What Would Ramsay Do? - Hells Kitchen Nightmares - Gordon Ramsay Forum
July 28, 2010, 11:38:18 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register  
Pages: [1] |   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Chef show "Kitchen Nightmares" filming in Conejo Valley  (Read 1442 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
cole1812
Global Moderator
Ramsay Stalker
*****
Offline

Posts: 1029


View Profile
« on: May 30, 2009, 10:52:48 AM »

http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2009/may/30/fox-tv-show-on-location-here/

Fox TV show on location here
Chef show "Kitchen Nightmares" filming in Conejo Valley

Famous for dropping the F-bomb during red-faced tirades on Fox TV’s “Hell’s Kitchen,” celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay has been in the Conejo Valley in recent weeks to shoot two episodes for his restaurant makeover series, “Kitchen Nightmares.”

But instead of being very, very afraid of encountering Ramsay in the flesh, neighbors of one of the featured restaurants are disappointed they won’t get even a fleeting, bricks-and-mortar cameo on the show, which they say could have brought much-needed — and free — publicity to their troubled shopping center.

The episode in question is being shot now through Sunday inside the Sushi Ko at The Lakes, a Caruso Affiliated-owned shopping center erected on city property next to the Civic Arts Plaza in Thousand Oaks.

Built at about a quarter of its originally approved size, the 50,000-square-foot center has struggled financially since it opened in 2005. Last month, the City Council approved a $96,500 contract to hire a consulting firm to explore ways to make not just The Lakes but surrounding properties more economically viable.

“This mall has been here almost four years and business is actually getting worse,” said Mark Schadecker, owner of Ben & Jerry’s at The Lakes.

While the recession is partly to blame, Schadecker said, The Lakes also struggles with the issues of access, signage and parking. “Getting shots of the outside of my store on network TV certainly wouldn’t hurt,” he added.

But that isn’t going to happen, because the Sushi Ko shoot is strictly an inside job, free of what is known in the business as exterior, or establishing, shots.

That a show of any description is being taped at The Lakes already represents an exception to a long-standing policy, said Rick Lemmo, senior vice president of community relations for Caruso Affiliated.

“We have a policy against allowing these types of shows at any of our properties throughout Southern California,” Lemmo said.

“In order to try and address some of the concerns that Sushi Ko has in operating their business, we made an exception to work something out with the folks from ‘Kitchen Nightmares’, ” Lemmo added. “That agreement was that all of the shots would be interiors. It was done as a courtesy to Sushi Ko, our tenant. And ‘Kitchen Nightmares’ was absolutely fine with that agreement.”

Such an agreement is “a private transaction” involving Caruso, “Kitchen Nightmares” producers and Sushi Ko, said Thousand Oaks City Manager Scott Mitnick.

Responding to an e-mail describing the situation, a spokeswoman for Fox and “Kitchen Nightmares” on Friday wrote, “I can confirm that we are shooting at Sushi Ko, but do not have any (further) comment.”

She also confirmed that “Kitchen Nightmares” had been shooting at Mama Rita’s Authentic Mexican Cantina in Newbury Park.

Requests for comments from both restaurants were declined; it is standard practice to have owners and employees of featured restaurants sign confidentiality agreements that limit what they can say about a show before its air date.

But the time limit has long since passed for Michel Bardavid. As chef and owner of The Secret Garden in Moorpark, Bardavid was featured in a “Kitchen Nightmares” episode that was shot in February 2007 and debuted 10 months later.

He deeply regrets his experience with Ramsay, which included scenes of the mock-boarding up of his restaurant with signs saying it had closed due to bankruptcy. The episode continues to air in re-runs and is readily available via the Internet.

“I thought he would make minor changes, put me on TV and give me publicity,” Bardavid said. “I was like the people in Thousand Oaks are now: ‘Any publicity is good publicity.’ Not in this case.”
Logged
cole1812
Global Moderator
Ramsay Stalker
*****
Offline

Posts: 1029


View Profile
« Reply #1 on: May 30, 2009, 10:55:10 AM »

Mama Rita’s Authentic Mexican Cantina in Newbury Park.

http://www.mamaritas.com/

http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2008/jul/31/mama-ritas-hosts-special-reception-in-thousand/

http://www.yelp.com/biz/mama-ritas-authentic-mexican-cuisine-westlake-village

Logged
cole1812
Global Moderator
Ramsay Stalker
*****
Offline

Posts: 1029


View Profile
« Reply #2 on: May 30, 2009, 11:01:36 AM »

http://www.shoplakes.com/content.php?tag=3&pg=3b

http://chowhound.chow.com/topics/401081

http://www.yelp.com/biz/sushi-ko-japanese-cuisine-thousand-oaks

http://www.dailynews.com/dining/ci_4197568
Logged
cole1812
Global Moderator
Ramsay Stalker
*****
Offline

Posts: 1029


View Profile
« Reply #3 on: May 30, 2009, 11:10:32 AM »

http://thesecretgardenrestaurant.com/

http://secret.garden.restaurant.suckered.us/

Secret Garden Restaurant Suckered Us

Restaurant, owners skewered on TV series "Kitchen Nightmares"

By Lisa McKinnon (Contact)
Wednesday, December 12, 2007


It was the kind of call that Michel and Lauréa Bardavid thought might come but were hoping wouldn’t: A new customer who had booked a table at their Moorpark restaurant, The Secret Garden, was calling back to cancel because of something she’d seen on the Internet.

