11 Home cooks, from all over the country with a goal in mind: become the newest America's Test Kitchen cast member, get a cookbook option and $100K to jumpstart their culinary dreams.11 Home cooks, from all over the country with a goal in mind: become the newest America's Test Kitchen cast member, get a cookbook option and $100K to jumpstart their culinary dreams.11 Home cooks, from all over the country with a goal in mind: become the newest America's Test Kitchen cast member, get a cookbook option and $100K to jumpstart their culinary dreams.
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It's hard to believe that these were the best candidates they could find for this competition. There is constant emphasis on how the winner will be "joining the ATK family," but it's clear that most contestants are interested only in boosting their own social media presence and/or independent careers, not in working for ATK. Look at how they say they would spend the $100k winnings - generally it's on a project that would let them build a career with no relevance to working at ATK, such as opening a restaurant. None of the contestants are all that appealing, nor do they seem like the kind of dedicated food educators ATK is known for. I'm not rooting for anyone after watching four episodes. I'm very puzzled about a show called "the next generation" including a 49-year-old contestant! I think I'm done watching this show.
Many of the other reviews have already said much of what I wanted to say, so I'll be more direct.
The show itself is competently produced and looks good. The contestants are generally pleasant people (although the cutaways frequently reveal who is really working to knock out the competition) as are the judges. Definitely should be enjoyed by fans of the genre. I would have given this a 7 star rating if that was all. But it's not.
The host has an enthusiasm level more suited to a game show and is out of place with the more laid back judges.
The entire setting of a competition with timed, often seemingly slapped together dishes with an elimination at the end of each episode runs completely counter to the parent series where recipes are perfected over time and co-operation toward those results is key.
At times an episode's "challenge" winner is given a chance to essentially undermine the other contestants, a quality not present in the slightest on ATK (I can't imagine any sort of rivalry behind scenes between say, Elle and Erin or Julia and Bridget).
Twice in the second season, food being prepared fell on the floor and suddenly the contestant had to abruptly pivot to finish their dish, no do-overs.
The second season added some cutaway "tips" from Dan Souza but those appear to be attempts to flavor the show with a sprinkling of ATK than prove to be a necessary insight into the current "challenge" (he's also an executive producer so there's that).
In all, bland, unnecessary and wholly unremarkable cooking competition that does nothing for the brand except provide a check.
I hope the money was worth it guys because this show has been eliminated from my future viewing.
The show itself is competently produced and looks good. The contestants are generally pleasant people (although the cutaways frequently reveal who is really working to knock out the competition) as are the judges. Definitely should be enjoyed by fans of the genre. I would have given this a 7 star rating if that was all. But it's not.
The host has an enthusiasm level more suited to a game show and is out of place with the more laid back judges.
The entire setting of a competition with timed, often seemingly slapped together dishes with an elimination at the end of each episode runs completely counter to the parent series where recipes are perfected over time and co-operation toward those results is key.
At times an episode's "challenge" winner is given a chance to essentially undermine the other contestants, a quality not present in the slightest on ATK (I can't imagine any sort of rivalry behind scenes between say, Elle and Erin or Julia and Bridget).
Twice in the second season, food being prepared fell on the floor and suddenly the contestant had to abruptly pivot to finish their dish, no do-overs.
The second season added some cutaway "tips" from Dan Souza but those appear to be attempts to flavor the show with a sprinkling of ATK than prove to be a necessary insight into the current "challenge" (he's also an executive producer so there's that).
In all, bland, unnecessary and wholly unremarkable cooking competition that does nothing for the brand except provide a check.
I hope the money was worth it guys because this show has been eliminated from my future viewing.
It's really fun to see the inside of the America's Test Kitchen building and kitchens, which we don't get to see on the other shows. And I love watching the ATK hosts like Elle, Jack, and Dan give feedback in a new setting.
I'm a big fan of cooking competition shows, so this show is right up my alley. It doesn't have the borderline aggressive edge of a lot of current Food Network shows, but it's more aligned with that style than with The Great British Baking Show. The contestants are friendly with each other mostly because they're not cooking the same dishes side by side. There's a lot of creativity coming from the contestants themselves.
I'm a big fan of cooking competition shows, so this show is right up my alley. It doesn't have the borderline aggressive edge of a lot of current Food Network shows, but it's more aligned with that style than with The Great British Baking Show. The contestants are friendly with each other mostly because they're not cooking the same dishes side by side. There's a lot of creativity coming from the contestants themselves.
This is the unfortunate work of ATK's new Vice President of Television, Video, and Podcasts: Mark Levine. His entire Food Network career was spent stacking the slate with competition cooking shows like "Worst Cooks in America", "The Great Food Truck Race" and "Cutthroat Kitchen". He also has the inglorious honor of being the guy that thought that putting little kids in dangerous, high pressure cooking situations for TV drama was an ethical idea.
