rickster wrote:If there is no influence of the producers in the judging, why do they put the disclaimer at the end of each program? My belief has been that the producers may have some role when the judges are split or have difficulty coming to a decision. Or it might be that they point out past tracks records in earlier challenges to jog the judges memories.
It's because while the judges say they have never (with one exception, below) influenced an elimination, they
do have that right, and because of this it has been suggested that there is some legal reason behind that disclosure. Reality show boilerplate, if you will. This is an excerpt from Ted's personal blog on his website (not the Bravo site):
Coldsun wrote: Manuel did not deserve to leave... This is real simple people, THEY ARE BASING THEIR VOTES ON PERSONALITIES... So come on dude.. you can tell us.. how much pull do the producers have in who stays and goes... Manuel was nice and boring, that’s why he left…
Ted replies: Coldsun, A.) nice punctuation, and B.) No, we’re not. If we were basing our votes on personalities, Joey and Howie would have duked it out for the win last season, and Sam would have clobbered Ilan the year before. And did you notice that quiet, nice-guy Harold Dieterle won the first season, while that lunatic, Ken, was the first one eliminated?
I’ll say it again: The producers have absolute authority to interfere with our decisions, and they have never used it. Ever. Not once. Not early in the season, as we are now, nor on the ridiculously late night on Aspen Mountain, when we chose Hung over the much-more-popular Dale for the brass whisk.
Which isn't entirely correct, but the singular exception, as it's been reported by Tom, was under such unusual circumstances that I think Ted can be forgiven for not thinking of it as interference with the judging process (if he was even aware of it -- he wasn't a regular judge yet at that point). When Cliff was kicked off for the whole attempted head-shaving incident in season two. Tom says his first reaction was to disqualify
everybody (including Ilan, Sam, and Elia) who was involved, forget about the finals and name Marcel Top Chef on the spot, and when he raised that possibility with the producers, they told him (for obvious reasons having nothing to do with picking producers' favorites, and not unreasonably, I think) that they wouldn't let him do that.
Of course, not to discount your opinion, rickster, it's all a matter of whether or not you believe them. But the judges have all been quite adamant that while the producers do wield that authority, they have never exercised it except in the very unusual situation at the end of season two that had nothing to do with the actual challenges.
Last edited by
Dmnkly on May 17th, 2008, 7:29 am, edited 3 times in total.
Dominic Armato
Dining Critic
The Arizona Republic and
azcentral.com