‘Drink the Best in House Arrest’ Wins Wine Spectator’s 2020 Video Contest

Troy and Jill Campione were on the couch watching a Disney sing-along skit and sipping Piper-Heidsieck Champagne when inspiration struck. The six-time Video Contest finalists decided to add their own wine-centric lyrics to Beauty and the Beast‘s hit song “Be Our Guest” for this year’s “Wine at Home” theme, and film a music video. The end result, “Drink the Best in House Arrest,” took first place in this year’s Wine Spectator Video Contest.

The homemade video was shot over the course of two days, almost entirely on an iPhone, and voice recorded in a closet. “Since the video was a musical parody, we had to conjure our inner thespians and bring it all to the screen, a menagerie of hidden talents including singing and dancing, all while drinking and juggling a glass of wine,” Troy Campione told Wine Spectator. “Plus, we needed to synchronize our on-camera shenanigans with our pre-recorded song.”

Troy’s passion for wine started in 2000, when he moved to California and began hosting business dinners. He says the song’s lyrics borrow from his extensive tasting at events such as Wine Spectator‘s Grand Tour, and sommelier classes. Luckily, the filmmaking responsibilities were handed to his daughter, Madison, who shot and co-directed the production, along with videos from previous year’s contests. It has now become the “Campione family tradition.”

This year’s biggest challenge for the Video Contest veterans was working with animals. Although it felt like a wild card, their rescue pets Benji and Beauty performed on cue, “leading us to believe that they may have had acting careers in their past,” Campione said.

This year’s contest came during a difficult year, and the Campiones wanted to show viewers that “Wine provides an important social reprieve where good times can be had and shared, even if from a distance … that your penciled-in French mustache doesn’t have to be perfect when you are having fun.” The Campiones’ Grand Prize includes two full weekend passes to Wine Spectator’s New York Wine Experience in 2021, where the video will be screened for more than 1,000 attendees.

This year’s second-place winner, “New Normal,” from Stoller Wine Group, focused on how wine and technology have brought us closer together during the pandemic. The video gives viewers a glimpse of the isolation, uncertainty and negativity that the pandemic has created through the lens of a young woman’s experience, but offers a hopeful message about wine’s power to transport us, and that our wine-tasting friends are virtually just a click away.

“We felt that it was important to capture the ways we have all been communicating, coming together and ultimately escaping, if only briefly, by showing how wine can whisk you away to another world,” Stoller marketing director Jenna LaCroix told Wine Spectator.

This year’s third-place winner, “2020: A Year to Shred,” takes viewers on a skateboard ride, delivering wine to friends around the city in a safe manner. The short video was created by Thai filmmaker Tina Termsomket, who also won the Video Contest in 2013. With special effects, a touch of humor and a skateboard primarily made out of a wine barrel, Termsomket shows viewers how “Wine at Home” can still be safely enjoyed and shared.

Catch the rest of the inspiring 2020 Video Contest finalists, and find your own favorite among our winners, finalists and honorable mentions.

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Vintner Diego Planeta, Who Helped Put Sicilian Wine on the Map, Dies at 80

Diego Planeta, the tireless force behind both his family winery’s success and Sicilian wine’s campaign to gain international respect, died Sept. 19. He was 80 years old.

“He has certainly been one of the most influential people in the Sicilian wine renaissance, and I will greatly miss our discussions about the future of Sicily,” said Alberto Tasca d’Almerita, who heads his family’s winery with his brother Giuseppe. “One of Diego Planeta’s greatest contributions was in the way he always thought about Sicily as a collective island and never just as an individual.”

Planeta’s most tangible legacy is the wine company that bears his family’s name, now run by the next generation and encompassing five wineries spread across Sicily. But Planeta started as a grapegrower and spent decades pushing Sicily toward the production of quality wines and promoting them around the world.

In 1973, Planeta began what would be an almost 20-year term as president of Sicily’s most successful wine cooperative, Cantine Settesoli. Planeta’s father was a founding member of Settesoli in 1958. It was established to protect grapegrowers at a time when prices were at an alarming low, driven by Sicily’s reputation as a source for poor-quality bulk wine.

Today Settesoli includes 2,300 members farming nearly 5 percent of Sicily’s total vineyard acreage. As president, Planeta improved the quality of the cooperative’s value-oriented MandraRossa label. He solicited the expertise of famed consulting enologist Giacomo Tacchis. In 1989, Planeta hired Piedmont-born enologist Carlo Corino to integrate modern winemaking technologies Corino learned during time working in Australia.

“His work at Settesoli was unbelievable, not only because he created a successful brand but because he proved the ability to join together hundreds of grape producers,” said Tasca d’Almerita.

During Planeta’s tenure he also established a progressive partnership with the Instituto Regionale della Vite e del Vino (IRVV). As part of this partnership the IRVV helped fund experimental vineyards of international varieties. Planeta hypothesized that in order to produce quality wine from Sicilian varieties, the island’s producers needed to first understand how to do so with benchmark grapes like Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay.

“At the time, he seemed mad to everyone else in Sicily,” said Francesca Planeta, Diego’s daughter, in a 2014 interview with Wine Spectator. “But he had the vision that we had to do it to save Sicilian viticulture. He didn’t do it just for Settesoli, he did it for the whole of Sicily.”

