It’s silly to say
‘I don’t watch television’ as if that were something to be proud of. I’ve been
guilty of saying it, in the past. But, nowadays, I watch my share. When I’m in
New Zealand, I watch some sport and the races, the very, very occasional bit of
fiction (Midsomer Murders, Miss Marple),
some of the travel and cooking shows (Rick Stein is my favourite) and some of
the other programmes that Wendy likes, and which play between 5.30 and 8.30 pm
…
Here, in
Australia, I am inclined to listen to the races on Trackside computer, as I
don’t have Foxtel, and of the two TVs supplied with my flat, one hasn’t yet
been turned on yet (3 months) and the other is keyed to the one programme that I
watch without fail. I don’t shift it off that setting for fear I can’t find my
way back! After our last power failure, it took me ages.
Oh, my unmissable
show is, of course. Australian Masterchef. No, I don’t care for the uncharismatic
English equivalent or any of the other like-style ripoffs. Just this one. Why?
I’ve no idea. But the first year we watched, I got hooked by one contestant …
she (she was Italian, and I think called Luisa) came second, I was indignant
and shocked … but I had got hooked by the style of the show, and the people
involved, and I just returned and returned and simply got addicted. Even though
there are things that really irritate me … I can’t stop myself. I, a
professional showbiz critic of some 30, oh Lord is it 40?, years standing, and
a sometime food writer, go back nightly, in season, for more.
So why am I
commenting on this? I couldn’t cook one dish that is displayed on the
programme, I am amazed how these youngsters have acquired such knowledge … but,
then again, I couldn’t sing Pamina or Rosina or Scarpia, and I’ve been telling
people how to do so, for half my life. So here goes!
I can’t rightly
explain what gets me. The presenters-judges are a good combination and good fun
– unpretentious, normal and pretty darned credible – anyway, kilometres above
the types who ‘judge’ all those singing Talent Quests. The competitors actually
have skill (unlike most of the Talent Questers) and we see them displaying it. There
are no camp Cowell-esque pauses before announcing the winners. There are very few
fake errors and breakdowns and dramas. We are allowed to explore these young
folks’ talent unshowbizzed …
So carried away
was I with the show in that first year, that the wrinkles didn’t start to show
till year two or three … and then the joins … and then ... other things.
I don’t know when
it came to me that, as well as being cooks, the people involved aren’t bad
actors, either. But the first thing that dawned on me was … the ‘judges’ taste,
before the cameras and us, cold food. It is not possible for every dish to
retain its heat through fifteen, twenty minutes. And once you see through the
first bit of fakery, you look for others. And either I’m getting cannier or
they’re getting careless, but this year the ‘joins’, the huge amount of editing
that goes to making up the finished programme, has been more and more obvious.
I suppose it has to be, but it is disappointing when you realise that what is
supposed to be spontaneity is nothing of the sort. I’ve only done continuity on
a film once, and it’s a stinker of a job … but it matters. Never mind. I try to
ignore it.
So when I rule the
world, what would I change about the show? Very little. But. First the opening
of the programme. Far too much of the content is shown as a taster. I sometimes
feel I don’t need to watch the show proper. Second, the opening titles, with
the eliminated contestants greeting you every week. Update them.
The format of the
contest? To me, it is almost perfect. Mystery Box/Invention Test .. Team Challenges … Masterchef kitchen, on location
… However, there are getting to be, I feel, too many ‘immunities’ and ‘powers’.
I would cut the cook-off against the professional who has been previously asked
if he would be willing to lose. These folk are competing against EACH OTHER.
Not against the outside world. Yet.
The guest chefs.
Yes, fine, great for recognition factor. Some are good value, some less. Some
are more credible than others. Lovely Nigella was really there for her face.
Then there is Marco Pierre Whites’s faux-fierce act with its ghastly crying of
‘yes, Marco’ which has me reaching for the mute button. That’s a nono. When he
is normal, instead of acting, he is most enjoyably cuddly. Heston Blumenthal
was my least favourite: until this year, when he put on a dazzlingly fun show and
rose to Undisputed Number One on my hit-parade. His week of pop-up restaurants was, for
me, the best week ever on Masterchef.
The contestants?
The ’lingo’ bothers me. How come they all learned the same modern kitchenspeak,
at home, in Cairns, Adelaide and Towoomba. Caramelised? You mean ‘browned’? Blast-chiller?
Every country kitchen has one. Do they all, perhaps, go to Masterchef
pre-school? And one really maddening thing, kids (and judges). Kill the
pre-commercial break standard: ‘and if my parfait doesn’t set (gasp) I’m GOING
HOME’. It’s become a bad giggle.
But in the end, it all comes down to the three anchor men, who make the show run on spiced olive-oiled wheels. I have to pause to recall their names, because unlike their vainer colleagues of the Talent Quests they don’t paste themselves in spangles and tinsel over the titles. Gary, little George, and the grand and glorious funny one. Matt. They just work together perfectly, like poached peaches and clotted cream and some divine liqueur, to drive along a splendid programme. If they are also responsible for the concept and the layout, I hope they are making (more) fame and (more) fortune than ever ..
One request chaps.
When your editor is sticking the voice-overs and things together, DO stop the
writers from making a contestant say ‘Oh dear, I think I put one drop too much
rose water in my soup’ only to have the judges come out later on and say ‘very nice,
but there’s one drop too much rose water in that soup’. Giggle. See what I mean
about the joins showing?
OK. I’ve got to go. Its 7.32. The teaser and the credits will be over. Time to put the TV on. Last three tonight. Sound still on MUTE, because the three are doing some too repetitive heartfelt chat. Open some Aussie bubbly. I’ll switch on the sound when the action starts. My favourite is still there. She’s the best. But can she outglam the pretty boys …
Let’s see. Gooo
Elena!
1 comment:
Good thoughts. It is at its base, a show that loves food and shares its passion with the contestants and between the judges. It is skilled, good natured and open. It is not gladiatorial like Channel sevens "My Restaurant Rules" which cares less about food and more about savagery and spite. Masterchef is very humanitarian, and much preferred.
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