The Art of the Cigar: 1996
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- Опубліковано 29 лип 2013
- The Art of the Cigar. 1996 General Cigar production.
Featuring: Edgar M. Cullman Sr., Paul Sorvino, Michael Nouri, Joey Pantoliano, Jim Belushi, Milton Berle, John Amos, Veronica Webb, Dolph Lundgren, Pat O'Brien, Edgar Cullman Jr., Marvin Shanken, Engelbert Humperdinck, LeRoy Neiman, Daisy Fuentes, Giancarlo Esposito, Austin T. McMamara, Aaron Sigmond, Catherine Oxenberg, Christopher Lawford, Gil Melle, David B. Salz, Dan Cortese, Jack Scalia, Angel Daniel Nunez, Joe Hunter, Joel Sherman, Nat Sherman, The Amazing Kreskin, Phyllis Diller, Lou Rothman, LaVonda Rothman, Mark Wood, Benjamin Menendez.
I’m not a ritual cigar smoker, but I smoked a cigar recently on vacation on a private beach by a house I was staying at, when the sun was setting, only me on the beach. I smoked a Ashton toro, had a beach chair, cold bev and some music. Lemme tell ya, the ambiance, the cigar itself, etc. it felt like the world just drifted right on by. It doesn’t get much better than that!
2021 and still a great documentary.
mate its 2022
Late 2021 and still great
@@DigitalEkho o yea, I didn’t realise.
Absolutely
2022
Paul Sorvino, 1939-2022. You'll be greatly missed.
Yup - was he jabbed?
@@ivotheg2397probably
This is the most 90’s thing i’ve ever watched.
DDI St d i iu
THIS DOCUMENTARY IS STILL WORTH WATCHING AFTER 25 YEARS.
Yes, it's the only thing the cigar industry did on video of lasting quality.
Freaking awesome to see a young Giancarlo Esposito in this. Taking about the stereotype of gangsters and cigars before he would go on to become one of televisions biggest gangsters ever.
bro i was doing my thing and baaaaaam a young Esposito shows and i was whaaaaaaaaaaaat jaja.
I'm enjoying a cigar right now 😄
Cigars are truly a modern phenomenon. They carry a lot of rustic tradition but, are still somehow timeless and relevant. They make a statement but, teach you subtlety in conversations. And when you go places where its still welcomed as a pastime you are also welcomed by great people.
I watch this video at least two or three times a year. I love it!
I was a kid in middle school when this came out.
Now I'm a cigar enthusiast. Fun film.
When I think of cigar smokers, in think of George Burns.
Whose still watching in 2022?
2024
2124 (Time Traveler) as your generation would say, "LOL"@@joeyyy771
I laughed my ass of when it got to the cost of a cigar and the guy was talking about the "average" good cigar costing $2.50! Man, wish it was that way again!
I found a great cigar, Casa de Garcia, from an online place (Churchills, robustos, coronas, toros, torpedos. In CT, maduro and sumatra wrappers) . A bundle of 20 for about $25 (Gordos...are about the same price for a bundle of 10.). It is my everyday cigar, which proves that there are some great cigars that don't have to cost a lot to enjoy. I really enjoy this brand.
He said "no less than"
+hattrick1972 Casa de Garcia corona has been a regular of mine lately as well. Great easy smoke, sweet mild taste. Excellent!
zekehooper yeah rn you’re talking $6.99 a stick for a “house blend” (cigar made by a cigar shop and not brand named). I’m also a pretty heavy weed smoker and sometimes I’m like “am I better off just getting more bud?” But while I love weed, nothing replaces a good cigar or a nice pipe with some good tobacco in it. Friends of mine who smoke weed also just don’t understand it “why wouldn’t you just smoke weed?” It’s a different relaxation tool, and a different experience, why can’t I just like them equally? Besides it’s my money
zekehooper hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
What a documentary about cigars, a lots of personal stories with passion and love.
Great video to relax and smoke a cigar with!
What a classic. I watch it every year. It always gets better.
Only just discovered it. Excited to watch it through!
@@jedwhassell I like the content you create as well. Keep up the good work.
Best cigar documentary I've have ever seen . Cool to see a young Giancarlo Esposito talking about cigars . Just saw him on Mandalorian
It is half past two, right now, and I am craving a cigar. I started watching this, and for some reason, I couldn't look away. Even watching the video, felt like a soothing experience. Yes, kinda like a nice cigar. Thanks for the upload.
This video brings be back to a better time…
Watching this beautiful documentary while smoking a great cigar with a constant smile on my face
I'm 62 and just took-up cigar smoking about 2 months ago. Went online (holts, cigar intl.) and have purchased about 20 different brands. My fave is Montecristo and Perdoma Reserve. Both brands were mentioned in the film. Overall, a great film.
