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.
New d’Arenberg wine branded sexist
A new £99 wine by provocative Australian brand d’Arenberg has been dubbed “sexist” by a local female wine writer due to its controversial name.
Winemaker Chester Osborn is in hot water over his new wine’s name
As reported by Australian paper The Advertiser, wine commentator Jane Thomson took umbrage to winemaker Chester Osbon’s latest effort: “The Old Bloke and the Three Young Blondes”.
The “Old Bloke” refers to old vine Shiraz, which forms the backbone of the wine, while the “Three Young Blondes” are white grapes Marsanne, Roussanne and Viognier, which make up the remainder of the blend adding “fragrance and spice”.
Thomson, who runs the 5,000-member “Fabulous Ladies Wine Society”, branded the wine an example of “everyday sexism in practice” on Facebook, suggesting that the d’Arenberg marketing department hadn’t thought the name through well.
The Old Bloke and the Three Young Blondes
“Most everyday sexism is so common and casual that we let it go. I think it’s worth raising the flag every now and then and asking do we really need this?” she said.
Her comment attracted a strong reaction from Facebook, both from women in support of her view and others telling her to lighten up, leading Thomson to elaborate on her opinion.
“I was more intrigued than upset, but it did make me wince. There’s an assumption that kind of language is acceptable,” she said.
Osborn defended his name choice to The Advertiser: “The old bloke refers to very old-vine shiraz, and the blondes refer to the young white varieties in the blend,” he said, insisting he never intended for the name to cause offence.
“Most of our label names are pretty crazy and have some humour in them. This one fits in the same boat,” he added.
Chester could in fact be making light of his advancing years, referring to himself as the “old bloke” and his daughters as the “three young blondes”.
The white label features four silhouette heads within each other, with a pipe-smoking old man on the outside.
According to Osborn, the nose is “brimming with dark fruits, woody spices and rich blackberry aromas” with the Viognier adding notes of “apricot and ginger”, the Roussanne “dried almonds and papaya” and the Marsanne “yellow stone fruit”.
This isn’t the first time Osborn has got into hot water over a wine name. A few years ago he was forced by Champagne house Mumm to change the name of his sparkling wine Dadd. The fizz wine is now called Pollyanna Polly.
Dear Jane
Perhaps I might find the concept of a ‘Fabulous Ladies Wine Society’ an example of “sexism in practice”. Or perhaps I have a life………..
Keith
x
Really Jane? Bored, overly politically correct, or nothing more creative to comment on? The only controversy here is your rather narrow thinking…
Bloody rubbish, “Fabulous Ladies Wine Society” that is exist too!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Having listened to this lady’s views at the recent Celebration of Sauvignon in Marlborough, I can’t say I’m surprised by her latest umbrage. Looking for anything at all to be offended about to push an agenda…
Let’s all get offended at everything everyone says or does!
That’s an amazing label – stay with it! the name’s pretty good too….
I’ll be buying several cases.
After all it’s what’s in the bottle that counts, not what’s on the label
Great name, great wine