Showing posts with label chefography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chefography. Show all posts

Saturday, March 26, 2011

The Guy Fieri Foundation's Pretzel Cart Project

One of our most frequently asked questions about Guy Fieri is how he got his start in the FoodTV biz. The unlikely answer is ... pretzels. In this video, Susan Noyes of Make It Better talks with Guy about the Guy Fieri Foundation's Pretzel Cart Project.

"My dad says, 'Let's make you a pretzel cart,'" Guy recalls. "So for six months after school, I go to this woodworking shop (a guy named Tim Ford had it), and we would build this pretzel cart.... And I really attribute a tremendous amount of how I got to where I am from having the pretzel cart."


*Link to video*

The Guy Fieri Foundation is about inspiration, imagination, empowering kids. The Foundation builds the carts ($10,000 each!) completely within Health Department specifications. And kids can work together with their non-profit mentors to sell the pretzels.

Since January 2011, when the Worth Our Weight episode aired on Diners, Drive-ins and Dives, we've received several requests for a Guy Fieri Pretzel Cart. Here are some guidelines:

1. It has to be a kids' organization,
2. It has to be non-profit,
3. The organization has to be able to show they have the ability to put the pretzel cart program into play.
4. This program is not for adults working together to raise money for kids; this is about the kids doing it.

Susan Noyes got to know Guy during a 4 day wedding party in Mexico. "He cooked the wedding feast, and I helped with the shopping," she wrote. "And while you might not think we have much in common, we have the same drive to give back and help others achieve their potential."

Click here to read her article, written in January 2011, in which she and Guy talk about the Guy Fieri Foundation for Inspiration and Imagination.
“It sounds whimsical,” Fieri acknowledges, “but I couldn’t improve on the name. That’s what it’s about—inspiring kids to live their imagination. You don’t have to be stuck.”

As part of this empowerment, Fieri developed a 21st century version of his original pretzel cart, and an accompanying program to teach entrepreneurial and other skills to youth. He donated the first one to the grade school he attended.
Guy Fieri is well-known for his philanthropic works, particularly for children. "He auctions off items for charities, like customized KitchenAid mixers and sunglasses," Susan writes, "and is excited to hand out a huge check to a children’s hospital at the Kentucky Derby."

For more on Susan Noyes, visit www.makeitbetter.net, follow on Twitter @makeitbetterNS or like them on Facebook.

Related Posts:
Chefography: Guy Fieri
Guy Fieri on his father
Guy Fieri donates Awesome Pretzel cart to Ferndale Elem School
Video: The Awesome Pretzel Cart
Guy Fieri pretzels and pizza recipes in FN Mag

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Tomorrow, Guy Fieri is on your television, all day long

Well, almost all day long. You know you've made it in the television entertainment industry when you have four different programs all airing on the same day, plus an hour-long program about your life - a Fest of Fieri, if you will, on Sunday, March 14, 2010.

All four of Guy Fieri's current in-production television shows will air at some time tomorrow and on every Sunday for the next few weeks, either on the Food Network or on NBC. And tonight, March 13th at 8 ET, with a follow-up broadcast on Sunday the 14th, the Food Network presents an encore of Chefography: Guy Fieri.

Guy's Big Bite - index page
New Episode
Totally Tempting Tostada
Airs on the Food Network
11:00 AM ET/PT - 30 minutes

Guy's Big Bite first aired on June 25, 2006. The successful inaugural six-episode series was renewed and is currently in its 7th season, with an 8th season on the way. This is the show where we get one-on-one time with Guy and his food, where he shares his life-long passion for cooking both regional American dishes and international cuisines. It is my favorite of his shows.

Chefography
A Food Network Special
Chefography: Guy Fieri
Airs on the Food Network
2:00 PM ET/PT - 1 hour

The Chefography series first aired in March of 2006 with Emeril, Giada, Paula and Ina. Guy Fieri's special was taped in December of 2008 and aired in August of 2009, highlighting the friends and family who influenced and inspired him. Tacitly evident in the story is Guy Fieri's admirable energy, determination and work ethic that has enabled his current career and status in the food and entertainment industry.