Give Davidoff Winston Churchill a try. Also AF Hemingway series is amazing.
Classic that never gets old. Much respect for all.
This was great! And I appreciate the diversity of the interviewees in this documentary- thank you for posting. Much Respect! There is nothing like the leaf life! 👌🏾
2022 and still a great documentary.
The ties and chairs in this documentary are just outstanding.
I have now learned to give myself in to the Mystic of the cigar.
Connecticut, Cuba, Cameroon, Sumatra were the only places to grow premium wrapper leaf when this was filmed. Now there is Pennsylvania, Nicaragua, Brazil, Mexico, Ecuador, and Dominican Republic. Up to the time this was shot, there were some amazing Havanas and few great Nicaraguans. The situation is reversed today. Cuba is down to a few good vitolas but no brands that are reliable across the board. Note, too, the smaller ring gauges of the cigars being smoked in the film compared to the 50-64 ring gauges favored today. The influence of the wrapper is being diminished in the overall flavor of the cigar with such rotund sticks. Finally, RIP to many of the careers and people in hhe documentary. Of those alive, I hope they can still find solace and pleasure in a good cigar.
Well said.
Greatest Cigar documentary ever.
Oh my Gosh.....This documentary only takes my love and enjoyment of the great art of cigar smoking life to a whole new higher level of understanding of why i partake in this way of life......Thankyou for posting this......and for all of you who dont smoke cigars ...........this is a room for the smokers elite.
You are one passionate BOTL!
@@jedwhassell Yes Brother i am...Love what i do.The hi-lite of my day is my cigar time.
Well Sir guess you got me on the hook...I just subscribed to Cigars of London Looks like you got a new follower .Thankyou for your input.
Wow, never have seen this film before. I'm so happy that I have found it. It gives a great insight into that amazing time.
I just wanted to say that I appreciate you posting this film. I really enjoyed watching it. Thank you.
I’m a Texan, my father was too, but he got in some trouble, and fled the country when I was real young. When I was a bit older, 14 - 15 yo, I knew he was laying low in Nicaragua. So I flew down to meet him, pretty much for the first time. We got Cuban cigars quite easily down there, and that was my first cigar.
I like since 24 August 1999. My first Cohiba cigar been offered to me by my Director General to celebrate the birth of my first daughter , Princess Nefertiti...
Today, I'm a great grandmother. I originally wanted to be a wine connoisseur, however, a half-a-glass of wine and I'm asleep on the couch. Additionally, at one point, I was bought a $35 glass of very high-end port and told that it was the perfect compliment to a cigar. To me, it tasted like battery acid, which is on me, not the port. What I do like is an espresso with my cigar. In any event, I was never a smoker, but at around age 35, my partner and I had some time to kill before our movie started across the street and wandered into a cigar shop. The walk-in humidor smelled amazing. We were the only customers and the guy behind the counter helped us choose a cigar, telling us all about them as he did so.
Then, he told us/showed us how to cut and smoke our cigars. To those who don't know, smoking a cigar wrong can ruin it. For example, by smoking it too fast (hotboxing it), you can ruin the cigar, causing it to turn somewhat sour. (Which is actually a good thing because it causes you to slow down, take your time.) My partner thought it was nice, but to her dismay, I thought it was the best thing since sliced bread. Now, over 30 years later, I have a huge humidor and cigars are one of my great pastimes. A good book, an espresso, and a robust Churchill on our patio, and I'm in heaven. 🙂
P.s. I used to have several Cuban connections, but since 9/11, that unfortunately ended. I can't wait to be able to order and smoke Cuban's someday as I love very robust cigars.....
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I would add that it was cigarettes that brought us cigar smokers down with them. Cigarettes have this noxious ammonia smell, at least to me. And while used to love shooting pool and smoking cigars, I have to sympathize with servers, bar tenders and other staff whose risk for cancer skyrocketed simply from the second-hand smoke. (I put myself through college tending bar, no loans, something that really isn't possible these days.)
Additionally, one of the few places you can smoke these days are cigar shops and sitting around with other cigar smokers is a wonderful experience. You can hear about a specific cigar, walk into the humidor and get one on the spot.
Then again, I always seem to walk out of such places with the latest lighter or high-end cutter (never cheap and as if I don't already have enough of either)....I'm such a magpie. lol.
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I love all cigars from every region, but some Nicaraguan cigars ive been having lately have been unreal. maybe its just my palate...
I definitely favor Nicaraguan cigars for their strength 💪 Super enjoyable after a good meal!
They are all outstanding now days, Cuba is no longer undisputed though, that is for sure.
