eatchicago wrote:What qualifies them to post on this forum!!!!!!??????
David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:What qualifies them to post on this forum!!!!!!??????
The same sense of entitlement that empowers each of us.
eatchicago wrote:David Hammond wrote:eatchicago wrote:What qualifies them to post on this forum!!!!!!??????
The same sense of entitlement that empowers each of us.
Yeah, but I have a bachelor's degree in entitlement.
foodmex wrote:It is mind boggling how they survived before the advent of internet and foodie blogs.
Bill Kim was the Chef de Cuisine at Charlie Trotter's, worked at Bouley, and was Executive Chef of Le Lan. Whether you knew it or not, he did indeed have a national presence.I personally wouldn't group Bill Kim and Graham Elliot Bowles or Urban Belly and Graham Elliot in the same categories. With all due respect to Bill Kim, I had never heard of him prior to his opening UB.
Well, two years on, I can say with certainty that concierges do recommend Urban Belly, quite a bit, and tourists have no problem making their way out there in taxis. Even Steve Plotnicki has been there.I just don't see a concierge recommending that tourists use their time and money to schlep out to UB, which is not located close to public transportation and in a strip mall.
I would mention that this has been the case at every restaurant I have worked in Chicago. Even chefs of GNR restaurants have been hard pressed to remember what LTH is, when I remind them that so-and-so from LTH is coming in. (sorry)With all due respect to this chef, the fact that this particular chef doesn't know LTH exists doesn't really mean or prove anything.
I was speaking of a certain clientele for whom the internet and food blogging is irrelevant with that comment, not chefs. This is generally customers of means over 30 (not 60 by a long shot). But if you're thinking of age as a factor, what would you say if I told you this chef was in his thirties? As to the Trib blog, that's updated how often and gets how many hits a day? There are very few commenters. That's not a great example.Again, that your chef focuses on professional reviews and/or traditional press is simply the result of conditioning, mindset, age and/or the focus of his personal business. But I have to strongly disagree that "this is not going to change significantly in the near future." It has changed. That's why in part the Tribune has a food blog.
Well, it's going to last at least another decade or two. Chefs are very insular and resistant to change. With the recession, many chefs have looked into social media, but social media can cut both ways.Maybe, now, this chef is justifiably sitting pretty as his customers are blissfully ignorant of food forums and blogs, but that isn't going to last.
I have mentioned threads on LTH to coworkers and our chef because they discussed our restaurant. I was definitely the one who brought LTH to the attention of those people. It has been the same at many other restaurants, according to friends in the industry. Sorry, I know it's hard to hear, but LTH is still not well known.How could you possibly know that? Either (A) you've talked to them about LTH, in which case they do now know about it; or (B) you have no idea whether or not they know about LTH.
Kenny, you're so very interested in snark and personal attacks, it's a wonder you even stop to read posts before you comment on them. I wrote the effect of food blogs on a certain segment of restaurants is minor, as far as driving or affecting business or operations. It's always a problem when your business is denigrated, very often falsely, in public, on sites where such remarks stay up (virtually) forever. There is a big difference.What a shame to let something get to you that much - to the point where you let it become "incredibly frustrating" - if the effect is so minor, anyway. Obviously - as your contradictory quotes reveal - the effect on these guys is not all that minor.
and other comments claiming this site has brought Urban Belly and Graham Elliot a "significant amount of business" while threatening never to go back and "I think without sites like LTH and Yelp most restaurants would simply close. It is mind boggling how they survived before the advent of internet and foodie blogs. They should be thanking LTH and Yelp for their existance not dissing them since their survival directly depends on these blogs."...well if people can't see the problem someone might have with such statements, there's not much more I can add.Bill, Bill, Bill. Speaking as one of those people with cameras that put you on the map, you're not doing yourself any favors.
AndrewR wrote:KennyZ...I have mentioned threads on LTH to coworkers and our chef because they discussed our restaurant. I was definitely the one who brought LTH to the attention of those people. It has been the same at many other restaurants, according to friends in the industry. Sorry, I know it's hard to hear, but LTH is still not well known.
AndrewR wrote:Don't know exactly what drew me back after so much time, but since the thread is still active, I will reply to some posters' points.
aschie30 wrote:I personally wouldn't group Bill Kim and Graham Elliot Bowles or Urban Belly and Graham Elliot in the same categories. With all due respect to Bill Kim, I had never heard of him prior to his opening UB.