Diners, Drive-ins and Dives - index page
Comfort Food Classics
Family Style
Airs on the Food Network
3:00 PM ET/PT - two episodes, 30 minutes each

Undoubtedly, this is the show that catapulted Guy Fieri into fame and pop culture. It premiered in November 2006, recently aired its 100th episode and has no signs of slowing down. In addition to two best-selling books for Guy Fieri, Triple D has inspired fans to create maps, guides, websites, photo journals, Facebook pages, Twitter lists, iPhone apps and road trips. It has inspired people to go into the restaurant business! Diners, Drive-ins and Dives isn't just a television entertainment viewing choice, it's a slice of America.

Minute to Win It - index page
Series Premiere
Airs on NBC
7:00 PM ET/PT - 2 hours

The big gamble, the new show, this is Guy Fieri's first significant foray outside of the Scripps Network family and into network television. After having followed Guy for just over a year, I've come to find that his "brand," such as it is, is more than food or being a 'food dude' - it's a lifestyle, which includes food, yes, but also music, cars, cigars, sports, jokes, travel, friends, family, partying .... I'm thinking, of any non-food-related show Guy would do, this one is the MOST suited him and to what his lifestyle represents. It'll be fly.

Ultimate Recipe Showdown - index page
Season Premiere
Comfort Food
Airs on the Food Network
9:00 PM ET/PT - 1 hour

Now in its 3rd season, Ultimate Recipe Showdown first aired in February of 2008, a competition between home cooks for the best recipe in several genres. The show's then-partnership with TGI Friday's spawned commercials featuring Guy Fieri, and heavy rotation introduced his voice and face to an audience outside of the Food Network.

Five and a half hours of Guy Fieri on your television, Sunday, March 14, 2010.

Guy, your hard work is paying off. On behalf of your friends and fans, may I say congratulations on this red letter day. It's an epic achievement.


Note: Daylight Savings Time begins tomorrow too. So if you're recording programs, check that your systems move their clocks forward one hour. :)

Related Posts:
More details on "Minute to Win It" with host, Guy Fieri
Chefography: Guy Fieri
Episodes of Guy's Big Bite
Excitement builds for Ultimate Recipe Showdown, season 3
How restaurants are chosen for Diners, Drive-ins and Dives

Friday, October 9, 2009

YouTube video - Guy Fieri taping DDD in Alaska

*Update*

Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives: A North Pole Christmas will air on the Food Network
Dec 07, 2009 - 10:00 PM ET/PT
Dec 08, 2009 - 1:00 AM ET/PT
Dec 11, 2009 - 9:00 PM ET/PT

Click the link above for more information, recipes, video and future air dates.
***

As YouTube vidoes go, this is a rather long one but worth watching. Great clip from 5:43 to 7:15, of Guy practicing his lines before shooting the opening introduction to Big Daddy's BarB-Q's segment for Diners, Drive-ins and Dives, in Fairbanks, Alaska.

The episode has a holiday theme, so I'd expect it to air mid to late December.

Shot 10/6/09 at Big Daddy's BarB-Q, Fairbanks Alaska. It was an amazing experience but we're glad it's over. You wouldn't believe the hours of work that go into getting ready for and shooting this thing.


Source: redclaymud.

No one expects Guy Fieri to be super human, me least of all. I exchange messages with dozens (hundreds?) of exuberant fans, and I get messages expressing disappointment in the man's behaviors too.

thc1972 tweeted, "Apparently @ChefGuyFieri has been and gone here in Fairbanks. A friend told him she was a big fan and he blew her off. Now she's not. Idiot.... She's a server at a place he was at - she said 'I'm a fan, watch all your shows.' She wasn't looking for conversation ... and he looked at her and sneered 'that's nice.' 'Thank you' would have made her happy."

