If you’re left scratching your head after the finale, you’ve come to the right blog. I was actually there in Napa in October, at the table eating the food, discussing it there and at the Judges’ Table, and yet based on how the episode was cut, it had me wondering up until the end whether my memory had failed me or not. It hadn’t. I think that what we have here is a classic case of building drama, of not tipping one’s hand, of leading the viewer (or misleading the viewer!) to keep the suspense till the final moment. Allow me to share a bit of what didn’t make the final cut:
I want to start by reiterating something I wrote last week, something that Kevin actually echoed in this week’s episode. This year’s finale put to the test four outstanding young chefs. None is a finer chef than the others. On any given day, any one of the four could have beaten the others; it was just a question of to whom the day would go that particular day.
So at the end of the day, Kevin won the first course, Bryan won the last, and Michael won the middle two, giving him the ultimate win. The equation is pretty much that simple.
Don’t be fooled by the fact that Kevin thought the day had gone to Bryan, or that Bryan’s venison dish was strong enough to plant a question in the minds of viewers, or even that we ended with Bryan’s winning dessert, leaving a strong last impression. When taking a step back and thinking over the entire meal, while Bryan’s dishes were certainly solid, while his dessert won and he made a strong showing with his venison course, Michael just hit higher notes all along the way throughout the meal. He just did.
This was definitely the strongest season of the three that I've watched. The three finalists seemed equally likely to win. Jen seemed at the same level. Then there were others - like Eli and Mike Isabella - who seemed about as strong as people who've made the finals in years past. Without eating the food, it is really difficult to judge these things. But my impression is the show has done a great job at recruiting better chefs to participate.
gastro gnome wrote:A brief not-at-all-food related note.
I just caught the wrap-up episode and one question nagged at me:
What's the difference between two contestants pinning down a third and forcibly trying to shave his head and two contestants dragging a third out of the house and throwing her into the pool?
Aside from the fact that one got a contestant kicked off and the other was a passing moment of 'frivolity' in a season-ending montage?
headcase wrote:gastro gnome wrote:A brief not-at-all-food related note.
I just caught the wrap-up episode and one question nagged at me:
What's the difference between two contestants pinning down a third and forcibly trying to shave his head and two contestants dragging a third out of the house and throwing her into the pool?
Aside from the fact that one got a contestant kicked off and the other was a passing moment of 'frivolity' in a season-ending montage?
How the person it was happening to reacted to it.
Khaopaat wrote:headcase wrote:gastro gnome wrote:A brief not-at-all-food related note.
I just caught the wrap-up episode and one question nagged at me:
What's the difference between two contestants pinning down a third and forcibly trying to shave his head and two contestants dragging a third out of the house and throwing her into the pool?
Aside from the fact that one got a contestant kicked off and the other was a passing moment of 'frivolity' in a season-ending montage?
How the person it was happening to reacted to it.
True. Plus the context; one was a malicious gang-up against an "enemy" of sorts, the other was two friends horsing around with a third friend.
Don't get me wrong, I had the same "wow, this reminds me of the Marcel-head-shaving incident" thought when I saw Jennifer being tossed in the pool too.
Matt wrote:Clothes dry much faster than one's hair grows back.
gastro gnome wrote:Matt wrote:Clothes dry much faster than one's hair grows back.
Except that they never actually shaved Marcel's head. Cliff just pinned him down while Ilan was filiming it and waited for Elia or Sam to come in and shave it off.
They actually did throw Jen in the pool.
Anyway, I don't think that Mattin and Mike I necessarily should have been kicked off. Apparently there was a "if you harm another contestant" clause that the Top Chef lawyers and producers decided was sufficient to disqualify Cliff based on his actions. Tom wanted to send everyone home, but only Cliff manhandled Marcel.
I just think it's odd, given the previous disqualification, that a similar scenario was caught on film years later and that it was thrown out in yuk-fest medley style at season's end.
gastro gnome wrote:Matt wrote:Clothes dry much faster than one's hair grows back.
Except that they never actually shaved Marcel's head. Cliff just pinned him down while Ilan was filiming it and waited for Elia or Sam to come in and shave it off.
They actually did throw Jen in the pool.
I was making a routine visit to the Bocuse d'Or USA website and noticed that while there are still a dozen candidates listed there, Kevin Gillespie, the recent Top Chef finalist who won his berth in the US finals on the show, has disappeared from the list while Jim Burke, executive chef/owner of James restaurant in Philadelphia--who was not on the original roster--has been added. I've confirmed with a rep for the Bocuse d'Or USA that GIllespie is out, but am awaiting further details.
To be honest -- although I have no idea what the circumstances are yet -- I don't find this to be terribly shocking news as I always wondered how Gillespie, who basically had to earn his spot to avoid elimination in another contest, was going to find the time and motivation to properly compete at this event. If he dropped out to make room for a more Bocuse-passionate candidate, it might have actually been a noble gesture, as strange as that may sound.
Update (1:03 pm/Jan 22) - A rep for the Bocuse d'Or USA committee says that Gillespie withdrew due to a conflict with Bravo. (Obviously Bravo airs Top Chef, on which Gillespie won the spot, but the rep says it's a matter of a time conflict. No further comment/information was offered.)
Update #2 (1:20pm) Gillespie's spokesperson Melissa Libby just got in touch to give me the story from Gillespie. "You are one-hundred-percent correct in your suspicion," she said of my theory for the withdrawl (above). "He didn't have time to prepare, and didn't want to let the country down. He felt like there was somebody else who deserved that spot. He's a perfectionist and didn't feel like he could do his best with everything going on." Libby says that Gillespie wrote to the committee, who were gracious, and even offered to let him defer his place until 2013 [by which she meant the 2013 competition in Lyon, the US trials for which would be in 2012]. So will he take them up on the offer, or defer again? "Absolutely [he'll compete in 2012]!" said Libby. "He wants to do this. It's a huge goal of his. But he didn't want to go in unprepared."
- Andrew
Andy Dehnart @ Reality Blurred wrote:The seemingly impossible happened during the Emmys last night: Top Chef Las Vegas won the Emmy for best reality competition show, finally dethroning seven-time winner The Amazing Race, which has won every year since the category was created in 2003.
Executive producer Dan Cutforth, who is one of Magical Elves’ two principles, accepted the award, saying “we never expected it.” Host Padma Lakshmi, who was the most animated of all of the show’s cast and crew on stage, said “I’ll say!” and then stood in front of Gail Simmons. Cutforth also said that his producing partner, Jane Lipsitz, has attended previously but skipped out this year. Their shows have been nominated all the way back to 2004 when Last Comic Standing was nominated. Ironically, they ended up beating the show they created, Project Runway, which has since changed hands to other producers.