AndrewR wrote:Bill Kim was the Chef de Cuisine at Charlie Trotter's, worked at Bouley, and was Executive Chef of Le Lan. Whether you knew it or not, he did indeed have a national presence.
aschie30 wrote:I just don't see a concierge recommending that tourists use their time and money to schlep out to UB, which is not located close to public transportation and in a strip mall.
AndrewR wrote:Well, two years on, I can say with certainty that concierges do recommend Urban Belly, quite a bit, and tourists have no problem making their way out there in taxis. Even Steve Plotnicki has been there.![]()
aschie30 wrote:With all due respect to this chef, the fact that this particular chef doesn't know LTH exists doesn't really mean or prove anything.
AndrewR wrote:I would mention that this has been the case at every restaurant I have worked in Chicago. Even chefs of GNR restaurants have been hard pressed to remember what LTH is, when I remind them that so-and-so from LTH is coming in. (sorry)
aschie30 wrote:Again, that your chef focuses on professional reviews and/or traditional press is simply the result of conditioning, mindset, age and/or the focus of his personal business. But I have to strongly disagree that "this is not going to change significantly in the near future." It has changed. That's why in part the Tribune has a food blog.
AndrewR wrote:I was speaking of a certain clientele for whom the internet and food blogging is irrelevant with that comment, not chefs. This is generally customers of means over 30 (not 60 by a long shot). But if you're thinking of age as a factor, what would you say if I told you this chef was in his thirties? As to the Trib blog, that's updated how often and gets how many hits a day? There are very few commenters. That's not a great example.
aschie30 wrote:Maybe, now, this chef is justifiably sitting pretty as his customers are blissfully ignorant of food forums and blogs, but that isn't going to last.
AndrewR wrote:Well, it's going to last at least another decade or two. Chefs are very insular and resistant to change. With the recession, many chefs have looked into social media, but social media can cut both ways.
"Resounding thud"? Perhaps on this board. Definitely not to the many diners and restaurant workers for whom Michelin makes a significant difference. Michelin is important in driving tourist business. You'd be shocked to hear how many out-of-towners come to our restaurant just from Zagat alone. In the past, restaurants that received a Michelin star saw an average of a 10-18% increase in business. That's nothing to shrug off.aschie30 wrote:especially after the resounding thud that Michelin guide has made on this town.
I mentioned the national presence with reference to the kind of media attention Kim got upon the opening of Urban Belly, which was intensive in major media outlets. It's very self-defeating and provincial to claim that Kim wasn't known nationally and that Chicago is just "flyover country" based on your personal experience, which is limited to your own knowledge. Chicago isn't exactly included in "flyover country" and has received national attention for its restaurant scene for many years now. I would beg to differ, from my experience reading national media and in the restaurant industry, that Urban Belly became well-known simply through grassroots efforts locally - it was a hit right off the bat due to a combination of old-fashioned PR and traditional word-of-mouth based on the chef's reputation (how else did people at LTH hear about it before its opening?).aschie30 wrote:I still disagree that two years ago, prior to opening his restaurants, Bill Kim had a "national presence." Even today there is probably only a handful of Chefs in Chicago who could claim to have a national presence, and I still wouldn't count Bill Kim as one of them. (No disrespect to Bill, but we're still flyover country here.) Having said that, two years later, it would not surprise me at all to learn that concierges recommend Urban Belly. Bill Kim has now made a local name for himself, and Urban Belly has been open long enough, and gained enough of a solid reputation, that recommending it makes sense. I don't know how relevant all of this is, though, to this discussion today, such that it merits comment two years later.
I don't disagree with your point, but I do think you're exaggerating the Michelin/Yelp situation with your characterization here. The listing of two restaurants in transition during printing are now outdated. That doesn't negate the entire guide. Yelp itself didn't do anything to Michelin, a guy (not very active on Yelp) who got a guide early posted the Michelin list on Yelp. Thinking about it, if I got the guide early and wanted to post it myself, I would only have two choices really - here and Yelp - because of the forums. This incident doesn't exemplify a greater shift in influence or a shift from print to internet no matter how much people active in food blogging/forums want it to be.aschie30 wrote:My point was, and still is, that non-traditional media will continue to make more of an impact on how people dine, and if chefs/restaurateurs want to build their customer base, they have to do more than vie for Vettel's three-stars, and a write-up in the Trib. I think that point couldn't have been made better this last Michelin go-round. Now that the books have hit the stores, they're already outdated, and Yelp -- a reviewing site -- stole Michelin's thunder.
