BEER VS WINE
NEW YORK (July 12) - Ahhh, the joys of a summer day, when the toughest
decision might be the choice between a perfectly chilled bottle of wine and an
ice cold beer.
That choice might be a little easier these days in New York City, where Mayor
Michael Bloomberg uncorked a brouhaha by suggesting that while drinking wine in
the park with the symphony is fine, beer and the beach just don't mix.
The comment has set off allegations of snobbery and classism, a problem for the
billionaire mayor who was already perceived by many New Yorkers as unable to
relate to them and their problems.
The whole mess started on the Fourth of July, when people hosting a fund-raiser
on Rockaway Beach in Brooklyn for memorials to World Trade Center victims were
rousted by police for drinking beer.
The city's open-container law bans alcohol in parks and beaches.
A few days later, thousands of people sipped wine in Central and Prospect parks
as they listened to the New York Philharmonic, the nation's oldest orchestra,
during free performances followed by fireworks. Police did not issue a single
citation.
A photograph on the front page of the Daily News the morning after the Prospect
Park concert showed Bloomberg sitting on the lawn next to music lovers imbibing
wine. One concertgoer, according to the paper, even offered the mayor a shot of
vodka - which was politely declined.
Bloomberg said that enforcement of public drinking laws is at the discretion of
individual police officers and that his neighbors in the park were ``behaving.''
He said inebriated people on the beach run a much greater risk of harming
themselves, as opposed to those who drink in the more placid confines of the
park.
``I don't know of anybody that's drowned in a tuba recently,'' Bloomberg
declared when asked about the discrepancy.
Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe said drinking wine in the parks when the
symphony plays is a cherished rite of summer in the city.
``There happens to be a four-decade tradition of Philharmonics in the park,''
Benepe said. ``The tradition has been that people have come out and have a
bottle of wine ... There have never been problems related to that.''
It's not fair, some New Yorkers say.
``Clearly, there's a class bias,'' said Doug Muzzio, a political science
professor at Baruch College. ``Bloomberg is from the Chablis and brie set, not
the beer and burger set.''
The idea that beer is the brew of the lower classes is not new: In about 350,
the Roman Empire denounced beer as ``the brew of barbarians.''
Wine lovers say many beer drinkers revel in what is sometimes a crude image, in
television commercials, at keg parties or on T-shirts.
``Listen, there is no equivalent for wine of that 'Reasons Why Beer is Better
than Women' T-shirt,'' said Alan Roberts, a Manhattan salesman who bought a
bottle each of cabernet sauvignon and pinot grigio at a downtown liquor store.
But Jon Bloostein, owner of the upscale Heartland Brewery and Chop House chain,
said that as the quality of beer continues to increase, prejudice against beer
drinkers diminishes.
``There isn't the same kind of snob appeal with wine-drinkers that there once
was,'' he said.
Counters Roberts: ``Bacchus is the god of wine, but there is no god of beer,
unless you count Homer Simpson.''