Gay Wines

Marketing the Rainbow

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Wine and same-sex marriage

Of all the many esteemed wine-producing regions in North America, western Sonoma County - in particular the area between Healdsburg and the Russian River resort area - stands out not only for its superb wineries and stunning natural scenery, but also for having a tremendous gay following.


A group of Californian gay wine enthusiasts created Out in the Vineyard in 2011, “an experiential Wine Country Event and Travel company promoting positive LGBT lifestyles and offering exclusive, luxury itineraries and events in Wine Country for the discerning gay traveler and their friends.” The organization is supported by Jackson Family Wines, a staunch supporter of the community - as meanwhile are J, Windsor Oaks, Sebastiani, DeLoach, Boisett Family Estates, Lasseter Family Winery, Ravenswood, Gary Farrell, Iron Horse, Muscardini and many others.


In the mid 2010's more and more wineries were coming out loud and proud in their support of gay marriage. They put it right on the label. One of the barrier breakers was Stein Family Wines, with Same Sex Meritage, a red blend that sends its message on the bottle and at the cash register: one dollar for every bottle sold was donated to the advocacy group Freedom to Marry.

Another brand that 'came out' is Égalité, a "Cremant de Bourgogne". Each quarter, a portion of profits is donated to a LGBT non-profit organization chosen by fans of the wine on Facebook: by 2013 $ 15,000 had been donated.


Their website says: "Égalité’s mission is not only to be the best wine to toast Equality for gay Americans, but also to help LGBTQ youth conquer life's challenges. By purchasing Égalité a percentage of sales will go toward organizations across the nation active in anti-bullying campaigns, suicide prevention, advocating for equal rights, and providing homeless services. We won’t rest until there is Equality for all!"


Égalité claimed to be “the first nationally-distributed wine created in

support of LGBT equality in the United States and around the world.”

From Stand Tall Wines, there was Genetic Pinot Noir (“the first LGBTQ wine label ever produced (that we know of)”), which refers to sexual orientation having genetic origins. Stand Tall Wines was founded by Larisa Stephenson and partner Dana Sabin. 1% of Genetic sales was donated to the Napa LBGTQ Connection.

Introduction

In the last two decades, competition in the beverage sector switched between beers, soft drinks, wine coolers and stronger liquids. Wine only joined this circus later.


As American attitudes towards gay people have improved - later than in most of the Western world - the presence of "gays in wine", always there but largely invisible, has become clearer: not just in the industry itself, but in their marketing approach as well. But it’s also recognition that the gay community has a lot of disposable income - and gay people like to drink wine:  16% more than straight people. According to the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs some 75% of gays and lesbians were described as "current drinkers," as compared to 68% of bisexuals and 59% of heterosexuals. And lesbians out-drink gay men. "Historically, so much gay drinking went on in gay bars because there was virtually nowhere else where gays could socialize," author Sharon Wilsnack says. "Although that has changed, they still face the chronic stress of being a marginalized group, and one thing alcohol's pretty good at, at least temporarily, is reducing stress."

Blossom Hill
Beaulieu Vineyards - Diageo

When Jacob’s Creek became exclusive advertiser on the TV-show Friends, Diageo's Blossom Hill reacted by sponsoring Will en Grace, the gay (beloved) TV-series - at USD 1,000,000 for the run of 24 episodes (the bottle and glass set pictured on the left could have been designed for that, but wasn't). Hardy Wines was prominently present on London’s Gay Pride Parade and Sydney’s Mardi Gras early ‘00s. Diageo later advertised with their HRC rating, showing Beaulieu wine. 


But this concerned regular, existing wines, aimed at a gay audience. Some brands went one step further and created ‘gay wines’. In 2007, blogger Tom Wark wrote: “It’s a fact, whether you like it or not, gay wines are here to stay. It all began as some sort of silly game: why would anyone need to drink a gay wine? What would be the special features that would make a wine “gay friendly”?” He did not have the answer…


In 2008 he observed: “Marketing wine to the Gay community isn't brain surgery. You do it in the same way you'd market wine specifically to the Hispanic community or the baseball loving community or the community of middle aged snake charmers: you simply speak to them directly in a voice, with an attitude and with language that they'll recognize. In large part it's about paying attention to them and their specific world view.” Which is actually the core of any good marketing approach!


"There's no question that marketing to the gay community is different than marketing to, say, ultra-right-wing religious conservatives, but while the labels may change, you can serve them up the same wine - it's got nothing to do with what's *in* the bottle."