That's right, anecdotally, for you. Yes, things are changing, but I think even you would agree you run in circles that are ahead of the general population as far as food is concerned.aschie30 wrote:Again, I think the numbers are inverting, even anecdotally for me, amongst people who two years ago, wouldn't pay attention to anything but what Vettel wrote, and are now trolling blogs and boards, because they feel left out when all of their friends have been to a popular restaurant that they've never heard about because it's talked about in other forums (discussion boards, Twitter, etc.) but gets little or no coverage by the Trib proper.
I never said restaurants are ignoring or should ignore the power of the internet. My initial point here was to answer several people who I felt exaggerated LTH's influence on certain restaurants and the dining scene as a whole. I feel some people here have an inflated sense of power (ie, discussions and agreements that LTHers are the "influencers," etc.) and need to get some perspective. I certainly didn't come here to bait anyone.aschie30 wrote:If a restaurant thinks it can blissfully ignore these drastic changes, which are impacting every sector of our economy, for the next decade or two, good luck to them, but my hunch is that their restaurant won't be around too long. (There are certainly some exceptions to this general precept, but anything that didn't receive two or three Michelin stars (or 4 Vettel stars), will die out as soon as its average clientele become too old to go to their restaurants. If the average age of a restaurant's clientele is high, then its days are numbered accordingly, unless the restaurant takes steps to build a younger client base, which will have to be through alternative means.)
AndrewR wrote:I feel there are some here who would love if people in the industry would never post, so they could keep up their own blinkered ideas about restaurants. But I feel people in the industry can offer a valuable perspective here, which is what I wanted to do when I first came on. I wanted to explain certain things so people wouldn't feel so angry/slighted/offended by certain restaurant practices, and so people would have a better understanding of how restaurants work. But some people here didn't want to hear that, at all, and smacked me down. I knew I wasn't welcome. That obviously has not changed.
AndrewR wrote:But some people here didn't want to hear that, at all, and smacked me down. I knew I wasn't welcome. That obviously has not changed.
AndrewR wrote:I do enjoy coming to LTH from time to time to see what you all are saying about certain local restaurant issues, and I feel LTH has a lot to offer, particularly to neighborhood places you champion, but the thing I come away with is this sense of insularity and cliquishness. New posters and posters who offer a different perspective are almost always vehemently challenged, being called everything from a shill to a liar, as I was when I first posted. I feel there are some here who would love if people in the industry would never post, so they could keep up their own blinkered ideas about restaurants. But I feel people in the industry can offer a valuable perspective here, which is what I wanted to do when I first came on. I wanted to explain certain things so people wouldn't feel so angry/slighted/offended by certain restaurant practices, and so people would have a better understanding of how restaurants work. But some people here didn't want to hear that, at all, and smacked me down. I knew I wasn't welcome. That obviously has not changed.
aschie30 wrote:especially after the resounding thud that Michelin guide has made on this town
AndrewR wrote:"Resounding thud"? Perhaps on this board. Definitely not to the many diners and restaurant workers for whom Michelin makes a significant difference. Michelin is important in driving tourist business. You'd be shocked to hear how many out-of-towners come to our restaurant just from Zagat alone. In the past, restaurants that received a Michelin star saw an average of a 10-18% increase in business. That's nothing to shrug off.
AndrewR wrote:I do enjoy coming to LTH from time to time to see what you all are saying about certain local restaurant issues, and I feel LTH has a lot to offer, particularly to neighborhood places you champion, but the thing I come away with is this sense of insularity and cliquishness. New posters and posters who offer a different perspective are almost always vehemently challenged, being called everything from a shill to a liar, as I was when I first posted. I feel there are some here who would love if people in the industry would never post, so they could keep up their own blinkered ideas about restaurants.
teatpuller wrote:AndrewR wrote:I do enjoy coming to LTH from time to time to see what you all are saying about certain local restaurant issues, and I feel LTH has a lot to offer, particularly to neighborhood places you champion, but the thing I come away with is this sense of insularity and cliquishness. New posters and posters who offer a different perspective are almost always vehemently challenged, being called everything from a shill to a liar, as I was when I first posted. I feel there are some here who would love if people in the industry would never post, so they could keep up their own blinkered ideas about restaurants.
I don't buy this at all. Industry professionals without an ax to grind are treated with great reverence here, especially if they bring something interesting to the "table."
Graham: ... Why this obsession with food online? You don't see people blogging about their new shoes in the same way.