critics? Point to point to 100 points? It's a little absurd if you admit that all you're looking for is an idea of how the taster found the wine.
Is Prévost 95 for me and Egly Vrigny 94? I mean, come the fuck on.
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
100 points is crazy talk, however. Especially when judging "from afar."
I can think of compelling restaurant or film or theater or art critics who give stars (often from 1 to 4), but to split hairs at the level of wine critics? Point to point to 100 points? It's a little absurd if you admit that all you're looking for is an idea of how the taster found the wine.
Is Prévost 95 for me and Egly Vrigny 94? I mean, come the fuck on.
True, true, unless you just mean that you have a tiny preference for Prévost.
It's when you give Prévost a 95 and '70 Latour a 96 and expect to mean something by it that I get off the bus.