Robert Parker Wine Advocate has a new editor, but its notorious 100-point system is here to stay

There is new leadership in one of the world’s leading wine publications, and a new reviewer covering Napa Valley wines.

But don’t expect a radical transformation from Robert Parker Wine Advocate, the 43-year-old publication that rates wines on a 100-point scale. Its new senior editor said the digital magazine’s core mission to be an independent and trusted shopping guide will not change.

The new editor-in-chief is Joe Czerwinski, previously the site’s managing editor. He succeeds Lisa Perrotti-Brown, who ran the Wine Advocate for eight years, and will also take over the rhythm of Napa wine.

British wine critic William Kelley, who takes over as deputy editor, is also promoted. It is not known what Perrotti-Brown will do next.

Personnel changes, especially on wine websites, are rarely newsworthy. But within the world of wine, what Wine Advocate does is important. Since its inception in the 1970s, as a newsletter produced by a moonlighting Maryland attorney, it has been a gravitational center of how people think about wine, most notably popularizing the 100-point scoring system now used in many publications and is visible in wine stores. shelves all over the world. Today, the subscription site is owned by Michelin, famous tire and food guide fame, and employs eight wine critics who publish wine reviews as well as old reports, blog posts, travel articles, and more.

In a conversation this week, Czerwinski (who I worked with once on another post, Wine Enthusiast) discussed where he thinks the Wine Advocate is now and where he sees it under his tutelage. Rather than signaling big changes, he emphasized a vision of continuity, articulating the ways in which Wine Advocate has retained its founding principles even through the tumult of recent years: the retirement of founder Robert Parker and a series of ownership changes that resulted in as a result the total acquisition in 2019.

“I guess we’re pretty old-fashioned,” Czerwinski said. “We see ourselves as the independent consumer’s guide to buying wine. That’s why we exist. That core mission hasn’t changed at all.”

Also largely unchanged, despite his departure, is the continued use of Parker’s name. The power of the stars, apparently, is too great. “Bob’s name attached to the property gives it more meaning, more value,” Czerwinski said. “There have been times when I’ve heard someone say, ‘The Wine Advocate, what is that?’ And you say it’s Robert Parker and they say, ‘oh, of course.’

However, increasingly, attachment to Parker can be a double-edged sword. He is without doubt the most famous wine critic of all time, a name whose recognition transcends this niche. But during his career, Parker and his palate, often regarded as favored by lush and hedonistic wines, became so influential that he also became the reigning power against which new voices rebelled. More than a few writers and sommeliers have defined their entire careers in opposition to Parker, positioning their palates as different from his. One of them, natural wine advocate Alice Feiring, captioned a book “How I Saved the World from Parkerization.”