I liked him much better as a normal, if sometimes goofy-looking, nerd. He was knowledgeable, geeky, and had a lot of charm. Now he just seems like a sawed-off martinet. He appears more as a sarcastic, iron-fisted impresario now. Can’t stand to watch him.
Is it just me? It’s just me, isn’t it? Tell me he’s the same friendly, dorky guy we all came to know and love, and not the tinpot dictator he appears to have become.
I still like the guy, but yes, I did prefer him when he was more of a normal dude, albeit one with more than a little too much knowledge and enthusiasm for food. He’s still mostly that guy on Good Eats. It’s when he hosting all those other shows on Food Network (something in the neighborhood of ALL of them) that he gets on his high horse and looks down his nose at all of us poor-eating, bad-cooking slobs that wouldn’t know the difference between a carrot and a parsnip.
He seems fine on Good Eats, which is the only show of his I watch. Of course, he’s been on long enough that he’s running into continuity issues - he recently disdained using a grapefruit spoon to section a grapefruit, because it’s a dreaded “unitasker”, while on previous eps he’s praised it as one of his “favorite multitaskers” for cleaning out peppers, tomatoes, etc.
He had an episode on Good Eats on the topic early this year. He pretty radically changed his diet, and lost a bunch of weight, due to health concerns. But, I agree, the first time I saw “skinny Alton”, on the 10th anniversary *Good Eats *special, I was afraid he was ill, because he looked so thin.
As a chef, I feel licensed to make this generalization…Any chef worth his salt has a pretty healthy ego. If you see one in his/her natural environment, a real working kitchen, this will be apparent.
I cant really watch much of the Food Network, because I see alot of stuff that would get you corrected—> reprimanded—> fired in my kitchen.
Ever notice the gal on Secrets of a Restaurant Chef is always licking her fingers and puts them back in the food? Even when she uses a tasting spoon she will reuse it in preparation.
I dont doubt it. I also know alot of real chefs that got themselves a publicist and eventually became TV personalities. I dont begrudge this, but time spent away from from the game erodes ones skills. I guess it doesnt matter, since I’m not exactly their target market.
When he had that reality show a couple of years ago in which he and some other foodie buddies toured the U.S. on motorcycles, there were many unguarded moments when he came across as rather a douche. He was all “I’m the boss and the star here and anyone who disagrees with me is the equivalent of gum on my shoe.”
And it wasn’t a self-lampooning, done-for-comedy kind of schtick, either.
They lost some chemistry potential when they combined Hattori/Fukui/Ohta into Brown/Brauch. Brown can do the Doc Hattori role easily, and with Brauch’s floor reporting ties things together in the show pretty well, but there’s not much interplay with the chefs or the judges. I always felt this combination would work better if they at least brought one of the guest judges down to the floor with Alton each week to jazz up the commentary.
I “get” that they want to do some teaching moments with the theme ingredient, but sometimes Brown’s minilectures seem more like filler than necessary content. It wouldn’t hurt the show to reduce the infotainment and increase the chatter. It’s part of what made the original so great.
Oh, that’s why I haven’t noticed this. I occasionally watch Iron Chef America, when there’s nothing better on the Tivo, but otherwise the only Alton Brown show I watch is Good Eats.