Friday, April 12, 2013

Fake Wine In The News

For the fans of Georgie Neverall, here's a link to a news story about fake wines.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-12/billionaire-koch-wins-12-million-verdict-in-wine-trial.html

And a link to the book that started me down the road toward writing about a fake wine con job:
http://www.benjaminwallace.net/home.html

Yesterday's verdict, and today's award of punitive damages, reminded me of the fascination I felt reading Wallace's book.  It's a look inside a world where a single bottle of wine, untasted and untested, can fetch six or seven figures at auction.  A world where those seven-figure bottles are never opened, where no one ever drinks the wine.

I have never even seen a bottle of wine that cost more than a few hundred bucks.  Well, maybe once, in a Las Vegas casino liquor store I saw a four-figure bottle or two.  But never up close and personal.  And I have certainly never had a glass of anything even in the hundred-dollar price bracket.  I don't think I'd ever be a wine snob, even if I could totally afford it.  But it was fun to read about.

How about you?  Anyone had a really expensive wine?  Was it worth the price (even if someone else paid for it), and if so, why?

No comments:

Post a Comment