This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
Jefford: The wine writer is dead
Award winning wine writer Andrew Jefford has hailed the wine writer to be “dead”.
Andrew Jefford
During an address at the European Wine Bloggers Conference in Izmir, Turkey, last week, Jefford said: “The fact that this conference exists is proof that the old wine writing world has disappeared.
“The creature we used to call ‘a wine writer’ has died.”
Jefford revealed in his speech that print articles represent under 40% of his income, a percentage that is falling every year, describing it as “the least remunerative of the things I do.”
He suggested the word “communicator” as a better descriptor of today’s wine professionals.
“There are no more livings to be made exclusively in the old way. The wine world probably doesn’t need more writers,” he admitted, though said there was still a need for “multi-tasking communicators”.
He also warned against those seeking to become “generalist” wine writers.
“Can anyone hope to be a generalist any more in a wine world which, like the universe, is expanding rapidly in every direction?,” he asked.
With the rise of the internet, Jefford believes the “old gatekeepers”: newspapers, magazines and publishing houses, are becoming less important as an arena for wine writing.
“Those who can generate income without recourse to the old gatekeepers will be creating the most durable and profitable model for wine writing in the future,” he said.
Finally, he made a plea for more humour and irreverence in today’s wine writing.
“There is an urgent vacancy for humorous, witty, caustic writing about wine powered by gonzo irreverence.
“The vast majority of wine drinkers take it for granted that wine is inseparable from hilarity. Almost all of us take it too seriously, too earnestly, too reverently,” he said, urging wine bloggers to “let rip”.