Indeed.

In Guy Fieri's Chefography, Guy's mother made a comment towards the end of the show; I don't have the exact quote. She said, if I ever hear about Guy not being nice to someone ....

Fans lift celebrities up. We're also the first ones to keep them humble. Penny, it's time to have that talk with Guy. Again.

Related Posts:
Guy Fieri visits Alaska
Chefography: Guy Fieri
Guest Blog

Monday, August 31, 2009

The Guy Fieri brand is "the real deal"

Guy Fieri is his own brand; he's just calling it "Knuckle Sandwich." Witness the Knuckle Sandwich products available on GuyFieri.com, the Knuckle Sandwich Ergo Chef knives, the Knuckle Sandwich NASCAR and the upcoming Knuckle Sandwich road show.

I asked and received permission from Blaine Parker, who runs Slow Burn Marketing, to re-publish his newsletter on branding (the corporate kind; not the cow kind). Read the full article here.

—————————————

SEARING WHITE HOT BRAND

Sunday afternoon, I stumbled upon a Food Network series that tells the stories of their TV personalities.

The episode in question was about the life and career of Guy Fieri.

What came out of that program was a striking lesson in brand authenticity.

If you’re not sure who Guy is, you may have seen him hosting one of the single most popular shows on the Food Network, Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives. He’s a loud, happy, joking guy with spiky blond hair, a goatee, and a fondness for wrap-around sunglasses, bowling shirts and bling.

Guy’s own cooking is wild. His Johnny Garlic Pasta Grill restaurants offer a bold and brash menu of items like deep-fried artichoke hearts, Cajun chicken Alfredo, and Lava Shrimp Sautee. His Tex Wasabi’s Sushi BBQ restaurants are as twisted as it gets, ranging from ribs & steak to nigiri & maki to items like the Jackass Roll, which is a rice & tapioca paper sushi roll of barbecued pulled pork, French fries, and avocado with a garlic chili mayo sauce.

A JACKASS CASH COW

Of all the celebrity chefs who populate the Food Network’s programming, Guy Fieri is the one whom you’re most likely to want to sit down and have a beer with.

That, or you find him the most infuriating.

Guy Fieri’s brand simply isn’t for everyone.

But the thing that’s really stunning about Guy is that his brand is The Real Deal.

He is not a manufactured personality. He isn’t the product of executive consultation. He is exactly who he appears to be: a tattooed nutcase with a kitchen ladle.

His menus reflect that.

And his personality permeates everything about the Guy Fieri brand.

AUTHENTICITY IS KING

Previously, we’ve talked about how important brand is to even the smallest business. Knowing who you are and how you’re going to convey that to your public is key.

So many small businesses, especially in radio advertising where so many of us live, have no brand identity.

They think because they have a logo or a jingle or a lame slogan, they have a brand.

“For all your widget needs” is not a brand. It’s lazy, sloppy thinking.

A brand is huge.

A brand is who you are and what you mean to people.

In the case of Guy Fieri, the brand is a crazy guy with a nutty sense of humor who feeds people in a fun, bold and flavorful way.

GUY FIERI REALLY IS THE GREAT OZ

That’s why he’s such a great example of branding: the wild and crazy restaurant brands of Johnny Garlic and Tex Wasabi would be forced and inauthentic and probably not too successful–if there weren’t an equally wild and crazy man behind them.

When Dorothy & Toto pulled back the curtain, they found a pathetic old man pulling levers and blowing smoke.

You pull back the curtain at Johnny Garlic’s, and there’s a wackjob whose flames are even bigger than in the kitchen.

That’s not to say every business owner is Mr. Toad, and every business’s brand needs to be his Wild Ride. That would be silly.

The point is that every small business brand is in some way a reflection of the business owner’s personality–and that personality typically infuses everything that happens in the business.

...

EVERY SMALL BUSINESS HAS A BRAND WAITING TO BE UNCOVERED

...