So it's no surprise that this feels very much at home with the tired, cookie-cutter content he's been churning out for well over 10 years as part of Food Network's post-instructional era. You can even see the direct lineage and combinations of ideas, concepts, and presentation taken from his earlier works.
That said, even though this is a weird, uninspired mixture of his previous programs, namely "Food Network Star" & "Cutthroat Kitchen", it doesn't work with the talent that ATK possesses and their usual on-screen personas. He's making nearly every ATK personality come off as incredibly petty and condescending; qualities that wouldn't make me vie for a job at ATK.
The contestants themselves are making the best of a weird situation but each Cutthroat-esque twist thrown their way doesn't add to the drama, it just makes things awkward as they refuse to play along with the production. I applaud them, throwing people under the bus during a job interview is never a good idea. If only the producers understood that too.
To top it all off, the promised rewards at the end of the series are confusing and make it plain that whomever wins will probably have as much lasting impact at ATK as the average Food Network Star winner had on the channel over it's 14 seasons, which is to say nearly none.
Just to drive this home, during the various confession cam segments the contestants talk not about their dreams of working under the ATK brand but what independent ventures they hope to finance using the $100K prize. I wish them the same luck that ex-ATK personalities like J. Kenji Lopez-Alt or Christopher Kimball have had after escaping ATK's clutches. Maybe they'll actually be able to win a James Beard award! :P
My advice: Stick to instructional content based around exhaustive experimentation and tough-love hardware reviews; this show is a bad look that was tired well before Mark left Food Network.
So it's no surprise that this feels very much at home with the tired, cookie-cutter content he's been churning out for well over 10 years as part of Food Network's post-instructional era. You can even see the direct lineage and combinations of ideas, concepts, and presentation taken from his earlier works.
That said, even though this is a weird, uninspired mixture of his previous programs, namely "Food Network Star" & "Cutthroat Kitchen", it doesn't work with the talent that ATK possesses and their usual on-screen personas. He's making nearly every ATK personality come off as incredibly petty and condescending; qualities that wouldn't make me vie for a job at ATK.
The contestants themselves are making the best of a weird situation but each Cutthroat-esque twist thrown their way doesn't add to the drama, it just makes things awkward as they refuse to play along with the production. I applaud them, throwing people under the bus during a job interview is never a good idea. If only the producers understood that too.
To top it all off, the promised rewards at the end of the series are confusing and make it plain that whomever wins will probably have as much lasting impact at ATK as the average Food Network Star winner had on the channel over it's 14 seasons, which is to say nearly none.
Just to drive this home, during the various confession cam segments the contestants talk not about their dreams of working under the ATK brand but what independent ventures they hope to finance using the $100K prize. I wish them the same luck that ex-ATK personalities like J. Kenji Lopez-Alt or Christopher Kimball have had after escaping ATK's clutches. Maybe they'll actually be able to win a James Beard award! :P
My advice: Stick to instructional content based around exhaustive experimentation and tough-love hardware reviews; this show is a bad look that was tired well before Mark left Food Network.
This was a really disappointing show. As much as I love ATK and CC, this is an abomination. Most of the cooks are from either California or, to a lesser extent, Massachusetts. This is one more show that caters to the coasts and to hell with the rest of the
country. I don't know or care who wins but I'll only see any of them when they get to ATK.
The level of inexperience for several of the contestants is laughable. On a dish that one cook mentioned he did in dedication to his Dad was horrible. Not only did he overcook the salmon that he said he has prepared many times but he failed to even get his rice done. How is it that you don't start the rice immediately - all of the rice cookers I am aware of can keep the rice warm until the protein is done. It all resulted in a plate that would have been better presented as salmon nachos - at least there wouldn't have been a nearly empty plate.
Others had their own set of afflictions. Bottom line, I watched through about 1/2 of the meal presentations and turnedd it off, not likely to ever watch again. I learned a great deal from ATK and CC and I feel lke this denigrates their "exalted" position in the cooking TV world. Sorry Elle, Julia, Dan, and Jack but this is beneath you!
The level of inexperience for several of the contestants is laughable. On a dish that one cook mentioned he did in dedication to his Dad was horrible. Not only did he overcook the salmon that he said he has prepared many times but he failed to even get his rice done. How is it that you don't start the rice immediately - all of the rice cookers I am aware of can keep the rice warm until the protein is done. It all resulted in a plate that would have been better presented as salmon nachos - at least there wouldn't have been a nearly empty plate.
Others had their own set of afflictions. Bottom line, I watched through about 1/2 of the meal presentations and turnedd it off, not likely to ever watch again. I learned a great deal from ATK and CC and I feel lke this denigrates their "exalted" position in the cooking TV world. Sorry Elle, Julia, Dan, and Jack but this is beneath you!
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