Nicaraguan are my favorite. Doesn’t matter if it’s a $20 stick or a cheap bundle of fumas lol. I enjoy them every time. A Cuban cigar was a major let down for me.
@@MattBurosh they make for some great evening smokes 😍
Foundation Cigars are definitely leading the way.
I wish I could hit like on this a hundred times every time I watch it.
Thoroughly entertaining and somewhat amusing at times. Thank you for the upload my internet friend. An enlightening glimmer of the past times bestowed upon these young eyes.
Just discovered this video. Looking forward to watching it through
What a wonderful and interesting vid. I am a long time cigar fan, but I learned a lot by watching this video. Good job to the video maker here.
10:48 "We were so bitchin." Holy fuck I died of laughter!
I got two friends; both younger than me into cigars recently. It was same thing with both of them, they hated them for the first few minutes but once they got into both are converted especially as the note change throughout
Enjoying this Amazing documentary with a nice cigar. Smoking Cigars is truly a glorious art. Cheers to long ashes.
Excellent documentary, well worth a watch
Excited to watch it through 🙌
2022 and just now learned how to cheat my friends at spades while holding my beautiful Cohiba Siglo VI. This is awesome.
Great Production!
I loved the first Bossa Nova played.
I am enjoying this wonderful documentary on Cigar history this beautiful Sunday afternoon at my favorite cigar shop called Roz Cigar Emporium in my hometown of Ocala Florida. Enjoying a cup of coffee with a Undercrown Maduro Cigar
is it me or are there some beautiful women in this documentary? haha just enjoying a cigar in the backyard and looking through this time capsule... cheers to all the cigar smokers out here still enjoying this ritual
1:05 “keep smoking everything in moderation”, truer words have never been spoken.
This is.... Acceptable.
this open my world to cigars love it
what a beautiful and relaxing documentary, really captures what cigars are about. cheers for the upload!
Great video indeed
Excited to watch it through 😍
I really love this.
Jesus I just woke up saw this on my feed and now I want a cigar. I just got a box of esplendidos 😊 and I want to keep it to 1 stick every 3 months 🤞
I enjoyed this documentary. While smoking a cigar, especially.
wow what a great video I really enjoy Paul Sorvino
Daisy friggin Fuentes!
Holy smokes!
Saw this a week ago. Watching again. Well done 👌
General Cigar made it.
An awesome documentary I smoked cigars on my deployments Iraq 2006-2007, Afghanistan 2012.
Funny to hear in 2021 them talking about the troubles of smoking bans back then.
Procedure procedure. Love it. 54:39
My favorite goto is the macanudo cafe first thing in the morning with a coffee.
I've always got one in my humidor!
RIP Paul Sorvino.
If I can find where you are resting I will leave a cigar.
Very cool documentary
Very entertaining, thx.
Missed one fact. Sinatra DID smoke cigars regularly. They were DeNobli made by Avanti Cigar Co still to this day. They are the sister smoke to Parodi and very similar to.
Smoking fuente fuente opus x watching this. Perfect length and perfect rto watch while enjoying this stogey
Very nice documentary.
Great intro. tune..
First time watching this, and it echoed all my experiences and observations. What is necessary to smoke a cigar...? Time, place, and opportunity...
Classic video....
Likewise in 2022!!
Joe Pantoliano @ 52:16 steals the entire documentary.
Amazing doc! Loved it thoroughly... in 2019.
"How long its been on the tree"...
Lmao
This was great and smoking cigars is a fine art....and its one that I love!
So funny to see how small cigar module were over 25 yrs ago. All of em in the Doc are bellow 50 Ring gauge.
tyvek05 No Dear You are wrong
Its maybe due to your young age
Really very interesting. Thanks for posting. Smoking a Montecristo #2 right now.
Partagas Lusitanias 😉
Was not expecting king Edward's to get a mention, I love cheap cigars I'm sorry don't hate me.
It's a timely process.
CIGARS were SMOKING!!!
But Catherine Oxenberg with LONG FULL LENGTH HAIR...
Was SERIOUSLY SMOKING TOO !!! 🤪
One thing that is interesting is that cigarette company CEOs and executives do not smoke cigarettes, but most people in the cigar industry do.
El Producto!!!
This is historic and epic ! Great video thank you !!
Here's the deal with Cuban cigars.... For many of the brands we know, there are actually 2 places they come from. The reason is because when the Cuban Revolution occurred, the owners of these large plantations, ie (mostly) White European guys, fled. Castro "nationalized" the Cuban cigar industry. ("Nationalizing" means that the government of the country now owns the business.) You can hold hundreds of tobacco seeds in a thimble and so the wealthy plantation owners grabbed their seeds, their families, and as much wealth as they could, and left. From an international business perspective, these owners had the legal rights to the brand names and they set up shop in various places in South America. Cuba also uses the same brand names.