(The brand is) always going to start with the business owner.

That individual’s personality is the core of the brand.

How they run the company, what they choose to sell, how they treat their customers, their philosophy on life–everything about all those business choices is the basis for brand. That, and the kind of person the business owner is. These are gold.

ACTUAL GOLD–NOT FOOL’S GOLD

These are not things you can fake.

These are the essential components to brand authenticity.

And they MUST be found before any truly effective advertising campaign can take place.

....

Brand is essential, authenticity is king, and you can take that to the bank wrapped in a Tex Wasabi Jackass Roll.

As always,

Blaine Parker
Your Short, Fat Creative Director in
Park City

—————————————

Related Posts:
Rock Fantasies, Pork Promos, Ribbon Cutting and Cook with your Kids
Will the real Guy Fieri please Twitter
Critique of TGIF tie-in with Food Network and URS-2

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Chefography: Guy Fieri

*Update*
Eat Me Daily has posted two video clips from The Food Network's Chefography: Guy Fieri episode.
Click Here to view.

Chefography: Guy Fieri show index page on FoodNetwork.com

The Times Standard, based in Northern California, interviewed Guy, old friends friends and past employers just before the Food Network premiered Guy's Chefography this past week. I'll also intersperce some quotes from Guy Fieri from an interview with California Conversations.

Guy Fieri's parents came from Ohio. Guy recalled, "they took off in a VW square-back bus with a six-month-old kid and moved to Whittier, CA. They loved it. My mom taught school. My dad worked at the college. Then they got in the van and went farther north on California 101 to Santa Barbara and said this is where we’re going to live. They loved it. Then they drove to Big Sur and said this is where we’re going to live. They loved it there, too. They eventually drove to a town called Ferndale to open a leather store. They sold their purses and leather belts and the candles they made. They eventually opened a store called Dave’s Saddlery, which was a county-western clothing store. (laughs) It was all good."

In Ferndale, apparently Guy's business career all started with doughnuts. And here we were all thinking it started with Pretzels! But no.

When Guy Fieri was in grade school, he recognized the marketing potential of his little sister's cuteness. He would have his sister stand outside The Blacksmith Shop on Main Street and ask for quarters from people passing by.

Then he would take the quarters to the bakers to buy doughnuts, according to Joe Koches, owner of The Blacksmith Shop, where Fieri spent much of his childhood. "It was just one story after another with that kid," Koches said. "He was a good one."

Koches said another time the young Fieri took his toy gun and tried to stick up a bank teller for quarters, for more doughnuts. "He couldn't even see over the marble counter." Guy's mother, Penny Ferry, had to put a stop to the quarter-gathering by telling the baker not to sell Fieri any more doughnuts.

Guy said, "growing up in the town of Ferndale, you were raised by the whole community."

A school-mate of Guy Fieri's said in a blog, "You may remember him as Guy Ferry, Mimi's brother and son of Jim and Penny, one-time owners of Dave's Saddelry. I remember him as the pretzel guy at Redwood Acres and Humboldt County Fairs. I have three childhood memories of Guy.

First, I remember one year the mechanical bull was next to his pretzel stand at Eureka Fair and he would trade a pretzel for a ride on the bull. Those guys would kick his ass. Guy never lasted more than two seconds.

Also, Guy did his "Older Friends" report, Mrs. Dixon's 7th grade, on my grandpa Charlie.

Lastly, he gave my brother fried clams or shrimp one time at Ferndale Fair and Rob got totally sick and found out, the hard way, he was allergic to shell fish. My brother was so sick, I have never eaten any type of shell fish, just in case. He eventually sold the stand to Megan (Gotcher) Lenardo."

And what's the story behind the Awesome Pretzel? "In fifth grade I went to Squaw Valley to go skiing. It was a favorite family trip. We’d get there, and I’d eat the pretzels. I mean I would eat the pretzels. I would eat ten of them. My dad said to me, 'would you like to have a pretzel cart?' I said, 'Dad, I would love to have a pretzel cart...that would be the best thing in the world.'

