Stogie News: The Cigar Year in Review
23 Dec 2010
As 2010 draws to a close, I reflect back on the year that was and some of our favorite, and most important, stories. They’re listed below in chronological order.
The biggest news of January was when Swedish Match and the Scandinavian Tobacco Group merged to bring their many brands under one roof. The deal united General Cigar, CAO, and Toraño.
On January 21, we were the first to report that a new cigar club was opening in Alexandria, Virginia. CXIII Rex has since opened and is now one of the best cigar venues in the country.
President Obama held a townhall on January 28 to discuss the restoration of American jobs. The event took place in Tampa—ground zero the devastation caused by the SCHIP tobacco tax increase.
In February, politicians in Santa Cruz, California, passed one of the most oppressive smoking bans in the country.
The global economic downturn took its toll on so-called “luxury goods.†Cigars were no exception. In late February, it was reported that Cuban cigar sales fell 8% in 2009 to $360 million.
After they won gold at the Olympics, the Canadian women’s hockey team took to the ice with to celebrate with beer, champagne, and cigars. The International Olympic Committee’s executive director later scolded the athletes.
On March 22, the Paul Garmirian Symphony 20th Connoisseur became the first cigar of 2010 to earn a rating of five stogies out of five.
Alejandro Robaina, a “roving ambassador for Cuban cigars†for the last two decades, passed away at the age of 91 on April 17.
On May 27, we gave you a behind-the-scenes tour of La Aurora’s factory in the Dominican Republic.
For the World Health Organization, May 31 wasn’t Memorial Day; it was World No Tobacco Day.
The Church of Scientology paid about $7 million to buy what was once the world’s largest cigar factory, built in 1886 by the man who founded Ybor City.
On June 7, the Padilla Series ’68 Robusto became the second cigar to earn a perfect rating in 2010.
StogieGuys.com reported live from the 2010 Cigar Expo, publishing video interviews with many of the world’s most influential cigar makers.
Wisconsin became the 28th state to enact a smoking ban.
Toraño Cigars took control of its own distribution back from a seven-month-old conglomerate that housed it under the same roof as General Cigar and CAO. The company also adopted a new name, a new look, and launched new blends.
On July 21, we unveiled cigar trademark secrets.
We reported live from the IPCPR Trade Show.
On September 14, the El Centurion Emperadores became the third cigar to earn a rating of five stogies out of five in 2010.
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg proposed banning smoking in huge swaths of government-controlled outdoor spaces, including Times Square.
Cuba announced plans to lay off over one million public sector employees and decriminalize certain forms of private enterprise.
When the Reds clinched the National League Central Division and celebrated with cigars in their locker room, the Cincinnati Department of Health decided to investigate the baseball club for violations of Ohio state law.
On October 13, we examined the dirty details of smoking data.
As the Food & Drug Administration moves to expand its oversight to include cigars, the agency announced new graphic warning labels on cigarette packaging.
Tim Ozgener, president of CAO, announced in mid-November that he is leaving the premium cigar business and the company he inherited from his father.
Three months after the IPCPR Trade Show, StogieGuys.com announced our favorite new releases of the year.
U.S. Customs officials seized 30,000 Cuban cigars when the illegal smokes arrived at O’Hare airport in December, the biggest raid seen at the Customs and Border Protection’s Chicago field office.
There you have it: our review of the world of cigars in 2010. A brand new year is just around the corner. Who knows what 2011 will bring us?
photo credit: various

The biggest news of January was when Swedish Match and the Scandinavian Tobacco Group 
Toraño Cigars
Behind it’s larger corporate brother Davidoff, Avo can get lost in the mix. Purchased in 1995 by Davidoff for an estimated $10 million, Avo Uvezian’s Dominican smokes are often a way to get the quality of Davidoff at a (slightly) more approachable price.
But not all the time. Occasionally, I look for a milder cigar and, when I have a good one, I’m always struck by how satisfying it can be. This came home to me again recently when I pulled an
“We’re all in this together in these tough economic times,†says Nick Perdomo, the company’s president. “You should be able to afford great cigars at great price points.†So, in 2009 and 2010, Tabacalera Perdomo made their best-selling blends more affordable, including dropping prices on their popular Lot 23 line by $15 per box.

1) A new report from the U.S. Surgeon General is being challenged by a renowned member health community and the International Premium Cigar & Pipe Retailers Association (IPCPR). The report claims that brief exposure to secondhand smoke can lead to cancer, DNA damage, and heart trauma. But Prof. Michael Siegel of Boston University’s School of Public Health says, “It is simply untrue to assert that brief exposure to secondhand smoke can cause such results. If there is no safe level of exposure to any carcinogen, that would include exposure to automobile exhaust, the sun’s rays, benzene, radon in homes, arsenic in drinking water, and many other everyday items.†Chris McCalla, legislative director of the IPCPR, also points out a key conflict of interest in a recent
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