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France Dying on the Vine (clip)

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    So when a region of the world
    becomes known for a specific type of food,
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    they'll go to great lengths to protect it.
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    I mean, let's look at Kobe beef.
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    It can only be called that
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    if it meets a very particular
    set of requirements,
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    including that the cow was born, fed,
    and slaughtered in a region of Japan
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    that includes the city of Kobe.
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    Quebec regulates who can sell maple syrup
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    and the government even keeps
    a strategic reserve.
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    French champagne is from, you guessed it,
    the Champagne region of France
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    and it's heavily regulated.
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    But the pandemic is exposing
    the behind-the-scenes drama
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    about how it's produced.
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    DYING ON THE VINE
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    You must hold it like this
    and tap, all the way up.
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    Okay.
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    And I use the back of the knife.
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    - Here, this part. OK.
    - Yes, that part.
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    Okay, merci.
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    Oh, it's quite heavy.
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    Okay.
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    This is very difficult.
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    Whoaaaaa!
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    (Charlet) There were many reasons
    to break out the champagne sabre in 2020.
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    Whooooo!
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    And that's bad news
    for Charles Duval-Leroy and his family.
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    Merci.
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    This is what we have today for
    Femme de Champagne: non-vintage.
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    It is more of apéritif-style vintage.
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    We stay in the frame
    of elegance and finesse.
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    (Charlet) The Duval-Leroy has been
    in this business for 150 years.
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    They produce more than
    2 million bottles annually
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    for big clients like Delta Airlines
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    and the Moulin Rouge.
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    With COVID-19 keeping planes on the ground
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    and event spaces closed,
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    sales have plummeted by almost 40%,
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    and the champagne industry
    has had to take drastic action.
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    This is an unusual year.
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    We had a good harvest,
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    but due to this COVID-19 crisis,
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    we couldn't harvest all the grapes.
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    As you can see,
    there are a lot of grapes left.
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    It's a frustrating year for us.
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    If I didn't know the context,
    it looks like sabotage.
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    It's really something unprecedented.
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    There are so many times
    that we ask ourselves
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    if there's a new wine-making method.
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    No, it's just throwing the grapes
    on the ground.
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    It makes no sense.
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    With the sales dropping
    throughout the year,
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    how did the industry respond?
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    The first step was to say,
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    "Let's reduce quotas.
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    If we reduce quotas, we reduce production.
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    We won't inflate the stock
    that hasn't been sold."
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    It's a truly collective response
    to lower production,
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    which is why we have left grapes
    on the vine today.
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    It's a heartbreaking response,
    but we know it's necessary
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    for the long term in Champagne.
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    (Charlet) Champagne has spent decades
    meticulously curating a global image
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    as the way to mark special occasions.
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    It's this type of deliberate management
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    that led to cutting production
    by 100 million bottles this year
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    to prop up prices.
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    But the decision left
    over 10,000 tons of grapes to waste away,
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    and it didn't necessarily
    account for issues
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    that were already threatening
    champagne's reign
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    as a celebratory drink of choice.
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    Can you talk a little bit about
    the state of of the champagne industry
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    before the pandemic hit?
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    Because I remember there was already
    talk of champagne
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    having a little bit of an image crisis
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    before COVID.
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    Since 2008, champagne
    hasn't regained its sales
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    simply because the final consumer,
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    due to to economic issues,
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    has shifted from champagne
    to other alcohols
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    or other aperitifs, of course.
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    Champagne hasn't benefited yet
    from Instagram.
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    We see more and more that
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    there is an audience that
    needs to show itself
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    with a big glass with lots of ice
    and colors in it.
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    A gin and tonic that's well prepared
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    and looks beautiful.
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    And champagne is very elegant,
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    but it's served in a small glass
    with not a lot in it.
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    It's too discreet to take a selfie
    or a photo with.
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    "Look, I'm in a dreamy landscape."
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    (Charlet) But some smaller producers
    have a different take
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    on the right response to the crisis.
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    The color is incredible,
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    it looks like Roussanne [grapes].
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    (Charlet) While the big names
    in the industry
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    sell millions of bottles each year,
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    Alselme Selosse makes only about 50,000
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    and each one can go for hundreds of euros.
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    We're looking for the grapes' stems.
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    (Charlet) Like this?
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    (Anselme) Yes. And then, on the soil.
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    (Charlet) No. That's sad.
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    (Anselme) Yes, it's sad because
    there's a full team that worked on it
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    for a whole year.
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    This is a gift from nature.
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    We're insulting nature.
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    We're not able to keep what it gives us.
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    (Charlet) The quotas mean all producers
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    are leaving grapes on the ground
    to compost.
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    Something that Selosse sees
    as particularly hard for smaller companies
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    that can't lose out on revenue.
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    So the industry implemented a quota
    to try and ease the crisis.
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    Do you think that was the right solution?
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    It's not a solution.
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    It's a way to carry on
    while keeping everyone at ease.
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    I see it as a race to the bottom.
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    Those who make no effort,
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    who don't adapt,
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    who see vines as grape-producing machines,
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    they are the ones being rewarded.
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    So they want the good producers
    to waste their high-quality fruits
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    so that they can sell
    their poor quality fruits.
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    That's not how you give
    young people a future.
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    These three young men
    are the future of the region.
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    (Charlet) For Selosse, champagne success
    depends on innovation
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    from the next generation of winemakers.
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    Charlet, would you like
    a glass of champagne?
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    Okay. (laughter)
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    (Charlet) But younger producers,
    like Alexander Chartogne,
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    are also the ones
    with the most recent investments,
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    leaving them the most at risk financially.
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    I love it.
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    Would you drink this for
    an aperitif or with food?
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    It depends on your mood.
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    It depends on the moment.
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    You can drink it
    really early in the morning
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    or really late in the evening.
    (laughter)
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    This is really good, though.
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    (Charlet) Most champagne makers
    are doing fine.
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    For now.
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    But their future depends
    on when the pandemic ends.
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    And more importantly,
    if sales pick up when it does.
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    So, of all the industries
    that have been hurt by the pandemic,
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    champagne is not necessarily
    the most sympathetic one.
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    Why should people care
    that champagne's been hurt?
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    In many countries--
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    whether it's the English,
    the Americans, the Germans--
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    nobody likes French people
    but everyone loves France,
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    and champagne is the tip of that image.
Title:
France Dying on the Vine (clip)
ASR Confidence:
0.83
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Eating With My Five Senses
Project:
COUNTER SPACE_(CLIPS)_The Issues - (Ep01-Ep08)
Duration:
06:57

English subtitles

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