So where did it begin?

Clos du Bois

In the mid-1990s, California-based Clos du Bois vineyards, at the initiative of marketing executive John Calmeyer, started making donations to the Names Project Foundation, the umbrella group for the AIDS Memorial Quilt project.

     

In 1997 they started advertising to the gay market, with an ad that showed the AIDS quilt and declared its support for the Names Project. A second ad, unveiled in 1998, depicted two men embracing within a collage of photos that again featured the AIDS quilt. They stepped up their efforts in 2001, with an advertising campaign showing corks that were emblazoned with the Rainbow flag. They also reiterated their support for the Names Project.

Clos du Bois  spent $  800,000 on the gay marketing campaign over those four years. "It has been very successful," said Margaret Davenport, senior winemaker at Clos du Bois. "Everyone is amazed at all the calls we have gotten."  Marketing Director Ruth Souroujon: "There are a lot of people that view this as a risk. I would say it is important to have brand loyalty. That is what is going to keep Clos du Bois at the top of mind." She calls it "marketing with a conscience." She received hundreds of positive emails in response to a winery ad running in gay publications that shows a field of vines being irrigated, with the rising mist creating the effect of a rainbow. Original, smart and relevant.


A number of wineries have run their national ads in gay publications like The Advocate and Out, but Clos du Bois was the first to create ads specifically for gay consumers and make a sustained push into the gay market, said Michael Wilke of AdRespect. Because so few wineries had targeted the gay market, it was still largely untapped. Beaulieu Vineyard, a Napa Valley winery, had run its mainstream ads in gay and lesbian publications for two years, but by 2001 had not yet developed ads tailored for the community. Just like in many mainstream publications, wine ads in homosexual media were overshadowed by ads for beer and spirits. Alcohol is the most crowded category in gay marketing, with more than 40 brands jostling for attention, Wilke said. The wine industry, however, has been slower to move into gay media. Wineries typically spend much less money on all forms of advertising than beer and spirits companies. Clos du Bois devoted 2-3% of its advertising budget to the gay ads, but planned to intensify their campaign. 

Chandon
Chandon LVMH
Moet & Chandon
Moet 2

(Moët &) Chandon

Domaine Chandon (the foreign label of Moët & Chandon) unveiled three new variations of its "Drink it in" print campaign in 2001, for the first time targeting the gay community with an ad appearing in The Advocate and Out. The image featured a laughing couple with copy that read: "When you know your future is with him, drink it in." Another showed two guys saying "We should do this more often".


Previously, the mother brand Moët & Chandon released the 'gay vague' commercial One Sound in 1997, and used same-sex images in 2006 in a campagne called Be Fabulous

Rosemount

In 2001 the prestigious Australian Rosemount Estate became the exclusive wine sponsor of Washington DC's Pride festivities for the first time, expanding to San Francisco in the following year. They donated Kirri Billi sparkling wine for the Domestic Partner Commitment ceremony and 'Champagne' reception.

Crawford Wines, Pansy! Rosé

In 2004, New Zealand's Kim Crawford Wines launched the rosé Pansy!. It was marketed as the “world's first gay wine” (review: “It's fruity, pink-hued, requires a certain taste and is targeted at the gay community”). Described as "fresh, funky and fun", the winemakers say the blend was created as a bit of fun. According to Erica Crawford, Pansy wine is about “friendship, kindness and generosity of spirit”. The wine was aimed directly at the gay community - and at $ 23.99 a bottle not really your everyday wine. The launch parties were in gay bars with lots of feathers, frills and drag acts. At this moment, the wine is no longer presented on the company's website.

Risqué Sommelier

The next year, Risqué Sommelier was launched, a website that leaned more on the sexual side of their target group to market wines. The site described its focus this way: “Sommelier is a Wine Interest style BLOG site targeting the Gay consumer that goes far beyond the basic “Wine Critique” into detail riche experiences in Wine, Cuisine, Travel, Luxury Goods, Art and Music… all with a little lighthearted risqué mischief."

One blogger observed: “Is it still necessary to appeal to the purely sexual when marketing to the gay community? Must a product or sales pitch to the gay community assume that my neighbor down the street is primarily concerned with getting laid? From the look of Risquesommelier.com you'd think this is the only thing on their mind.” In 2010 the latest post appeard, and the website no longer exists, so I guess their approach was not very successful.

