Put a shirt on, Kevin |
But if your name is Kevin or Jennifer or Jessica, it's all second-label bulk wine for you. And maybe they'll lock up the silverware.
There's a subset of French people who give their children very American names, and the extremely class-conscious French believe that such parents are not from the right part of town.
"Kevin" surged in popularity with French baby mommas in 1990, when Kevin Costner was Dancing With Wolves.
UPDATE: Reader Paul passes along this article from Slate in French, which has a chart. Click to enlarge it. Turns out "Sabrina" has the worst graduation rate in France, and "Jordan" is slightly worse than "Kevin," but neither of them are as common, which may explain the stigma.
Jessica Simpson enjoys some of that Dom stuff |
Name prejudice in France isn't confined strictly to American names.
Monique Soltani, Wine Oh TV founder and host, says, "We were at a party and I was trying to relate with (a French entrepreneur) on a French level with my Frenchie name, and he told me it's actually a low-class name: the equivalent of Trixie."
In France, she asked which is worse, Monique (Trixie), or Jessica. Parents, if you want your kids to visit Paris some day, don't name them Jessica.
For kicks, I tried introducing myself as "Kevin" last week several times at wineries in Bordeaux. Most proprietors were too polite to say anything, plus they had received a briefing sheet which listed me with the extremely high-class name of W. Blake.
But one winemaker had to stand in for the chateau owner at the last minute, and hadn't received the briefing. He visibly flinched, slightly retracted his hand, before recovering his manners and shaking mine. I'm sure he washed later with antibacterial soap, or possibly bleach.
Who are you calling low-class? |
I asked Milhade, while we enjoyed some of his older wines over lunch with the real silverware, if I were actually named Kevin, if he would pour me the '66.
He didn't hesitate. "No."
No wine for you, Kevin.
Follow me on Twitter: @wblakegray
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Note to French vintners: I am not actually named Kevin. I don't even know any Kevins.
and like The Gray Report on Facebook.
Note to French vintners: I am not actually named Kevin. I don't even know any Kevins.
I think this is the report your winemaker friends may have referred to, that rates Kevin and Jennifer as no-no names. Can't see anything about baccalauréat pass rates though. But they do point out that retro names like LOUISE are now very chic. Ha! http://www.lefigaro.fr/actualite-france/2011/09/14/01016-20110914ARTFIG00783-le-palmares-des-prenoms-de-l-annee.php
ReplyDeleteOliver Kohlbacher pointed out on The Gray Report Facebook page that "Kevin" has an even worse reputation in Germany. One German teacher said, "Kevin is not a name -- it's a diagnosis."
ReplyDeletehttp://freakonomics.com/2009/10/22/kevin-is-not-a-name-its-a-diagnosis/
Would you be considered in the bottom of the "Kevins" if you introduced yourself as "Kev"?
ReplyDeleteDear Kevin,
ReplyDeleteYou are hilarious!
Sincerely,
Trixie
I have a good friend, Kevin who owns Casque Wines in Loomis, CA, micro winery of the year a couple of years ago, and who loves to visit France....he also goes by "Kevino"..would that be a good name for you to adopt as well?
ReplyDeleteI can't help wondering how Kevin Zraly is received.
ReplyDeleteThe report I saw was the correlation between first names and a "très bien" (equivalent to honors) on the Bac. Check out this link and click to enlarge the chart. http://www.slate.fr/lien/74997/prenoms-bac-2013-mentions-tres-bien
ReplyDeleteBlake,
ReplyDeleteWassup with touting 1966 red Bordeaux as if drinking them is some sort of coveted "treat"? (Is it your birth year?)
I'd say more Halloween trick than treat.
Citing "Decanter" magazine:
"An inconsistent vintage with some good Saint-Julien and Pauillac."
[Link: http://www.decanter.com/wine-learning/vintage-guides/year-for-region/Medoc-and-Graves-1966/173]
Jeff Leve in his "The Wine Cellar Insider" comments:
"1966 Bordeaux wine is the perfect example of an old school Bordeaux vintage. At this age, many 1966 Bordeaux wine are tired and as a matter of style, several are hard, tannic and austere."
[Link: http://www.thewinecellarinsider.com/wine-topics/bordeaux-wine-buying-guide-tasting-notes-ratings/bordeaux-wine-detailed-vintage-summary-1945-today/1966-bordeaux-wine-vintage-report-buying-tips/]
~~ Bob
You know what, Bob? I don't give a damn what other people wrote about a vintage when I've got a delicious wine in front of me.
ReplyDeleteBlake,
ReplyDeleteThen "enlighten" me on which bottle(s) you are drinking . . 'cause I have a wine cellar organization client who owns cases of these wines that he is prepared to kick to the curb (for the city's refuse pick-up), based on his drinking experience replicating Jeff Leve's comments.
~~ Bob
Bob: Buy yourself some new reading glasses.
ReplyDeleteI don't know Jeff Leve, but I seriously wonder that anyone would be sitting in a chateau, and have the owner offer him a glass of a 47-year-old wine, and say, "No thank you, I don't want to try that, Decanter didn't like that vintage."