Da Beef wrote:Never said mutually exclusive or that Guy was a better host. I just said that most of Guy's critics are big fans of Bourdain who in return is Fieri's biggest critic, it's the piling on effect you mentioned. All you have to do is google "Bourdain Fieri" and you'll see every result is something Bourdain said in an interview about Fieri. Being a smart ass is part of his shtick*. Can people be fans of both? Of course, I am to an extent in that I'll watch either of their shows if they're on.
Roger Ramjet wrote:Guy Fieri Goes To Vegas:
The Off-Da-Hook Original Smash Burger! $16
This burger is money! Crunchy righteous rojo rings, ITOP + the kicker - Guy's bourbon brown sugar sauce is sandwiched between a toasted brioche bun. It'll leave you in a food coma!
Well, the price looks reasonable.
There do seem to be two Guy Fieris:
The one who concepts (may one assume?) schlocky , carny-style restaurants that absolutely positively do not make any effort to "introduce ordinary Joes to good food" (or however GF's admirers may phrase the spin). You don't have to be a "snob" to stay away from items like the O-D-H OSB. (And it's not an atypical menu item, it's a 100% typical one.)
And the one whose TV show has recommended a number of obscure (to non-LTH eaters), kind of special places in Chicago - including a number of LTH GNRs - that really do offer good, interesting, well made food: Smoque, White Palace, Vito & Nick's and many others. (Maybe not actually "many", but quite a few - enough to make your nose hair spontaneously burst into blue and green flames of wonderment!!!!)
So - anybody here supplying Guy's staff with Chicago recommendations ... ?
Roger Ramjet wrote:Guy Fieri Goes To Vegas:
The Off-Da-Hook Original Smash Burger! $16
This burger is money! Crunchy righteous rojo rings, ITOP + the kicker - Guy's bourbon brown sugar sauce is sandwiched between a toasted brioche bun. It'll leave you in a food coma!
Well, the price looks reasonable.
There do seem to be two Guy Fieris:
The one who concepts (may one assume?) schlocky , carny-style restaurants that absolutely positively do not make any effort to "introduce ordinary Joes to good food" (or however GF's admirers may phrase the spin). You don't have to be a "snob" to stay away from items like the O-D-H OSB. (And it's not an atypical menu item, it's a 100% typical one.)
And the one whose TV show has recommended a number of obscure (to non-LTH eaters), kind of special places in Chicago - including a number of LTH GNRs - that really do offer good, interesting, well made food: Smoque, White Palace, Vito & Nick's and many others. (Maybe not actually "many", but quite a few - enough to make your nose hair spontaneously burst into blue and green flames of wonderment!!!!)
So - anybody here supplying Guy's staff with Chicago recommendations ... ?
David Hammond wrote:
It seems a little unfair to say there are "two" GFs, as though he's some kind of hypocrite. His menus seem a fairly accurate reflection of his over-the-top approach to food, and many (though far from all) of the places he visits on DD&D are of the fry-it-if-you-can, pile-it-on, amp-up-the-sauce-and-spice variety.
.
Roger Ramjet wrote: It's just odd that someone with Guy Fieri's approach would be such a connoisseur of GNRs. It seems out of character.
Roger Ramjet wrote:It's just odd that someone with Guy Fieri's approach would be such a connoisseur of GNRs. It seems out of character. It seems hypocritical.
stevez wrote:Roger Ramjet wrote: It's just odd that someone with Guy Fieri's approach would be such a connoisseur of GNRs. It seems out of character.
That's because it's actually the producers of the show who are the connoisseurs of the restaurants, not (necessarily) Guy himself (who likely has little to nothing to do with the restaurant selection process). Like his "Good 'Ole '67", Guy is trucked in after the fact and placed before the camera to do his thing.
David Hammond wrote:Yes, as mentioned above, it seems there's a lot of stagecraft behind GF's appearances, but there's a lot of stagecraft behind every "reality" show on television.
The Internet wrote:According to a lawsuit filed on Friday 5/13/11, with the U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota, David Page, producer of Diners, Drive-ins and Dives, alleges that the Food Network is failing "to provide the services of [Guy Fieri] and failing to make payments required by the Contract."
According to bizjournals.com, "Page Productions said in its lawsuit that the Food Network signed on for 39 more episodes over three seasons in 2007 and agreed to retain and pay host Guy Fieri separately from the show's budget."
mgmcewen wrote:You guys better watch it. Soon hipsters are going to start having Guy Fieri cooking parties and going to his restaurants ironically. Apparently it has already started
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... ning-mecca
David Hammond wrote:Roger Ramjet wrote:It's just odd that someone with Guy Fieri's approach would be such a connoisseur of GNRs. It seems out of character. It seems hypocritical.
We'll just have to disagree here, not only about GF but about human nature in general. There are a lot of folks here (like me, maybe like you) who would be as eager to eat at Gene and Jude's as they would be at Grace. These two places represent radically different eating experiences, .
David Hammond wrote:stevez wrote:Roger Ramjet wrote: It's just odd that someone with Guy Fieri's approach would be such a connoisseur of GNRs. It seems out of character.
That's because it's actually the producers of the show who are the connoisseurs of the restaurants, not (necessarily) Guy himself (who likely has little to nothing to do with the restaurant selection process). Like his "Good 'Ole '67", Guy is trucked in after the fact and placed before the camera to do his thing.
Yes, as mentioned above, it seems there's a lot of stagecraft behind GF's appearances, but there's a lot of stagecraft behind every "reality" show on television.
And are we so sure GF is not involved in the selection process? I just don't know, but based on Da Beef's recounting of his encounter with the guy at White Palace, it seems he is involved in the process -- and you know, he does have a brand to protect, so I'd guess he does play a role in selection.
Roger Ramjet wrote:It's about liking good food more than bad food.
David Hammond wrote:Which one of his places have you eaten at?
David Hammond wrote:I never said anything about the quality of food in any of his restaurants. I don't think it's legitimate, fair or productive to evaluate a restaurant, a movie or a book if you haven't experienced the thing you're critiquing.
David Hammond wrote:I never said anything about the quality of food in any of his restaurants. I don't think it's legitimate, fair or productive to evaluate a restaurant, a movie or a book if you haven't experienced the thing you're critiquing.
David Hammond wrote:Fieri may be obnoxious – no, I’ll admit it, he is, definitely, obnoxious – but the result of his food-goofing may very well make for a richer food culture, where little places can serve fun, reasonably priced food that broadens the culinary perspective of the average guy. And that, to quote the equally maligned Martha Stewart, is a good thing.
David Hammond wrote:But it takes no leap of faith to attack a restaurant you never tried? Ron, that makes no sense.
And who is blindly defending anyone or anything?
But to answer your question, if I ate at one of his restaurants and didn't like it, my points (and please, those are the points I presented in the original post) would still stand. To reiterate:David Hammond wrote:Fieri may be obnoxious – no, I’ll admit it, he is, definitely, obnoxious – but the result of his food-goofing may very well make for a richer food culture, where little places can serve fun, reasonably priced food that broadens the culinary perspective of the average guy. And that, to quote the equally maligned Martha Stewart, is a good thing.
I've heard nothing here to make me back away from that position. The fact that he may serve "bad food" (a point no one here can, based on zero experience with his restaurants, actually attest to) is not relevant to that thesis.
My points address Fieri as a cultural force, not as a chef himself.
David Hammond wrote:Looking over the menu at the Vegas location, I was actually surprised that some of the items seem fairly normal and others more-adventurous-though-edible.
boudreaulicious wrote:And if you find a television network that IS "sincere", I'd love to know what that is--I find the concept a bit hard to wrap my arms around