Merryvale

By 2006, the number of 'gay wines' seemed to have grown, as for instance Merryvale Vineyards started a marketing campaign called "Celebrate. Come out to Merryvale" - after having sponsored a number of gay events in the previous months, some events taking place in the winery's 'sacred' cellars. Merryvale's decision to reach out to gay consumers, made at the instigation of proprietor Jack Schlatter and President Peter Huwiler, is part sales strategy, part social statement. "It's not just a marketing thing, it's also a community outreach," says marketing director Jean DeLuca.


Occasionally, DeLuca is asked if she worries about a backlash. "I don't know what there is to worry about," she says. "We're not saying that we're gay, we're not saying that the owner's gay or the president's gay. We're saying that we're gay welcoming and anyone who's uncomfortable with that - OK, fine." Well - maybe not so fine, but the intention is good.


Still, observers underline that there are some caveats: Rule No. 1, there's no such thing as "gay" wine. Rule No. 2, if you're going to market to a particular demographic, you'd better not be pushing plonk. "First and foremost, you've got to make good wine," says Felipe A. Barragan, co-owner of the Chateau de Vie bed and breakfast in Calistoga and a Merryvale customer.

One outfit taking a no-holds-barred approach to marketing was the gay owned Rainbow Ridge Wines (Palm Springs, California), a small winery launched in March 2003 with a wine made from the unusual red grape Alicante Bouschet, and the advertising slogan "We're Coming Out." Even their marketing description of the wine comes with a smile. They describe it as "fruit forward with a fabulous finish." It got a 91 rating from Wine Enthusiast, so was not just a marketing ploy - they were obviously not "pushing plonk"...


Co-owner Dennis Costa says he and partner Tom Beatty picked the relatively obscure grape because "we wanted to go after something that's a little different, just like we are." Still, he added, Rainbow Ridge, which subsequently brought out a chardonnay, is just as interested in selling to straight drinkers. "People say, “Oh, gay wine.” And we go, “No. It's just a good wine made by a gay owned company.” By 2016, no trace of  the winery or wines can be found.

Rainbow Cuvee

Californian winemaker Iron Horse presented the world with a sparkling Rainbow Cuvee 2010, to celebrate the 45th anniversary of San Francisco Pride. Their website says: “We are honored to be recognized as one of the top 6 most gay friendly winery in California. It’s important to remember how much has changed in just the last decade … Here's to the freedom of being yourself!”


They also give 10 “insider tips” for participants of the Parade, including nr. 9: “Get up to date on the “Alphabet Soup”. It’s not LGBT anymore. The latest is LGBTQQIA, which stands for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Questioning, Intersex and Ally. By the way, Iron Horse is an ally.” Apparently, they missed the memo on Toronto's LGBTTI2QQ2SA Pride.

A “gay wine” was also introduced in Argentina in 2006 (four years before the introduction of same sex marriage): Pilot, in no less than five varieties. The brand was owned by the Buenos Aires Gay Wine Store. A reviewer observed: “The bottles are very well presented, with some fancy leather labels and interesting colors. (…) a fresh collection of wines, specially designed for summer times.”


Neither the wine, nor the store seem to have survived,however.

Mundo Gay

The same fate was bestowed upon another Hispanic gay wine: Mundo Gay, from the Spanish region of Ribera del Duero, presented after the introduction of same-sex marriage in Spain, by Bodegas y Viñedos Robeal. They said it was meant to “open the minds of those in the small agricultural area of Ribera del Duero". By 2014, their website no longer lists this wine, although some wine shops still seem to offer some bottles.

In the same year the French Domaine du Boyer launched a sparkling rosé called 'Tendre Bulle Gay Vin' (Tender Bubbles Gay Wine). On the bottle are two stylized heads, which appear to be almost kissing, with the words 'Gay Vin' underneath. The letters G and L, for gay and lesbian, appeared on the foil capsule covering the cork. "I added on the L and G letters after some women at a wine fair told me, oh, so your wine is only for boys," said the wine's creator, Jacques-Edouard Pailles. He started out wanting to make a rosé wine that would be called the gay wine of Malpierre, one of the local place names, but could not, because of AOC regulations. 'So then I thought it would be fun to make a happy wine, something festive, as in happy which is what gay used to mean in the middle ages,' he said. Pailles made some 13,000 bottles of Gay Vin which retailed for about € 6 each. 

