• Hi Guest - Come check out all of the new CP Merch Shop! Now you can support CigarPass buy purchasing hats, apparel, and more...
    Click here to visit! here...

What was the "Cigar Boom"

The Master said:
Marvin Shanken created the boom when his magazine came out in 1992. I have no idea if he bought shares in the companies that went public.

The tobacco companies did nothing to manipulate the market, they were completely unprepared for the incredible demand that came as a result of the magazine.
[snapback]295510[/snapback]​
Right. And that explains why good cigars were hard to come by and got expensive and bad ones flourished. Time has healed that to some extent.

PS. Master, I don't believe you about the Cameroons. Send me a box of old ones and prove it. :p (Good info)
 
smokelaw1 said:
Gooble gobble, gooble goble, one of us, one of us. (sorry for the obscure referrrnece, but I imagine you can tell me where it's from, who wrote it, and where he got the idea).

From the circus side-show small-town movie Freaks, later adopted by the legendary Ramones for the beginning of the song Pinhead. They turned it into "Gabba Gabba we accept you, we accept you one of us" - and led to the Gabba Gabba Hey! chant at the end of the song which became one of their main chants at the live shows, along with Hey! Ho! Let's Go! chant (the main one from the beginning og Blitzkreig Bop which was the first song on the first album in 1976). It also resulted in their adoption of mascot Zippy the Pinhead (from the old classic comic strip) dancing around stage with a Gabba Gabba Hey! sign.

Yes, I know my Ramones very well ;)
 
IgwanaRob said:
smokelaw1 said:
Gooble gobble, gooble goble, one of us, one of us. (sorry for the obscure referrrnece, but I imagine you can tell me where it's from, who wrote it, and where he got the idea).

From the circus side-show small-town movie Freaks, later adopted by the legendary Ramones for the beginning of the song Pinhead. They turned it into "Gabba Gabba we accept you, we accept you one of us" - and led to the Gabba Gabba Hey! chant at the end of the song which became one of their main chants at the live shows, along with Hey! Ho! Let's Go! chant (the main one from the beginning og Blitzkreig Bop which was the first song on the first album in 1976). It also resulted in their adoption of mascot Zippy the Pinhead (from the old classic comic strip) dancing around stage with a Gabba Gabba Hey! sign.

Yes, I know my Ramones very well ;)
[snapback]296188[/snapback]​

Wow. I didn't know that, but I do remember seeing the Ramones live at my first Spring Weekend festival at UCONN in 1984. Hey! Ho! Let's go!

Wilkey
 
The boom also caused the old brands that were good cigars to be manufactured at a more poor quality plus putting pressure on other cigars at a low price to beef up the apperance cousing the price to increase. La Unica is one brand in particular that came bundled without a band and at $1.25 a stick for the 100 was a great value, now the stick is over $5.oo . Another brand Hoyo de Monterey and Punch was a great value and good smoke for the money until demand took over and again quality went out the door. Plenty of other brands that were a good smoke could not keep up and went out of existance.
 
The Master said:
The cigar boom was created by Marvin Shanken and his magazine Cigar Aficionado. Before the magazine came out, you could buy all of your favorites any time and you didn't need to worry about stocking up because something might not be available. Once the boom was in full affect, most legitimate non Cubans became hard to find, even JR had huge back orders. I used to buy Fuente 858's for 17 bucks a box in the mid 80's. Now they retail for 87.50.

The boom created tons of shit cigars and all of those who mfg. them eventually went out of business. What we have left is the greatest amount of quality cigars that has ever been in the cigar industry. The amount of competition today is making cigar mfgs produce better and more variety of cigars than there has ever been. Back before the boom there were not nearly as many different brands or blends as there are now. There are so many more choices for us cigar smokers, but the prices are indeed a lot higher.

The quality of some of these cigars is unprecedented; the only thing about the pre boom cigars that was better was the quality of the Cameroon wrapped cigars. Back in the mid 80's to early 90's the Cameroon wrapped Upmanns, Fuentes, Partagas, and Royal Jamaican Park Lanes were the toothiest Cameroon you have ever seen. Today that Cameroon wrapper isn't quite as good, other than that the cigars being made are superior to what was being produced before the boom. The amount of technology being used by a younger generation of cigar maker is way above what the old school guys used.

As far as Cuban cigars are concerned in 1999 Cuba decided they wanted to make 200 million cigars. They had never even made 100 million before that so they opened a ton of new factories and their quality went to shit. The tobacco itself wasn't that big a problem because the 1998 crop was one of the best in Cuba’s history. It was the blending and construction that took the huge hit. Before 1999 there were serious shortages to the most popular sizes i.e. Monte 2's Partagas Lusi's HDM DC and Serie D 4's to name a few. However there were still tons of less popular cigars i.e. Partagas SD1's. Upmann Lonsdale’s, Sancho Panza Molino’s that were available and smoked great. It took Cuba until 2001 to start getting their shit together and for the most part their quality in construction has greatly improved. They of course never got close to the 200 million number and have abandoned that ridiculous idea.

This is just a basic description of what went on there were of course a lot more things happening at the time.


One interesting note was when the new mfgs during the boom lured hundreds of Fuente rollers away with big promises of money. Those rollers were soon out of jobs and looking to go back to Fuente. He didn't take one back. Instead he turned factory no. 4 which is still run to this day by Juan Sosa into a sort of college for rollers. He took young people with no experience and trained them all to roll cigars in the old Cuban style of En Tubar. This method is basically taking each individual leaf and rolling it into a tube and then adding each tube into the bundle and then wrapping the binder on to that. He created a completely new work force that had no history of bad habits. This is one of the main reasons that a Fuente cigar is constructed so well.
[snapback]295107[/snapback]​

Great and as usual highly informative post Master thanks for further educating and shedding some little know repercussions on this very interesting topic.

BTW Good question Shawn just when I thought I knew all about one cigar related topic I was proven wrong again. ???

Really only at CP can you get this kind of wealth of information. Thanks guys!
 
Maybe so but I think the popularity of Rush Limbaugh, when he started smoking cigars, pushed the boom to an explosion.

Take Snapple-a small b oy in the field that took to national stardom with promotion by Rush. Once they were sold to a larger company they stopped advertising on the Limbaugh radio show. The popularity peaked and hasn't been the same.

Take Am radio. Once on it's death bed-after rush it is alive and well.


The Master said:
Marvin Shanken created the boom when his magazine came out in 1992.
[snapback]295510[/snapback]​
 
I remember going over to my buddies house around 95 - 96 and his dad had all these CA magazines in the bathroom, that and Playboy, I remember I split my time between the tits and the sticks :)
 
Top