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    Thursday, May 23, 2024

    How celebrity tequilas are changing the nature of tequila

    I’m staring at two new bottles that represent a tension at the heart of tequila.

    One is from Casamigos, the brand founded by actor George Clooney, ex-model Rande Gerber and businessman Mike Meldman, which they sold to spirits giant Diageo in 2017 for a reported $1 billion. Their new bottle is a jalapeno-flavored blanco tequila under the feminized name Casamigas. On it, the signature of Cindy Crawford, Gerber’s wife, has joined Clooney’s and Gerber’s, along with a lip-print asterisked with her famous mole.

    In the press release, Crawford speaks of her love for a skinny, spicy Casamigos margarita: “A few years ago, Rande and I were watching the sunset and we talked about how fun it would be for me to do a spicy tequila. Voila — Casamigas was born.” (Also, how fun is it to eavesdrop on completely authentic golden-hour conversations between hot model spouses?)

    The other bottle is an additive-free blanco from Pure Brands, a U.S.-based investor-developer, named Not A Celebrity Tequila.

    That a new tequila markets itself around what it is not should give you a hint of where we are these days. You can’t swing a quiote without hitting a tequila brand that’s owned, invested in or fronted by a celebrity (often the face of a multinational corporation). A by-no-means-comprehensive list includes Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson (Teremana), Kendall Jenner (818), LeBron James (Lobos 1707), Michael Jordan (Cincoro), Mark Wahlberg (Flecha Azul), Guy Fieri and Sammy Hagar (Santo, but Hagar also launched Cabo Wabo back in 1996).

    “Having spent the last 4 years working in the tequila industry, it feels like every brand that has been released in that time has some sort of celebrity affiliation,” Pure Brands founder Andrew Bushby said in an email. While Not A Celebrity Tequila’s name is tongue-in-cheek, he hopes it has a more serious effect: encouraging more transparency within the industry, so consumers can make more educated decisions.

    It’s going to be an uphill climb. Though the small, four-digit NOM indicator on every bottle of tequila or mezcal allows savvy consumers to find out some information about its production, labeling regulations for agave spirits are complex and often opaque, even to those steeped in the industry.

    The category is getting crowded. Especially since that billion-dollar Casamigos sale, there’s been the booze equivalent of a Gold Rush.

    “I’m honored to be known as the ones who helped grow the tequila category to what it is today,” Gerber said, in a statement sent by the Casamigos PR team. “Many will learn that it takes time, dedication, most of all it takes authenticity and a really great product such as Casamigos and Casamigas to succeed.”

    Others have a different take. “Every celebrity pretty much since George Clooney has gone into not just mezcal or tequila, but any liquor, with dollar signs in their eyes,” says Susan Coss, co-founder of Mezcalistas, a company dedicated to raising mezcal awareness in the United States. Celebrity marketing is so pervasive that nobody cares “if you’re a celebrity and you start a vodka brand or a gin brand,” she said. “But I think as soon as you start playing in waters that are cultural, that’s where you get into trouble.”

    Consider the backlash when Kendall Jenner — whose very Kardashianness guarantees an outpouring of love and hate for any project she might take on — launched 818 tequila, naming a Mexican spirit after an L.A. county area code, with images of herself riding a horse through misty agave fields dressed in vaguely “Mexican” apparel.

    More subtly and pervasively, I’ve lost track of how many tequila websites contain a first-person celebrity origin story that goes something like: “I fell in love with this wonderful, authentic Mexican spirit, the vibrant history and culture it comes from, so I made a version that is way better than what they’ve been making for centuries.” The attraction to tequila may be sincere, but the marketing hook is baited with condescension.

    If you distill it, will they come?

    That’s the question for so many spirit brands, and a famous face can provide visibility in an incredibly crowded space.

    “But a lot of celebrities miss that tequila and mezcal is something that is truly embedded in the culture of Mexico,” says Lucas Assis, former L.A. bartender and now a consultant and agave spirits educator. “It’s not just a spirit. It’s always more than just that.”

    When American celebrities become the face of a spirit made by Mexican farmers and distillers, when they benefit financially from a spirit made from a plant with deep roots and cultural significance in Mexico, it raises the question: Who defines tequila? Its makers, its drinkers — or its marketers?

    Tequila’s drinkers are disproportionately Americans. Since 2002, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, domestic tequila sales have grown by 180 percent; and the U.S. is still by far the biggest destination for tequila exports. Eighty-five percent of tequila is consumed in the U.S. and Mexico, with the U.S. vastly outpacing its southern neighbors, who actually make the tequila we drink.

    American tastes have, for years, driven the evolution and marketing of agave spirits.

    Worth billions, from a financial perspective, tequila is a huge success story.

    While some tequilas are still made by traditional methods, many have become what agave geeks refer to as “agavodkas” — industrialized versions that, for reasons of efficiency or cost, have been stripped of their essential character, often leaning on such additives as vanilla and glycerin to compensate.

    Many of the tequilas fronted by American celebs land in this category. But the language on bottles can be a bewildering combination of flash and fact, making it hard to tell what you’re getting. Casamigos hints at added flavoring, touting “notes of a smooth vanilla finish” on its label. Many brands with similar notes don’t acknowledge any additives (and in aged tequilas, some vanilla notes come from barrel aging). But if you compare their flavors to a classic, truly additive-free tequila, your palate will tell you what’s going on.

    Plenty of celebrity tequilas that lean smoother and sweeter are beloved by consumers. And so what? If you like a tequila that tastes like vanilla-frosted birthday cake, what’s the harm?

    Maybe not much. But if millions of consumers believe that’s what tequila is supposed to taste like, driving other brands to follow suit, tequila will move farther and farther from its roots.

    It’s not that celebrity-affiliated tequilas are never high-quality, says Bushby. The danger “is that a lot of the time the celebrity is not an expert ... Many tequilas on the market are much lower quality than advertised or priced, have been made with agave in various stages of ripeness and have been artificially flavored or manipulated ... to give the appearance of time and technique.”

    I’ve been struck by how many brands seem to want it both ways: They have the celebrity face on the bottle, their website, the events, but they do not want to be thought of us as a “celebrity tequila.” Casamigos “was never a celebrity tequila,” according to Gerber. “George just happened to be an actor.” (It’s a paradox: so many celebrities “making” tequila, yet none of them make celebrity tequila!)

    Beyond the question of whether celebrity tequilas are good lies a bigger question about their impact.

    Celebrity marketing has helped push tequila’s enormous growth, but the wealth has generally not made its way to the people doing the hard labor to make tequila, says David Suro Piñera, a tequila importer, activist and co-author of “Agave Spirits.”

    “I would love to have celebrities who actually share the profits,” says Suro Piñera, who also founded Siembra Spirits. “But if you come down to the farms in Mexico and ask most of the jimadors or people at the distilleries if they really see any increase in income? The answer is going to be not really.”

    You can see this, he says, in the migration of jimadors leaving Mexico to seek a better living in the U.S., taking their skills with them. “If we don’t take care of the people who take care of tequila, there will be nobody to take care of tequila,” says Suro Piñera.

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