UO! Wines 

In 2009, another Spanish effort was made. Spanish UO! Wines is a line of three wines (Ánima Blanca, Antinoo and Oscura) created with homosexual men in mind, and its descriptions, packaging and website imagery were all tailored accordingly. Underscoring the connection it sees between wine and sexual orientation, UO! explained: "Right from the time you see the wine in the display case, we want to ensure that the bottle speaks about more than its delicious contents; that it has to do with you; that you are offering whoever you are with something more than a simple glass of wine." As an added benefit, 1% of their sales were donated to the  Fight Against AIDS Foundation (FLS).


In 2016 the vintner ceased to exist.

VinAmis

In 2010, Dutch wine house VinAmis marketed the “Chardongay” at the occasion of the annual Canal Pride parade. Strangely enough, this was not Chardonnay but a Chenin Blanc with Colombard, while there was also a red: Cabernet Sauvignon. A Rosé was added later. A competition was organized in 2011 to spruce up the label a bit, as it was deemed too boring. These wines no longer exist, although the wine seller does. 

Yellowglen Rainbow wine
Yellowglen Rainbow wine
Graham's
Graham's
Arcoiris
Arcoiris
Naked Bottle
Naked Bottle
Dancing Bull
Dancing Bull
Marry Me
Marry Me
Naked wine
Naked wine
Amazon labels
Amazon labels
Opici
Opici
Vald'Orbieu
Vald'Orbieu

And then there were products like Gay Rosé by Oregon's Naked Winery ("we aim to tease" - now called Evoke Winery), Marry Me by the Save Me San Francisco Wine Co., the Argentinean Arcoiris (rainbow) wine, and Californian Dancing Bull sponsoring GLAAD. We saw organizations such as the Argentinian Altura, offering "gay-friendly wine tours" and gay and lesbian wedding celebrations in the vineyards. Graham's port wine advertised with "Life Should Always Be This Good" showing two male lovers in 2002. Opici wines who showed two female ones that same year. The French presented "Rfereshing things that happen in the 'oui' hours' with Val d'Orbieu. And Australian Yellowglen who added red, orange, green, blue and purple to their name and label to turn it into the rainbow.


There was The Gay Man's Guide To Red Wine offering life saving tips for first dates and dinner parties (imagine ordering a Merlot prior to the main meal!). Amazon offered a set of four LGBTQ Rainbow Wine Bottle Label Stickers so you can turn any bottle into a gay wine.

Barefoot 2020 2
Barefoot 2020 1
Barefoot 2020 3

Barefoot wines

This wine house - est. 1986 - stems from California (member of the E & J Gallo family since 2005). Their website has a special LGBT section, which says: "A proud LGBTQ+ ally since 1988, Barefoot believes in accepting everyone exactly as they are. Discover how your purchase supports LGBTQ+ communities around the world and #MarchOnward with us!"

Click here for the full Barefoot article.

"Queer champagne"

Late 2019, Swedish historian and wine enthusiast Pedro Bentancour Garin started a crowdfunding campaign to support the launch of an 'organic, queer champagne'. The pride-profiled brand should have a permanent LGBT focus and give 25 percent of the profit from each bottle sold to support queer liberation movements in countries where the community is still oppressed. The kickstarter campaign only reached 1% of its target of €450,000, so the project did not materialize. 

German sparkles

German brand Deutz Geldermann surprised with a print ad for their sparkling wine in 2006. It was called "Genuss Mit Stil Und Lebensfreude" (enjoyment with style and joie de vivre) and showed two men, quite likely a couple. The text read: "Even when you have everything, you can still surprise your partner. With a new partner, for instance." A mysterious description, with one man gloating, the other one looking guilty. 

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Man-holding-Torti-Rainbow-collection

Italian rainbow bubbles

Italian winery Torti Wines honoured the LGBT community for Christmas 2020 with their Rainbow Wine Collection of sparkling rosé wines. Torti Wines is a 110-year old winery, who, in collaboration with the LGBT Foundation created this Rainbow Collection in the name of peace, love and diversity, with a percentage of sales revenue from each bottle going to the LGBT Foundation. Patrizia Torti from the Torti Family said “We’re excited to be working closely with groups and foundations who want the same as us. In the modern age, we need to embrace individuality, while at the same time, we need to come together to support those communities who continue to face marginalisation.”


The Torti family say their Rainbow Collection is bright, bold, and never willing to compromise, a message from which society can learn a lot they say – being proud of who you are and striking for ‘Equality Wins’.

