Boomers are buying less wine. Millennials aren’t picking up the slack. As a result, the growth of wine sales is slowing, while buying patterns are shifting in ways that are sending chills down the collective spine of the U.S. wine industry.
We were warned. The venture capitalist and Netscape founder Marc Andreessen wrote a widely read essay in 2011 titled “Why Software Is Eating the World”. But we didn’t take Andreessen seriously; we thought it was only a metaphor. Now we face the challenge of extracting the world from the jaws of internet platform monopolies.
It seems to make some sense: Let your teenagers drink at home where they will have adult supervision and won’t be driving.
But a new study finds that parents who provide their kids with alcohol aren’t doing them any favors.
As marijuana becomes more available to Californians and additional efforts to legalize it move forward in other states, law enforcement may face a challenge in identifying drivers who are high.
Alcohol is simple. A higher concentration in the bloodstream means more impairment and a higher likelihood of accidents.
Mothers Against Drunk Driving's latest ranking of state drunken-driving laws shows we still have a long way to go.
Even as self-driving cars inch closer to becoming a reality that possibly could eliminate the problem of drunken driving someday, MADD's annual report points up how many states — we're talking to you, Montana — fail to take even small, sensible steps that could reduce the carnage on our streets.
Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America (WSWA) President and CEO Craig Wolf today announced that he will depart the organization at the end of June, capping an 18-year run at the association that serves as the voice of family-owned American distributors of wine and spirits.
If you were to compile a list of the Top Ten Things to Unnerve Plane Passengers, having armed police enter the cockpit moments before take-off, handcuff the pilot and lead them away on suspicion of being drunk would have to rank pretty high.
Men and women are different—you probably knew that—and that’s true when it comes to wine and health. Alcohol impacts women differently than it does men, from first sip to metabolism to recovery. That means it’s important for women to understand how alcohol impacts their bodies.
The road to Lehigh University’s indefinite ban on hard alcohol at fraternity events has been coming for some time in the wake of incidents at other universities, including Lafayette College, as well as incidents at the school in Bethlehem.
High-quality products are what builds consumer trust and differentiates brands from the competition, but what happens when quality assurance is compromised?
Liquors in particular have been a popular product to alter, water down and sell on for a profit.