Jack Daniels, Jim Beam and a Few Other Friends
By Larry Fine
What is in a name?
What is in a bottle? And what is in the packaging?
There is much we can learn
from whiskey bottles and from whiskey that can teach us much about
our human friends.
One of my sons-in-law was
never into drinking alcohol – which is fine with me. But one
Friday night as we finished the fish course I brought out my bottle
of Jim Beam to make a 'l'chaim'. I gave him a super sweet
locally made Israeli chocolate liqueur to drink instead. He likes
the sweet life and what is wrong with that?
He asked me about my
choice of drink; why do I drink this stuff instead of his choice,
the sweet stuff. I told him that I enjoy bourbon; the taste is very
pleasant and pleasing to me and so it is my custom that after the
fish course on Friday night, I always have a small shot glass of
bourbon. Jim Beam is my favorite. I offered it to him. He tried it
but did not like it. Jim Beam is not sweet to sugar lovers.
Being an inquiring person
and seeing my Friday night custom for many a Shabbat evening, he
asked what is it that makes the this bourbon better than others
types of drinks. Now just realize that Jim Beam is not very
expensive. I do have more expensive drinks on my shelf, I have
Booker's and Glenlivet, to name a few, but Jim Beam is just fine to
me.
I explained that it is the
taste that counts to me. True, there are more mellow drinks and much
more expensive drinks, but Jim Beam is fine to me.
I brought out a few
bottles as you can see in the picture above. Chevas Regal, I
explained, was my father's favorite. My father told me, “son,
if you are going to drink, only drink quality whiskey because if you
over drink, you won't wake up with a headache.”
Now people drink for one
of two reasons: the taste or the effect. Most people are not really
into enjoying the taste of what they drink so the manufactures try
to make their bottles look appealing. What looks the most
interesting, I asked him.
He pointed to the bottle
of Crown Royal; it comes in a small fancy royal blue pouch.
I agreed that this did
the job of drawing one's attention to it, but in my humble
estimation, the other drinks are, if not better, they are at least
just as good. Today, the emphasis is on the bottle.
As an example, I pointed
out the bottle of Booker's. I like Booker's. But Booker's is not
like the normal whiskey or bourbon. It is (supposedly) 100% in the
bottle as it came out of the barrel – not mixed with water;
where as the normal whiskey is bottled alread pre-mixed with water,
Booker's is not. The originator of the Booker's brand, Booker T.
Noe, said that he wanted to duplicate the whiskey that he had
encountered when he was young before the commercialization of
whiskeys. He said that people would go down to the distillery with a
bucket and fill it up and take it back home and each person would
mix it themselves as they saw fit. Sounds good; so they put a label
on the bottle that lends one to believe that it was a hand made
label, hence the drink inside is something hand made, which it is
not.
Look at the label on the
Chevas Regal bottle. It is like a royal crest giving off a aura of
upper class elitists. Jack Daniels' label is designed to give you
the feeling of drinking that you are drinking the same old stuff
that was made a hundred years ago – a connection with whisky
tradition.
It is the packaging that
sells today; what is in the package is not really as important as
what the external packaging conveys.
People are similar.
How many people dress for effect? I think most. They want their
external manifestation which is the seen first to impress, to convey
an image, as if the internal person is like the external packaging.
Ever read tips on how to land a job? The first thing they stress is
dress for the job.
It is only later that the
internal person, the real thing comes out. Often internal person
does not meet the standards of the external image.
I have another
son-in-law. He is a bit of a snob, or I should say, was a bit of a
snob. In Israel, about fifteen years ago, Coca Cola was the most
expensive cola drink available. There was also Pepsi and RC on the
market, but this son-in-law preferred Coke simply proclaiming that
it was much superior to the others.
It so happened that on one
Shabbat when he was staying by us, we had Coke, Pepsi and RC on
hand. I suggested that he take a taste test to see if he could
identify which of the three drinks was Coke. He accepted the
challenge.
I took one of my sons into
the kitchen and pulled out three plastic cups and set them next to
the three bottles of cola. We filled each with one brand of cola and
brought it to my son-in-law to taste. Only myself and my son knew
which was which. My son-in-law could not figure out which was the
'real thing' from the other one. He was totally baffled!
My sons seeing that my
smug son-in-law could not figure out which was the real coke asked
also to take the 'taste test'. Out of four sons, only one guessed
the correct drink. Of course, statistically speaking, out of five
tasters tasting three drinks, one is bound to guess correctly.
The moral: we are more
influenced by the externals (in this case the heavy advertising
campaigns for Coke) than the actual thing itself (the taste). From
that time on, my son-in-law got only RC, the cheapest cola drink in
Israel and he drank it – and with out any complaint.
What is there to learn
from this?
Let us be careful to with
hold judgment based on first impressions. What we see is not always
what is really there. Actions that may look bad can actually have
good motives and actions that look good can have evil intentions.
~~~~~~~
from the October/November 2012 Edition of the
Jewish Magazine
Material and Opinions in all Jewish
Magazine articles are the sole responsibility of the author; the Jewish
Magazine accepts no liability for material used.
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