My dad told me to ask the pretzel guy where he gets his pretzels. So I asked the guy where he got his pretzels. The pretzel guy said, 'I can’t tell you.' I said 'why not?' He said 'because you might open a pretzel cart.' (laughs) I said 'I’m eleven.' My dad told me to sit down and wait until the pretzel guy takes the box to the trash...(still laughing)...and then go get it. The guy went to the trash. I jumped in the dumpster and I got the box. I went back and my dad said 'fine, we’ve got the source.'

We went home and my dad helped me build a cart. I had to go every day after school to his wood shop and work on it. It was us working side-by-side to make this fantasy idea. It had become real. When we were done I had this pretzel cart. I’d sell these pretzels...called the business Awesome Pretzels."

Guy's parents hosted two exchange students in their home. "I was a freshman. I wanted to be an exchange student, but they said you have to be in a language class. I wasn’t in a language class. They said take Spanish. I didn’t want to take Spanish. I wanted to take Italian. They didn’t have Italian.

Of course my parents were always bringing in wayward sailors and we met a cork salesman from France. He was in the wine country during Thanksgiving. He met somebody, my mom’s aunt or something, and came to our house for dinner. I said do you live in France? He said yes. I said I want to go there. He said I will find you a place to live. It happened, just right there.

I wouldn’t lay off until my parents said fine. My mom said if you can take a class and learn French and get a B or better, you can be an exchange student. My mom drove me to the College of the Redwoods, fifteen miles from my high school, every day at lunch. I took the class. I got a B. (laughs) I told my parents I was ready to go.


At the plane, I was crying my eyes out. I wrote them a letter and slipped it in my mom’s book. My dad said my mom was catatonic for two days. She couldn’t even open the letter. She’d pull the letter out and she’d cry. I landed in Paris. I lived on the third floor of this house. It’s a store room with a bed and a sink. I’m like, oh what have I gotten myself into. Of course, I can’t go home. I just thought I have to figure this out...(laughs)

Okay, what’s the thing we did in school-conjugate the verbs. So, I carried a piece of paper and I would say how do you say that in English? I had this huge French verb book and I’d write them down in all the forms and I decorated my walls with them. By the time I left France there were like 300 up there. But, I taught myself how to speak French, and when I left you couldn’t tell I wasn’t from France...(laughs) they just couldn’t tell where the hell in France I was from. I mixed dialects...I would sound like a New York Southerner with a California twang."

Guy Fieri stayed in France for 11 months.

After coming home, Guy got his first restaurant job at the Red Lion Inn in Eureka. His dinning room manager at the time, Mark Milligan, was “one of the first guys that got me. Or, at least tolerated me,” he added with a laugh. “I think I was a bit of a handful.”

Johnny Wise, a Eureka native who now owns Johnny's Flooring and Window Coverings in Fortuna, CA, said "He was definitely always the go-getter. He's got a lot of character."

Fieri recalled some favorite spots in Humboldt County. "It's not just redwoods. There's Centerville Beach, the mouth (of the river), Samoa Cookhouse, Kinetic Sculpture race, Dungeness crabs. I love coming back -- going to Ferndale, going to the meat market, going to Curly's.”

"I've been trying to make it back for the Fortuna Rodeo for years now,” Guy said. "There are a lot of 'thank yous' deserved in Humboldt. ... I won't ever forget where I was raised.”

Guy Fieri and his partner Steve Gruber opened their first restaurant, Johnny Garlic's in Santa Rosa, CA. "My business partner and I had a choice to open restaurants anywhere in the country. I said I’d like to go to Sonoma County. Sonoma where? I said, you know, wine country. He said it is too expensive up there. We opened our first restaurant, two young guys, we were 26 years old, no money, we had to beg, borrow, and steal to make it happen. And we did it."

