Okay, as is my wont, I’ll disagree a little here—under my assumed name and without full disclosure of my identity. Lest anyone misunderstand, I am not mounting a defense of Bruno. I don't have the emotional capital invested to care about him personally as much as others here do. But I do care about personal responsibility for writing.
MJN wrote:is it a service to direct your readers to a nine year old place slinging $14 Pad Thai and Panang curry that preys on tourists and the Loop business lunch crowd?
That’s your opinion. You’re entitled to your opinion just as much as Bruno is entitled to his.
MJN wrote:I guess he’s never been to Spoon Thai (4608 N. Western) or Silver Spoon Thai (710 N. Rush St.)...
While his experiences (if any) in those or any other places is relevant, he is entitled to use any reasonable standard of measurement that he wants; it doesn’t have to be the same as yours.
MJN wrote:Besides, at Vong, you’re likely to get an entitled college graduate waiter slumming it for cash while dreaming of making it at Second City or contemplating where they might drink their PBR tonight in Wicker Park instead of thinking about refilling your empty water glass.
Glad you're having a good time here but I’m not quite sure how this points up a fault with Bruno’s review. A "college graduate waiter slumming it for cash" could be a good server, couldn't he (or she)?
MJN wrote:It feels like Bruno is just interested in cozying up to famous chefs like the restaurant’s namesake, John Georges Vongerichten.
Actually, that would be Jean-Georges.
MJN wrote:Well, Pat, I know with your “freelance” career working as the sole reviewer for the Sun Times, you probably no longer have time for real journalism....
How does a sarcastic personal attack strengthen your argument?
MJN wrote:I don’t understand how a high priced long serving wordsmith gets away like using trite adjectives like “delicious” and “good”.
I don’t have any idea what Bruno makes and I’m impressed that you do. But whatever that number is, it’s irrelevant: how does his salary have anything to do with this? I agree completely with your substantive point that “delicious” and “good” are hardly sufficient although I would have less of a problem if the review explained what he meant. It’s completely lazy to rely on it as I must presume he does here, since I didn’t see the original review. It would be lazy of anyone to do so, regardless of salary or time served.
MJN wrote:Anyways, make no mistake about it. I’m not being snarky for snark’s sake.
Oh, I'm sorry; as long as you’re being snarky for some
other reason, I guess it's okay. Everyone welcomes legitimate criticism; even I. And I have no personal brief for Mr. Bruno. But how about letting facts and reasoned criticism take the place of personal animus and snarkiness?
MJN wrote:Pat Bruno has a responsibility to his readers, and part of that responsibility is to find great places that his readers would not otherwise find. Likewise if he can find them at a value and from locally based entrepreneurs and chefs slinging their own blood, sweat, and tears and not celebrity mega-chefs who own twenty other restaurants and spend the bulk of their time in New York City, then he’s really on to something.
Ah, so the reading public is not entitled to reviews of places that are (a) easy to find or (b) owned by celebrity mega-chefs? I agree entirely with your second sentence and, yes, I appreciate learning about new places that I didn’t know about. It hardly follows that I don’t want to hear about places that are easy to find or that I already know exist. Places get better and get worse over time. As you point out at the beginning, VTK has been around for a while. Is it unreasonable for me to want to read a review precisely for that reason?
MJN wrote:Bruno should be writing a piece on....
No. If that’s what you think should be written, write it. Criticizing Bruno for what the Sun-Times is willing to pay for is a little misplaced. As you undoubtedly know better than I, there are a lot of factors that go into what he writes—and what they publish. Attacking him for the substance of a review is fair; attacking his choice of a place to review is unfair.
That’s not to say that the piece you’re suggesting should be written isn’t interesting or well worth reading; maybe the Sun-Times won’t pay for it. How is that Bruno’s fault? Are you privy to what he might have suggested? I don't care what he's written in the past and what his track record is, unless you know the facts behind the decision to publish this particular piece, you're out of bounds in laying the blame entirely on Bruno.
MJN wrote:Better yet, once folks walk in the door and work their way through the familiar Thai-American fare, there’s a whole world of regional delicacies to discover from funky Issan Sausage to dried beef jerky to banana blossom salad that really celebrate what Thai cooking and culture is all about.
Absolutely right.
MJN wrote:Bruno might contend that his wide reading audience (read, Grabowski rubes) isn’t ready for an authentic experience and that he’s fulfilling his mission.
Isn’t that called setting up a straw man? Bruno said no such thing and it’s presumptuous to put words in his mouth. You’re assuming that he might say that. He might; he might not. The fact is that he didn’t. And demolishing the defense he didn't make doesn't strike me as adding to the conversation.
Make no mistake: I have absolutely no problem with saying he’s wrong. None whatsoever. If his review is wrong, lacks substance, is poorly reasoned or even poorly written, that's all fair game. But why can’t your response focus on the review instead instead of what is either an ad hominem attack or a complaint about what he didn’t say or didn’t write about?
Gypsy Boy
"I am not a glutton--I am an explorer of food." (Erma Bombeck)