Specifically, the would-be diner had visited the Web site for the Fox reality TV series “Kitchen Nightmares.” There, she clicked on two video-clip previews of the show, which at 9 tonight will feature the restaurant in its season finale.

In one clip, the show’s star, celebrity chef and self-styled restaurant fixer Gordon Ramsay, curses and groans theatrically after finding allegedly moldy food in the walk-in refrigerator. (More on that in a minute.)

In the other, Ramsay, who is British, calls Michel, who is French, a “filthy pig.”

“I couldn’t really blame her for not wanting to come, based on the way those clips falsely depict our restaurant,” Lauréa said. “We’re a romantic, destination restaurant with French-California cuisine. We are not by any stretch of the imagination dirty.”

Michel, who is the restaurant’s executive chef, returned the woman’s call and persuaded her to rebook the reservation. But as the hours tick down to the debut of tonight’s show, he said, he feels a growing sense of dread.

“If I had to give advice to someone considering being on a reality show, I would tell them not to do it,” he added. “The stress is not worth it.”

The Bardavids have owned The Secret Garden for nearly eight years and say business was good until Ramsay came along and simplified both the menu and the decor, rocking the expectations of longtime patrons.

Pared down and sped up

Michel had been offering five- to 12-course tasting menus in addition to the regular, French-inspired fare. Ramsay countered with a bistro menu designed to get patrons in and out the door in less than an hour.

“People complained; they come to our restaurant to linger,” said Michel, who has since reinstated many of his original dishes.

Of the restaurant’s pre-makeover look, which included Victorian flourishes like silver tea trays and paper-doily slippers for the pedestal water glasses, Ramsay can be heard muttering in one of the show’s promos, “I feel like I’m at Buckingham Palace.”

Apparently, that’s a bad thing. Before the episode is over, Ramsay’s unseen team of designers will have cleared away the restaurant’s ornate salt-and-pepper shakers and crystal bud vases in favor of more streamlined items straight from the pages of a West Elm catalog.

“I do like the new curtains they gave us, and the rods,” said Michel, pointing to the winter-white silk dupioni drapes framing the restaurant’s front windows. “I can’t be completely negative about everything.”

So, if things were OK at The Secret Garden, why did the Bardavids agree to participate in a show whose basic premise is that Ramsay swoops in and fixes a so-called “troubled” restaurant in a week or less?

“I wanted to teach Gordon how to cook,” Michel said with a laugh.

He’s aware that such statements come off as cocky.

“In one of our arguments, Gordon calls me arrogant, and I agree with that,” Michel added. “I only wish I was half as arrogant as he is. I probably would be way more successful.”

An alternate reality

Like several other owner-chefs featured on “Kitchen Nightmares,” Michel came to the producers’ attention because he had interviewed to appear on “Hell’s Kitchen,” another Fox reality show in which Ramsay pits chefs against one another in tests of wills and skills.

Despite the change in shows, Michel decided to go forward with his goal of a possible cook-off with Ramsay. He said he got his wish in a segment involving soup, but doesn’t think that the scene will make it into the episode.

What does make it in, judging by the promos, is a scene in which Michel arrives at the restaurant to find the doors covered with plywood, caution tape and signs proclaiming “Foreclosed by bank” and “Closed for business.”

Ramsay’s on-screen explanation for the staged closure: “If he (Michel) doesn’t start changing … that’s the end result.”

It was not the only time that a scene was played for effect rather than accuracy, the Bardavids said.

That tray of allegedly moldy brown food? What looked like mold, Michel explained, was actually trimmings created when he cut out heart-shaped bits of chocolate cake for a dessert called Chocolate Surprise.

The Bardavids hope to share many other behind-the-scenes insights into their “Kitchen Nightmares” experience during dinner-and-a-show events tentatively scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Dec. 19 and 20.

Until then, it’s safe to say that The Secret Garden hasn’t come in for this kind of attention since the wife of singer Frankie Valli was found guilty of slapping the restaurant’s former owner in a dining room dispute over the bill nearly a decade ago.

That incident, which was covered in the tabloids and settled at trial despite charges of juror misconduct, still inspires visits from out-of-town diners, Lauréa said.

So maybe it’s true: There is no such thing as bad publicity.

Logged
Pages: [1] |   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.5 | SMF © 2006-2008, Simple Machines LLC Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!