Guy then recalled how his friends encouraged him to apply for the Food Network's Next Food Network Star. "My buddy, Mustard, said you have to do the contest for the Food Network. I said, dude, I was approached about two years ago by young guys from LA who wanted to do a show on the Food Network called the Barbecue King. They asked me and my team if we wanted to be on the show. I thought wow, talk about food, do a show. Unfortunately, they didn’t know what they were doing. The show never came to fruition. End of story.

I didn’t want to do the Food Network thing because I didn’t want to put it all out there and then have the dream go away. I think that’s a weird parallel for people to say they don’t try things because they don’t want the dream to leave."

But he did do the Food Network thing, and the dream hasn't gone away. Risk taker.

Sources:
blogs.myspace.com
www.californiaconversations.com
www.times-standard.com

Guy Fieri's Signature Dish:
Cajun Chicken Alfredo

Related Posts:
A DVR alert - Chefography: Guy Fieri

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

A DVR alert - Chefography: Guy Fieri

To date, the Food Network has produced 16 Chefographies: Tyler Florence, Food Network, Mario Batali, Ina Garten, Ace of Cakes, Giada De Laurentiis, Rachael Ray, Wolfgang Puck, Sandra Lee, Bobby Flay, Julia Child, Paula Deen, Emeril Lagasse, Nigella Lawson, The Neelys and


Chefography: Guy Fieri

With multiple series and specials on Food Network, a New York Times best-selling book and millions of fans, Guy Fieri is on top of the world. But the ten-year old who just wanted to cook dinner for his family had no idea where his passion would lead him. . In 2005, he was picked as a finalist on the competition series "Next Food Network Star," and a new chapter began.


Since the Food Network viewers first met Guy Fieri in the 2nd season of the Next Food Network Star, Guy has hosted four shows on the network and appeared in dozens of specials.

Guy's Big Bite - just finished its 6th season - episode guide
Diners, Drive-ins and Dives - now in its 7th season - episode guide
Ultimate Recipe Showdown - soon taping its 3rd season - episode guide
Guy Off the Hook - aired only one season, with no new tapings scheduled at this time - episode guide

The chefography interviews were filmed in December of 2008, with friends, family members and of course with Guy Fieri.

Airs on the Food Network
Mar 13, 2010 - 8:00 PM ET/PT
Mar 14, 2010 - 3:00 AM ET/PT
Mar 14, 2010 - 2:00 PM ET/PT

Forward Post:
Chefography - Guy Fieri

Related Posts:
Chefography: Guy Fieri due on Food Network
Interview with David Page
More on the set of Guy's Big Bite

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Guy Fieri interview on Ultimate Recipe Showdown

TGIF
On December 17, 2008, I learned of a conference call with Guy. He was on his cell phone, sitting in his truck outside his house in Santa rosa. A film crew was inside, shooting interviews with family and friends.

Cynthia Boris of SheKnows.com commented, "I don't think he knows how to be anything but loud -- in an 'I'm so excited, I could burst' way." He spoke of his upcoming second season of The Ultimate Recipe Showdown, premiering on January 4, 2009.

This season began with 12,000 recipes that a panel of judges narrow down to 24, in categories of Comfort Food, Burgers, Hot and Spicy, Desserts, Cakes, and Hometown Favorites. Each week the winner takes home $25K and a chance to have their recipe featured on a T.G.I. Friday’s menu. Co-host Marc Summers is not helping Fieri this time, and while he claims to be bummed out about that, Fieri is ready for the challenge of hosting it alone.

“This second year is remarkable,” Fieri said. “There is a real in-depth view of the contestants. It’s not just about the food on the plate and how it’s presented. Producer Art Edwards really got more of a compelling background piece on the show contestant’s giving the show much more depth.” He then adds, “The folks this year were a fantastic group and many of them had that one signature piece that just blew the judges away.”

See Premium Hollywod for a more in-depth article.