whiskeybent wrote:gleam wrote:I'm going to come out and say this:
Food Detectives sucks. Why does Ted Allen talk in that bizarre, ultra-enunciated voice? It's like a bad science film strip from the 50s or 60s. The food science parts of Good Eats are generally great, why can't they just stretch that to 30 minutes and get an Alton Brown knockoff to host?
Agreed. Based on the couple episodes I've seen of Ted's show, he'd have been better off sticking with TC.
Although I can't blame his decision to man his own vessel, I expected more. It looks cheap.
elakin wrote:imo, the problem with using whole foods isn't the quality or the selection, it's the price. they often make the chefs work on a pretty tight budget, and then to make them pay retail at a very expensive store is ridiculous. restaurants pay about a buck a pound for chicken breasts, but i bet they're eight bucks or so at WF.
elakin wrote:it's stupid, and imo, the whole 'run through the grocery store madly planning and frantically searching for ingredients' is utterly moronic and unrealistic. chefs order their ingredients and they're delivered. that's how it works.
elakin wrote:unrealistic in that chefs don't really do that.
Dmnkly wrote:elakin wrote:unrealistic in that chefs don't really do that.
Nor do they cook Thanksgiving dinner for rock stars in July, have sauce tasting tournaments or open restaurants overnight. Any aspect of the show may or may not help to make it a better competition that better tests their chefly skills, but even setting all details aside, they're already sequestered in a house with 16 other chefs, no outside contact and they're constantly on camera and being judged in a competition to win money. Where does realism figure into the equation?
ronnie_suburban wrote:Wait! Do you mean to say that reality tv isn't truly reality?! Next thing, you'll be telling me that Santa Claus doesn't really exist.
=R=
elakin wrote:
but i get it--the shopping thing is all about getting product placement for whoever's giving them free food and, i assume, money for sponsorship. i just think it's dumb.
i don't begrudge TC the product placement, but it does bother me when the actual content of the show seems contrived to get the products more airtime, like the thing where they had to cook everything on the "calphalon family of small appliances".
sundevilpeg wrote: Bravo should give them a shot. They sure aren't doing GE any favors!
Bravo is owned by NBC/Universal, which is owned by GE, so there might be some pressure to keep using GE products
sundevilpeg wrote:Bravo should give them a shot. They sure aren't doing GE any favors!
elakin wrote:not economically viable w/o product placement? doubtful.
reality shows are far cheaper to produce than dramas or comedies, with their expensive writers and actors, yet they somehow manage to survive without product placement. it's not like TC doesn't also have commercials.
could they really not manage to make any money if they just limited the sponsorships to advertising during commercials and something at the end saying "food furnished by whole foods, storage by glad, blah blah blah...."?
i don't begrudge TC the product placement, but it does bother me when the actual content of the show seems contrived to get the products more airtime, like the thing where they had to cook everything on the "calphalon family of small appliances".
i'm sorry, but that is just lame.
JLenart wrote:Actually the producers don't make money on commercial time. The production company makes it's money by selling the program to the station. The station makes it's money by selling air time.
You do know that GE owns Bravo, don't you? I think the chances of non GE kitchen appliances are slim to none.
stevez wrote:JLenart wrote:Actually the producers don't make money on commercial time. The production company makes it's money by selling the program to the station. The station makes it's money by selling air time.
I think the producers get the product placement money, too.
The blind tasting was a great way to be introduced to the contestants - by their dishes you shall know them -- and I felt honoured that this week's challenge was dreamt up for my benefit. I was a little harsh about some of the dishes, but in general I was very impressed by the standard of the cooking.
whiskeybent wrote:So how egregious was the Diet D** P***** (no plug here!) placement in this week's quickfire? Connection to the QF theme hung by a thread, and it didn't appear that anyone even used the product (though I could be wrong about that).
Like I've said before, would you rather watch commercials?
Vital Information wrote:Like I've said before, would you rather watch commercials?
whiskeybent wrote:Every time Melissa came on the screen, I said "Who are you? Oh, you're a cheftestant too." My early-show prediction (say, 9:10pm) that they were giving her more screen time to set the field for her ouster was spot-on. Go me.
Vital Information wrote:OK, I say this with absolutely no evidence or proof or anything but TV producers and network exectuves and most importantly ad buyers are not blind. They see that more and more TV is being watched via DVR/Tivo. They know that eyes are not seeing their ads as much. This would seem to me, guessing, that less can be charged for advertisements meaning the money has to be picked up somewhere else.
And yes, the ad time sold by Bravo is not the same thing as the money coming from product placement fees, but my hunch is still hunching and it tells me these are all related.
I could be totally wrong
Product placement, IMHO, is much more intrusive and therefore more annoying than a commercial or even a pre- or post-show sponsorship
tem wrote:Re: the show .... I think Toby was an arse, to put it in his native tongue. His little quips are "funny" but could be used to describe any dish. "Weapons of mass destruction" referring to a soup doesn't make sense. Perhaps Tom could have used that one for the nuclear-powered habanero shrimp from a few eps back.
Eugene I won't miss -- he doesn't seem to have it all together. An ironic "fettucine pomodoro" with raw daikon, tomato, basil, fish sauce, ginger/galangal and lime would have been a great salad alongside a fish (although probably even better with an oilier fish).