riddlemay wrote:The downside is that you'd have to sit there and listen to two idiots make inane comments about your choice (even if those inane comments were "positive"). And then you'd somehow get dragged down to their level, making inane responses to their inane comments. I suppose it wouldn't have to happen this way; but I have yet to see it happen any other way.
David Hammond wrote:My experiences trying to interview "real people" about food (for radio) has yielded up results that are vastly more dismal than what you describe on this program.
riddlemay wrote:compared to any other standard 99% of them are bad enough!
David Hammond wrote:Perhaps they fail to provide much insight into a restaurant's food...
brotine wrote:.... and the famous "sum up the restaurant in one sentence" question....
Darren72 wrote:I also don't like the interviews with restaurant owners or managers. It's like a commercial in the middle of the show.
David Hammond wrote:Darren72 wrote:I also don't like the interviews with restaurant owners or managers. It's like a commercial in the middle of the show.
Notwithstanding the commercial feel of these pieces, isn't it good to get the perspective of people on the other side of the counter? That's what we try to do with our Professional Board. That's why I like Nagrant's Chefs on the Grill podcasts -- it's good to hear from these people, and of course they're going to talk up their places.
Darren72 wrote:Yeah, that's true. But it would be more interesting if it was more focused - for example, if Alpina interviewed the owner.
riddlemay wrote:To each his own, but I would never want to be a panelist on Check, Please. I suppose the upside would be getting to bring attention to a restaurant one felt was deserving of wider recognition; it's always fun to share one's enthusiasms. (It's the reason people, including me, have blogs.) The downside is that you'd have to sit there and listen to two idiots make inane comments about your choice (even if those inane comments were "positive").
Morton the Mousse on Chowhound wrote:I liked the show at first, then I was a guest and learned how it is produced. Now I don't watch it.
My biggest complaint is that the restaurants are billed as the guests "favorite" place. That is simply not true. The producers have a lengthy set of restrictions - the restaurant has to be at least two years old, the style of food cannot be too similar to a restaurant they've profiled recently (no Indian food! no Soul food!), it has to be visually appealing enough to generate pretty film ops (no dives!), it has to fit properly in the producers' vision of the episode. I had five restaurants rejected before I found one we could agree on! My fellow guests had a similar problem with being forced to "settle" for a restaurant that was not their favorite. The result: lots of mediocre restaurants (like Bucca di Beppo) that no one really loves, except for the image-focused producers (who never actually try the places).
I could accept this if the guests were honest. Here's where the production methods get creepy. After filming was over, a fellow guest told me that she hadn't been to her restaurant in over a year when she recommended it (once again, it wasn't her first choice, but the producers rejected all of her first choices and she had run out of ideas.) When she actually returned to eat there, she had a so-so meal (totally understandable; places go downhill all the time). However, the producers instructed her to be positive and enthusiastic despite her experience so that the overall criticism was balanced. Yes, you read that correctly, they instructed a guest to mislead the audience about her experience. To be clear: I do not blame the guest for her selection or her performance; she was at the mercy of producers who favor form over substance.
Some of my hostility stems from the fact that I ended up eating two of the worst meals of my life on my own dime thanks to Check, Please! I'm not surprised the food was sub-par, given that my fellow guests would have much rather sent me to one of their favorite restaurants, and not whatever restaurant they could think up after the judges had summarily rejected all of their favorites. Some of my ill will comes from the fact that the editing was skewed to make me look like a confrontational asshole. Though I'll be the first to admit that I'm an incorrigible food snob, I was actually quiet and shy for most of the filming, only to become defensive when a fellow guest insulted my judgment (the insult was edited out and my response remained, naturally). The whole experience has made me sympathetic to reality-TV contestants who are depicted as jerks (Hung, Chris Cosentino) despite their actual personalities through conflict-driven production techniques.