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FSB: Wine marketing goes high-tech

There is perhaps no better example of the democratization of wine marketing than Gary Vaynerchuk. His almost-daily, 25-minute video rants about the subject, Wine Library TV, boast 60,000 viewers, who post an astonishing 300 to 500 comments per episode.

SI.com: John Rolfe: Athletes' wines and whines

Some men never grew up Fortunate like you Some men never found out What it takes to be a dude That's sports and wine -- Ben Folds Five

SI.com: Dr: Z: Vermeil doing just vine nowadays

Dick Vermeil was concerned. He had gotten off to a good start with his 2003 vintage Charbono, a dark, stylish wine that is made only in California. It was a correct wine, mixing the dark brooding touches of this exotic grape with a clean taste of berryish fruit, but then the next vintage, the 2004, had shown an overripe, spirity quality that puzzled a few of the tasters in the room.

SI.com: Nicki Jhabvala: The glove just fits

Some things just don't make any sense: Elton John and 50 Cent? The Godfather (I and II) and When Harry Met Sally?

FSB: Winning in the wine world

Dear FSB: What is the success rate for a small local winery in an area of between 40,000 to 60,000 people?

SI.com: Dr. Z: Cope followed his heart into broadcasting

There's nothing as depressing as internal congratulation, except maybe for an NFL Network think piece, but I've simply got to stop and take note of the truly superior brand of e-mails this week. So let's have a real Morris Plains round of applause for our man in the control booth, Paulie Forrests! OK, Doctor, let's hear from the first stiff ... uh, first e-mailer.

FSB: Weedy wine

"You sure have a lot of weeds." That's how Doug Tunnell describes the reaction of visitors to Brick House Vineyards, his small estate in Newberg, Ore. He points to plants you don't expect to see among the rows of grapevines: a tangle of blackberries overtaking a bed of yellow yarrow. "Only we don't view them as weeds," he says. "They're plants that offer habitats to organisms that somehow affect our grapes' DNA."

Making the world's best wine

Ten years ago, Blair and Estelle Hunt entered the wine business with nothing more than a bare plot of land.

Krug: class in a glass

Popping corks and effervescent bubbles have symbolised success and celebration for more than 300 years.

Green grapes: Turning sunshine into Napa wine

California's Napa Valley, with its rolling hills, vineyards and prized terrain, produces some of America's finest wines. Here, tradition and craft are everything.

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