Tuesday, March 22, 2016

TV food shows

A few weeks ago, while watching Top Chef on Bravo, I was thrilled chef Martin Yan presented the chef-testants a chop suey challenge. As a child, I loved watching him on TV, but to my surprise, Brian had no idea who he was.

Image result for yan can cook
Martin Yan - Yan Can Cook 

Before the Emeralds and Flays, the Giadas and the Rachel Rays, before the existence of the Food Network, PBS was the only place on television where you could watch a cooking show. Today, PBS still offers an array of cooking programing like Lidia's Family Table, which I tune into occasionally, but I fondly remember many childhood afternoons spent watching Yan Can Cook and the Frugal Gourmet. 

In the mid-1990s, the Food Network launched. The minimalistic, stark white kitchens that Flay, Lagasse, and Batali appeared to share are a far cry to the homey, audience friendly stages they occupy now.  

Image result for the chew batali cooking


I've spent a good part of my afternoon searching the web for a glimpse of the past, but these images and videos conveniently are unavailable. Being that they were chefs before actors, their stage presents had yet to develop. Batali even told of a story where he grated his hand on camera, and instead of stopping the production, he dumped his hands to tomatoes, before a commercial break.  Even the original food competitions like Ready, Set, Cook  are so drastically different than today's programing like All-star Academy. Take a look! 

Ready, Set, Cook

All-star Academy

I can only imagine that the cost per chef to be on the program cost more than the production cost of the entire series of RSC! Most network TV channels have at least one food competition show for primetime entertainment. People like watching food and how people cook. Whether it is the Worse Cooks of America  or Man vs Child (can't wait to put Matthew on that show!), people are watching, for better or worse. 

Michael Pollan's new series on Netflix Cooked begins with a monologue that there are more cooking shows than ever on TV, but less and less people are cooking. Though he disapproves of these actions, he too his providing entertaining cooking television. Would you call this aiding and abetting the issue of people not cooking?? I am happy that there is a new cooking TV revolution. These shows introduce new cuisines and a "can do" attitude that I find put people in the kitchen. It's allowed for more people to advocate for better food choices in their schools and super markets. People want to know what they are eating, and where it is coming from, and these shows, documentaries and even movies help people understand that cooking is what makes us human.