Settesoli began to pay skeptical growers to plant international varieties, based on the promising results of the IRVV work. Co-op members ultimately applied the farming and winemaking techniques they learned to local varieties.

Planeta began commercial production from his family’s historic vineyard holdings located in southwestern Menfi, bottling his first wines in 1995. The wines were an overnight success. In 2000, the Planeta Chardonnay Sicilia 1998 rated 91 points on Wine Spectator’s 100-point scale and the Merlot Sicilia 1997 rated 90 points. The Chardonnay earned a spot among Wine Spectator’s Top 100 Wines of 2000, the first wine from Sicily to be included in the annual list.


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Planeta continued to champion all Sicilian wine. In 1998 he collaborated with Lucio Tasca d’Almerita and Giacomo Rallo of Donnafugata to establish Assovini Sicilia, a private organization promoting the island’s wines.

Though Planeta is known for championing international varieties, he saw that work as ultimately in pursuit of quality production from the island’s local grapes. While the wine world was raving about his Chardonnay, Cabernet and Merlot, Planeta was purchasing land in other parts of Sicily to explore the diversity of the island’s terroir and its ability to produce distinctive wines from native varieties.

Working with his daughter Francesca and nephews Santi and Alessio, who heads the winery today, Planeta added four new boutique wineries between 1997 and 2013. Each is dedicated to the production of different native varieties, from Frappato at the Dorilli estate in southeastern Sicily’s Vittoria to a Nero d’Avola-Nocera blend at Capo Milazzo’s La Baronia property in the island’s northeast corner.

With his warm and congenial personality, often speaking of his beloved Sicily, Planeta was a venerated ambassador for his region’s wines. “Diego was an inexhaustible source of wisdom, ideas and vision,” said Antonio Rallo of Donnafugata.

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Leggings Awards: The Best Leggings in 2020

Sartorially speaking, there’s so much to love about fall, not least of which is the switch from shorts to leggings.

Already the building blocks of the well-rounded wardrobe, in 2020 terms, comfy, stylish leggings are more important than ever before. But which pairs promise to hold up and never let you down?

For that, we went to Bare Necessities buyers Kelly Morales and Megan Irvine. According to our sources, these are most legendary leggings.

Without further ado, check out our annual Leggings Awards winners.

BEST BLACK LEGGINGS: Hue Ultra Leggings with Wide Waistband
For the second year in a row, this Hue pair takes the prize. Not only are they top quality everyday opaque black leggings for the price, they’re super comfortable and really flattering, thanks to that wider-than-most waistband. The Lycra-Spandex blend is what allows them to both fit your figure and keep their shape, even after repeat washings-and-wearings. And should you love them so much you’re ready to expand your collection, they also come in heather gray, white, navy and olive green.

BEST SIZE RANGE: Commando Perfect Control Faux Leather Leggings & Commando Faux Patent Leather Leggings
It’s 2020—way past time to expect democratic sizing. Commando delivers where so few others manage to come through. From XS to 3X, anyone can get in on the haute, haute, haute faux-leather look or make a high-shine statement in ersatz patent leather. That both pairs are figure-flattering, look so luxe and elevate every outfit only adds to the appeal.

MOST WEARABLE FASHION: Commando Perfect Control Faux Leather Animal Leggings
Show a little skin without revealing your own or taking anyone else’s. These croc- and snake-embossed pleather leggings are actually made of super comfy 4-way-stretch microfiber, with a little extra shoring up in the tummy region. It’s incredible how they completely transform a neutral sweater or basic long-sleeve tee. Pair with booties or loafers and you’re fashionably on-time for fall with not a whole lot of effort.

BEST DENIM LEGGINGS: Hue High-Waist Denim Leggings
Before this, jeggings were a bit of a joke: Precisely no one was convinced they were jeans; you may as well just put stick grommets on sweatpants. But this pair finally gets it right. The fabric blend isn’t all that far off from real denim, but with a higher stretch content and lower percentage of cotton. The different washes, plus the patch pockets and belt loops, mean they also look like actual jeans but feel noticeably softer. The slim leg, high-waist and ankle length are on trend, and they hold their shape so you won’t end the day wearing stretched-out, saggy bottoms. Plus, even the comfiest jeans can’t touch this price. This is what we’ll be wearing to work from home all fall.

MOST VERSATILE: Commando Fast Track Leggings
Our other two-time winner is this innovative, go-everywhere pair that takes you seamlessly from your workout to the rest of your life. On the performance side, their gentle compression eases muscle fatigue and improve circulation; laser-cut edges never dig—important when you’re wearing them for hours on end. On the style side, the soft microfiber and an inner panel smooth the waist and tummy. We also really appreciate that they’re machine washable and quick-dry because you can really put them on repeat all week.

BEST WORKOUT LEGGINGS: Champion Sport High Waist Leggings
Sporty racing stripes make these cropped leggings look cute, but there’s so much more to them than just good looks: UPF 50+ fabric takes them through every season; Double Dry compression fabric feels great against your skin and flat seams prevent annoying chafing while you’re trying not to think about how hard you’re pushing yourself.  Bonus points for the zippered pocket sewn into the waistband for essentials when you’re working out away from home.

The post Leggings Awards: The Best Leggings in 2020 appeared first on Bare it All.

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Author: Brooke Glassberg