Love wins
GYODC
Decision
Migrant
Riveter

Equality Vines

A special mention goes to Equality Vines, "the world’s first cause wine portfolio dedicated to equality for all people. A percentage of all proceeds from the sales of Equality Vines are donated or directed to partners in the ongoing fight for Equality for all." The vineyard works with Jim Obergefell, who played a crucial role in the marriage equality fight in the US. They wine house produces wines such as Love Wins, The Decision, GYODC (Get Your Own Damn Coffee) and The Riveter - all supporting good causes. 

Rosemount Brand Manager Honore Comfort said: "We are extremely proud of our involvement with LGBT Pride. Rosemount's innovative brand image and new 'Life's Never Still' campaign are a great fit with this event. The weekend is about enjoying life and celebrating diversity and Rosemount wines embody that spirit." Even though these exclamations were rather gratuitous and politically correct, Rosemount still deserves credit for associating their brand with the community in a time when this was not so logical yet.

Rainbow Ridge

Pilot

Domaine du Boyer

In the midst of the American turmoil around this issue, 4e Winery (for "Four Elements") in North Dakota, run by Greg and Lisa Cook, issued a fierce protest against the state's anti-LGBT legislation. "At 4e Winery we will serve all people and welcome all people with open arms. Not straight people, not gay people, not people with green hair – – – all people. Our family and our friends who happen to be LGBT are people. And they are welcome. We don’t care WHO people love, we care THAT they love. This winery has no tolerance for hate." On the occasion of Pride Month, they change the logo on their social media to the rainbow one on the right. 

Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives

An unlikely alliance came to be in 2014, when the Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives partnered with Goodwill Wine and released wines with historical images on the labels in support of the preservation of Australia’s LGBT history. The featured images were: a 1978 ‘Homosexuals fight back’ screen printed poster; or a photograph of a 1950s private camp party in Melbourne.


The wines in question were a constantly changing selection of boutique wines from around the country. 50% of the profits went towards the Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives.


Goodwill created a tradition of raising funds for a total of more than 300 charities over the years, raising close to $400,000.

Why Not

Another Argentinian product was the Sparkling Pinot Noir Extra Brut from Mendoza, called Why Not. It was offered in different varieties for a few years. 

With Gay Pride Day 2020 approaching, the old Spanish vineyard of Vintae (over 50 years old) did not want to be left behind in the celebration and offered a special pack of two red wines: Matsu El Pícaro 2019, a red from the DO Toro and Bardos Romántica 2017 from the DO Ribera del Duero.


With this special Pride pack the company said they wanted to make a toast to tolerance, love and respect with two brave and tasty wines.

Vintae Pride

Orgullo Wines

Another Dutch initiave, by Sander Salburg, was the sale of three varieties of the Spanish Orgullo Wines, for Pride Amsterdam in 2015 and 2016. For each bottle sold, €1.50 was donated to the Pride Fund of Amnesty International and COC. Wines were sold via the store of and the deli-supermarkets of Marqt - the latter did not donate to charity, so this was more a case of pinkwashing. In total some €2.000 was raised. 

House wine HRC 18
House Wine 21b
House Wine 21
House Wine 20

House Wine

House Wine's motto is "Everyone's Welcome in Our House". Standing by their motto, they have done a few campaigns in the past years with special packaging, while donating $2 of every purchased rainbow-colored can case to HRC.


In 2020 they launched a Limited-Edition Rainbow Rosé Bubbles can, again donating $2 for every case sold to the Human Rights Campaign.

Case study: "Gay" Wines

Branche: fmcg

Dom Perignon goes Gaga

Outrageous, sparkling, colorful and creative... Global superstar Lady Gaga and the LVMH-owned champagne brand Dom Pérignon came together in 2021 for a limited-edition collaboration. Tying in with Gaga’s Chromatica album launch, the Dom Pérignon team-up came as a "means of shared artistic energy, born out of a celebration of creativity". With this in mind, Gaga put her name to a range of limited-edition collector’s bottles and an accompanying sculpture. This is captured in a Nick Knight-shot campaign. Dom Pérignon: "With creative visionary Nick Knight, Dom Pérignon and Lady Gaga have created the Queendom: a world where absolute creative freedom rules. A world born from the collision of their two effervescent energies. It invites us to move forward and embrace this power for ourselves, to encourage it and affirm it for everyone to see.

survival guide
gay friendly tours arg
altura wedding

So - that's gay wine for you.

This article was last updated Dec 16, 2021