| Index | 5 reviews in total |
30 out of 33 people found the following review useful:
Must see for Food Fanciers, 28 December 2004
Author:
(lyon1) from Ohio, USA
I'm tired of reality TV, I'm tired of Emeril, give us reality in our
reality TV. This show delivers. This is not a show about some chef in a
sanitized kitchen studio making meals he has prepared and rehearsed 10
times prior to airing, this is about a man who loves food and wants to
see good food on your plate. The drama from the series comes from the
people whose restaurants are failing and Gordon's expertise in
rectifying their calamities. He addresses this in a direct assault the
failings of the business end and back kitchen. More often then not, you
find the star in the kitchen with his hands up to elbow in work
ensuring his plan comes through. I find his hands on approach
refreshing and exciting.
If you enjoy food programming this is a must, if you enjoy reality TV
and can appreciate dialog then it is required viewing.
A reality TV show which delivers and rewards the viewer.
29 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
The Scariest Chef In The World... EVER!, 10 June 2004
Author:
James Barnes from Chesterfield, England
Only weeks before the more mainstream 'Hell's Kitchen' came along, this
one-hour, 4-part documentary series on Channel 4 was a real unexpected
treat for viewers, particularly for jaded ones such as myself, tired at
the whole cringe worthy "celebrity chef" genre.
Grizzly chef Gordon Ramsey travelled around Britain, each week visiting
a different restaurant that was struggling to make money, serve decent
food etc. In his now-famous way, Gordon would shout, swear & threaten
the incompetent chefs at the restaurants, warn the restaurant owners
that they will go out of business if they don't put their foot down &
try & turn their fortunes around, help out in the kitchen, & promptly
criticise anyone who had the guts to disagree with him on any sort of
decision he made.
Seeing Mr. Ramsay tear into young upstarts, arrogant owners & generally
anyone who got in his way, made for fascinating television, but it was
also pleasant to see that, more often than not, the help Gordon had
provided made a lot of difference, & that the restaurant began
attracting more customers & serving better food.
No doubt there will be a second series of 'Hell's Kitchen' on ITV1 next
year, but I would also like to see this show recommissioned as well.
Not as glamorous as seeing celebrity chefs whinge at each other in a
glorified TV studio, but 'Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares' was the best
cookery-related show to come out in a long, long time
21 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
Good to watch if you work in the industry, 12 April 2005
Author:
sardid007 from Melbourne, Australia
Ramsay's kitchen nightmares is a British reality TV show that features
chef Gordon Ramsay that attempts to save restaurants from going out of
business because of poor teamwork, poor food quality, poor hygiene or
Bad customer service. His rude personality is a laugh as he attempts to
save the battling restaurants from closure. The show appears to be
aimed at reality TV fans that may have an interest in food and beverage
and the Hospitality Industry.
I think the show provides an interesting insight into what happens
behind the scenes at restaurants including the stress on the staff and
the common mistakes made by the kitchen staff particularly. I feel that
the show expanded my knowledge by highlighting the importance of
teamwork in a restaurant and what can happen if this is not done. Since
a lot of the show is filmed during busy hours of the restaurant the
viewer gets to see how the kitchen operates and how fast passed
everything is.
We Lent about the importance of communication within the workplace in
class and Ramsay's kitchen nightmares provided an educational link by
showing students how any restaurant could be a disaster with out
efficient communication. My conclusions of the show are very good. It's
great to see a new type of TV chef that doesn't just stand in front of
the camera cooking meals all the time. Gordon Ramsay has a very rude
personality that is stereotypical or the "grumpy chef", but it makes
for a very entertaining show.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Rinse and repeat, 3 September 2011
Author:
nelly3 from Richmond, VA USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Just as Ramsay gives restaurateurs a makeover, so too someone needs to
give this series a makeover. Don't get me wrong. It is engaging and
entertaining, but often in the typical reality show/disaster beside the
road kind of way. Every episode I've ever seen unfolds in precisely the
same way: Ramsay arrives and everything is a disaster; he screams and
yells at the unbelievably inept owners who reluctantly give in to
Ramsay's suggestions (usually, someone storms off - more reason for the
f-word); their first attempt is always a disaster; Ramsay redoes the
menu and refurbishes the decor and pushes the idea of fresh, local
produce and a simpler menu; the grand reopening is a resplendent
success. I could look at the clock during the show and tell when the
next "act" was going to occur. And there's the issue. The show is too
predictable. In reality, every restaurant won't be a success (actually,
about half of those places Ramsay visited are closed) and every owner
can't possibly be as mind-numbingly imbecilic as they initially appear
here. I also find it bizarre that Ramsay remakes the decor of every
restaurant he visits: how much does that cost? One other typical
Ramsay-esque touch is his pervasive use of profanity (he even has a
series called "The F-Word"). At some point, that really seems juvenile
and unprofessional. I know it is done for ratings. A grizzled Brit
barking obscenities at clueless morons! What a concept for a reality
show! But, again, it's endless and becomes monotonous. As said at the
outset, the show does manage to engage one a little, but the hook isn't
in very deep. I have no doubt that Ramsay is an accomplished chief, and
his suggestions (nay, ultimatums) are sound.* But it get's hard to
believe that the same magical Ramsay touch would always work so
predictably and so perfectly in every restaurant.
*Ramsay's insistence on fresh, local produce was cited by some of the
closed restaurants as one of the reasons for their demise. Fresh and
local tends to cost more and spoil quicker. Most of the restaurants
visited were already at the limits of their finances and this change
put them further in the red.
2 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares, 16 November 2007
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Author:
Jackson Booth-Millard from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I might have seen an episode or two when it first started, then a couple more the second series, and now I can't miss it, it is just as good as, in fact better, than The F Word. National Television Award nominated Gordon Ramsay every week basically visits a restaurant, pub or café business that is failing with customers, food quality and ideas, takings, attitude, financial difficulties (e.g. debts) and the business itself, and it is Ramsay's job to help as much as he can to make it a more profitable and improved business for the workers and customers together. As with his other shows, Ramsay's use of swearing, particularly "the f word" is key to some of the great laughs, and also how stupid or ridiculous some of the business bosses, employees or main staff members behave in the work environment that is meant to be cooperating. It is very good to see just how bad these eating places are working, but it is also nice in the end to see most of the businesses saved. It has been nominated the BAFTA for Best Features twice, it won the International Emmy for Non-Scripted Entertainment, and it was nominated the National Television Award for Most Popular Factual Programme. Gordon Ramsay was number 84 on The 100 Greatest Sex Symbols, and he was number 82 on The 100 Worst Britons (for his arrogance I guess), and the programme was number 35 on The 100 Greatest TV Treats 2004. Very good!
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