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vor 7 Jahren
With a bachelor’s degree from the University of California,
Davis, in political science, six years as the director of
government relations with the nation’s second-largest student
loan provider, and as a member of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
senior staff and advisory team, Gorman spent almost 20 years
honing his prowess as a government relations professional and
political strategist before pursuing his love of the grape.
Raised in Lodi in the ’80s, Gorman was not completely unfamiliar
with life in a wine region, but he didn’t start to find his
passion for it until the mid-2000s when a co-worker introduced
him to the wineries of the California foothills. At the same
time, Lodi was experiencing its own wine revolution, and weekends
often found him wine tasting in Lodi and across California.
Gorman says that as his appointment with the Schwarzenegger
administration was coming to an end, he was becoming increasingly
disillusioned with the country’s leaders in Washington, D.C., and
he found his focus was shifting. Though he’d grown up around
vineyards, he hadn’t really known or cared much about wine until
he started hearing stories about the people who made it.
“All of my extra time was being spent on wine,” he says. “I was
really excited about California wines.”
In 2012, Gorman and his then-fiancé (now husband) Kyle Peppers
moved to Maryland so Peppers could attend graduate school.
Unenthused about the potential professional options for Gorman in
D.C., the couple agreed it was time for Gorman to follow his new
passion for wine full time, starting with a $10-per-hour job at a
wine retail shop, so he could start learning everything he could
about the industry from the ground up.
“It wasn’t exactly a midlife crisis,” Gorman says with a wry
smile, “but I did make a total career change in my 40s.”
One of the two brands of Amador County-made wines represented at
the wine shop where he worked in Baltimore was Scott Harvey
Wines. So when a tasting room manager position opened up at the
actual winery in 2014, Gorman knew it was his opportunity to
officially get his foot in the door of the California wine
industry. Out of more than 90 applicants, Gorman was selected for
the position and almost overnight became an Amador County
resident.
“The plan was for it to be a stepping stone to Napa or Sonoma,”
Gorman says. “Bay Area was the goal.”
After only a few short weeks, though, Amador began to work its
magic on the couple, especially Gorman.
“I didn’t just get excited about the wine,” he says. “I got
excited about the people and the passion that drives this small
community.”
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