";s:4:"text";s:6568:" Answer all the questions below to see your personal dialect map. The three smaller maps show which answer most contributed to those cities being named the most (or least) similar to you. The way I talk. Sexism aside, these terms fall into the same obnoxious camp as “wet river stone.”. And as new pathways are created to usher in a more diverse new generation of wine professionals, the resources to do that expansion will grow. My conversations with wine professionals like Jirka Jireh and Martin Reyes for a recent story about the need to improve wine education for BIPOC really put into focus just how limited and unwelcoming the established wine lexicon can be. For my friends and me, what would usually come as jokes and passing comments over a weekend with too many drinks came out over a 12-week reflection featuring video calls, text messages, and voice notes. I May Destroy You transformed my group chats, DMs, and weekly phone catch-ups into intense discussions on whether the characters’ consent was violated, and whether the violation was debatable or clear-cut. This idea came up a lot in recent discussions about the wine industry’s lack of racial diversity, especially with Jireh, who told me that early in her career she was conditioned to “mold” her palate to a French ideal, even though French flavors weren’t evocative for her. My typical reader can read in English, lives in the Bay Area, probably knows what a persimmon tastes like. The show makes clear that consent procured under any kind of false pretenses is stolen and is most likely a violation, while not labeling everyone who steals consent a monster. I May Destroy You restarts and reshapes the #MeToo conversation. How many people have actually tasted a wet river stone, anyway? In its early days, the movement—which was founded by a Black woman—was heavily criticized for centering white, wealthy females and leaving out voices of color. Notes of smoldering tobacco or forest underbrush or underripe Jonagold apple — it sounds almost farcical in its specificity. The data for the quiz and maps shown here come from over 350,000 survey responses collected from August to October 2013 by Josh Katz, a graphics editor for the New York Times who developed this quiz and has since written “Speaking American,” a visual exploration of American regional dialects. Some started therapy. Another part of it is really, truly paying attention to those flavors, whether it’s the pungent saltiness of XO sauce or the mouthwatering tang of umeboshi. Morgan Wallen (born May 13, 1993) is an American country music artist. In the course of the series’s 12 episodes, Coel pushes at the boundaries of consent from every direction there is, leaving you reevaluating previous sexual encounters and reconsidering how you might think about consent in the future. Some of us found solace seeing our lived experiences played out on television. Morgan Cole Wallen (born May 13, 1993) is an American country music singer and songwriter. Certain descriptors like Chinese five spice, rooibos tea, hoisin and lemongrass have crept into the mainstream, used frequently even by the highest-profile critics. Esther Mobley is The San Francisco Chronicle’s wine critic. She’s upset, but thanks to Zain’s gaslighting, she isn’t quite sure how to process it. The show is centered on Arabella (Coel), a British-Ghanaian author, social media influencer, and sexual assault survivor. For starters: The vocabulary used for fine wine is nearly exclusively rooted in flavors and aromas familiar to western Europe. with love for... Napa wineries dub a ‘true hero’ of Glass Fire: a winemaker on a stunt... S.F.-Marin Food Bank ratifies union contract after yearlong battle where... Chantal Guillon closes, plus other Bay Area restaurant closures. Their intersectional perspectives are vital to the show, and to the movement as a whole. ... that a randomly selected person in that location would respond to a randomly selected survey question the same way … The survivors of I May Destroy You represent Black voices, queer voices, and working-class voices. Yes, it’s an esoteric Greek derivative. Some of us came away empowered to stand up for ourselves when we find ourselves in situations with changing circumstances. Consider the extent to which French words have crept into English-language wine talk. As Arabella highlights, stealthing is considered rape under U.K. law, but only “a bit rapey” in Australia. Wine’s diversity issue starts with the way we talk about the taste of wine, a recent story about the need to improve wine education for BIPOC, A running list of Napa Valley wineries that have been damaged or destroyed in the 2020 Glass Fire, Napa wineries dub a ‘true hero’ of Glass Fire: a winemaker on a stunt motorcycle, In fire-prone Napa, winery employees double as high percentage of region's volunteer firefighters, He lives in a 65-year-old cruise ship idling in the California Delta. #MeToo caused a long-overdue revolution and exposed the prevalence of sexual assault and rape, but after many months, it spurred backlash when sound minds could not agree on whether some incidents are sexual assault and what the consequences should be. Sometimes, the exercise of conveying what a wine tastes like may require a little more imagination. Folks know I'm … It’s not available at Safeway. But as the show continues, its characters are involved in more complicated sexual interactions, where consent is given, and then circumstances change. Some people like to make a little fun of. She like my style, she like my smile, she like the way I talk She from the country, think she like me 'cause I'm from New York I ain't that nigga tryna holla 'cause I want some head