Over the past fifteen years, Bourdain has hosted increasingly sophisticated iterations of the same program. Initially, it was called “A Cook’s Tour,” and aired on the Food Network. After shifting to the Travel Channel, it was renamed “Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations,” and it ran for nine seasons before moving to CNN, in 2013. All told, Bourdain has travelled to nearly a hundred countries and has filmed two hundred and forty-eight episodes, each a distinct exploration of the food and culture of a place. The secret ingredient of the show is the when-in-Rome avidity with which Bourdain partakes of indigenous custom and cuisine, whether he is pounding vodka before plunging into a frozen river outside St. Petersburg or spearing a fatted swine as the guest of honor at a jungle longhouse in Borneo. Like a great white shark, Bourdain tends to be photographed with his jaws wide open, on the verge of sinking his teeth into some tremulous delicacy. In Bourdain’s recollection, his original pitch for the series was, roughly, “I travel around the world, eat a lot of shit, and basically do whatever the fuck I want.” The formula has proved improbably successful.
Geo wrote:A really thorough and, IMHO, objective article on Bourdain is in this week's New Yorker. It's genuinely worth the read. I admire the guy immensely.
Geo
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/02/13/anthony-bourdains-moveable-feast
Geo wrote:Oops, sorry Ronnie I totally missed that... thought I'd checked carefully, but alas, not. Still a good article tho' !
: )
Geo
Anthony Bourdain dead at age 61: CNN
AlekH wrote:hard pass^
Geo wrote:Finally, and this tells strikingly against the author: he claims, based upon (AFAICS) one specious piece of 'evidence' that AB not only has a cult following, but evidently encouraged it. The specious piece of evidence is the enshrined table in the noodle joint in Hanoi. How, mind you, is that evidence for a cult following? It's in Vietnam for gosh sakes, where it's highly implausible to claim a Bourdain cult exists; moreover, it is much more likely that the President of the United States is being enshrined there, rather than a tv chef/traveller, eh?
Anyway, it's always good to see a wide diversity of opinion, and this guy's opinion adds to the diversity.
Geo
jnm123 wrote:The National Review article was shallow at best.
What I'd like to know...
...is from those who were at Burt's that night with Bourdain and Louisa Chu. How was he? Did he know that the joint was stacked with those from the Chicago food scene? Did he care? My impression just from viewing the edited airing was that he wasn't a big fan of the pizza but was still complimentary and seemed to thoroughly enjoy himself.
And I would've killed to have been there...
ronnie_suburban wrote:For me, the highlight was when Toby Maloney caught a pitcher full of barf (jettisoned spontaneously by someone who was clearly so sick she had no business being there) without missing one drop. As much time as I've spent on bar stools, it is still the most professional move I've ever seen.
=R=