Thus, there are "Punch" cigars from Cuba, and Punch cigars from Honduras, their new home after the Cuban Revolution. These two brands with identical names and symbols/images may have started with the same seeds, but the soil, the weather, rainfall, etc., etc., are often different. In other words, from a taste perspective, no matter what cigar line under the brand considered, they should be considered entirely separate - as they taste very different. The only consistent difference is that cigars made in Cuba tend to be more robust, heavier in flavor profile. Many smokers, especially those in America, tend to (on average) prefer lighter-tasting cigars. That is why "Cohiba" is considered the most popular Cuban cigar: it is one of, arguably *The* lightest Cuban cigar.
I have enough experience and palate-sensitivity to be able to tell if a cigar is from Cuba (or if made to look like a Cuban cigar), is counterfeit. However, I can't reliably tell if the counterfeit is from Cuba, but is "ditch weed" rather than an official Punch or Cohiba. (Counterfeits are a huge problem in America regarding Cuban cigars.) I tend to prefer more robust cigars and so I really like Cuban cigars. Prior to 9/11, I had several friends in the military who would bring back Cuban cigars for me. However, after 9/11, things tightened up border-security-wise and it just wasn't worth the risk anymore.
In the couple of decades following the Cuban Revolution, reportedly there were problems with quality control, problems that didn't occur (or didn't occur at the rates) in the new South American location of the brands of the same name. But over the last couple of decades, this, again reportedly, isn't the issue it may have once been.
Finally, obviously in Canada and other places outside of America, Cuban cigars can be purchased normally just like any other cigars. In those cases, reputable stores clearly note which cigars are made in Cuba and which cigars are made in South America, even though they both have the same brand name. However, I should warn anyone going to Canada to purchase Cubans: tobacco products of all kinds are - HEAVILY - taxed and so you will pay through the nose for Cubans up there. Stores know that Americans come to Canada to purchase Cubans and so they jack up the prices and when combined with the extra taxes, this can make Cubans bought in Canada prohibitively expensive.
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Who else here is watching this enjoying a beautiful cigar? Padron Catch 22
Watching it right before i spark a cigar up
There’s so many different brand and variety’s I’d love to become an expert
4:40 That is interesting, what was said about the faster-paced times of now a quarter-century ago, as it still holds true today.
48:58 the Indian portrait to the left of him is of the upper Creek chief Opothleyahola. He and my ancestor the lower Creek chief William McIntosh were enemies.
It’s funny to see some people who know so much about cigars and so many who know jack shit at the same time in the same film
The band on a cigar was originally on them to protect the gloves of smokers from getting dirty. Why the fiction that only "bounders" smoke with the band on is a mystery other than some writer for a James Bond movie thought it would sound good. Keeping it on often is best if a cigar is poorly rapped.
My father taught me how to smoke cigars when I was like 12, but then again he was Cuban. My mom wasn't from Cuba but her folks were from Mexico, and she would enjoy an occasional cigar.
is there a soundtrack available for this vid? amazing
especially the merengue : )
Anyone got the name of the song in the credits? Great track! and amazing documentry
❤️
man can you activate the automatic subtitles option ? thank you.
Vance is on the Dixie Chopper!
god, veronica webb was so hot! her skin is that of a beautiful Connecticut shade. I didn't really buy the featured females affinity for cigars; though, I enjoyed the eye candy just the same. Nice upload, thanks...the 90s were quite the time for cigars.
Bill Clinton would agree with you!
Haha, I was gonna say, I don't think I saw ANY of the female interviewees take a single puff until the last couple minutes, when they showed it off like a novelty 😆
Unintentional ASMR
anyone know the jazz music at @22:40
$2.50 for a great premium cigar? SHITTTT not these days lol
It was the mid 90s and everything was better then, including the quality of what your dollar bought.
*****
Agreed.
I agree you can find some good sticks for under 10 bucks but tobacco taxes are insane these days.
MSkeetz I know and getting much higher
Flor de Oliva @ Famous Smoke 20 sticks for 37.99. Hand made and consistent.
Why do some people feel they have to dress up in a "black tie" to smoke a cigar? If I wanted relax and hang out with others and have cigars, I don't wanna be in uncomfortable clothing. Also, cigars themselves don't care how much money you have (however, some tobaccos are more expensive to produce than others).
2022🎉
My first was a blunt then well got in to it after once in a blue moon then I learned about bundle cigars never looked back all so my first real cigar was an asid look in to drew faturay smokes yumm