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  • Jamie Oliver has a shocking track record of making people very, very angry, and often

  • the anger is for good reason.

  • You know, like the time some of his unfounded comments cost hundreds of jobs?

  • These are the times Jamie Oliver made more enemies than friends.

  • Jamie Oliver started his Food Revolution show with the best of intentions: go into school

  • districts and help them feed kids right.

  • Everyone can agree that's a noble goal.

  • But when he headed to Huntington, West Virginia in 2009, well, they weren't exactly happy

  • to see him.

  • "Jamie what it is, I really wanna like you, you're a really likable guy, but I just

  • don't know if I trust you.”

  • It was just after the city had been named the unhealthiest in the country, and no one

  • really wanted him putting them under the spotlight.

  • There was more to the differences than just that, though.

  • It turned out that locals just didn't want some outsider coming in and berating them

  • into eating healthyespecially in a manner that was less than understanding.

  • This is going to kill your children.”

  • Oliver's comments succeeded in getting some serious hate thrown Huntington's way.

  • The school's food service director, Rhonda McCoy, was bombarded with hate mail, and everyone

  • was calling for her resignation.

  • But here's the thing: after Oliver swept through and made his changes, the school was worse

  • off.

  • A whopping 77 percent of students didn't like or eat lunch anymore, and many were throwing

  • it away.

  • That's a huge problem, because Huntington was town devastated by a collapse in their

  • manufacturing sector that relied on school lunches to feed their kids.

  • With no one buying lunches, staff started to get laid off.

  • Oh, and the food didn't even meet the US Department of Agriculture's standards because it was

  • too high in fat.

  • The punchline?

  • By 2017, McCoy had ditched Oliver's changes, revamped the school menu herself, and made

  • it a healthy one that kids would actually eat.

  • Jamie Oliver and his wife, Jools, have a fairly large brood of children, and in 2016 he made

  • some comments that made it clear he believed his fatherhood made him qualified to tell

  • the women of the world just why they needed to start breastfeeding their babies.

  • He remarked,

  • "If you breastfeed for more than six months, women are 50 percent less likely to get breast

  • cancer.

  • When do you ever hear that?

  • Never.

  • It's easy, it's more convenient, it's more nutritious, it's better, it's free."

  • While some were quick to point out that more breastfeeding mothers need to be given proper

  • resources before breastfeeding could even become something done 100 percent of the time,

  • others condemned the fact that he called it "easy."

  • For many women, it's not a choice they can make.

  • There's a lot of reasons women decide not to breastfeed, and for some, it's just physically

  • impossible.

  • Victoria Young wrote in The Telegraph about not just the difficulties she had, but the

  • guilt and feelings of inadequacy that were devastating to her.

  • That's just a small part of why the world told Oliver he needed to keep his mouth shut

  • on the subject.

  • Both men and women from all over called Oliver out because of his comments, which were exactly

  • the type that made countless women feel bad about something they couldn't necessarily

  • help.

  • In 2016, Jamie Oliver shared his recipe for paella on Twitter.

  • Paella, for anyone not up on their Spanish cuisine, is typically made with shellfish,

  • shrimp, fish, various vegetables, and served over seasoned rice.

  • Oliver made a big deal of his inclusion of chorizo, and social media was outraged.

  • To many in Spain, it wasn't just a bad recipe, it was taking a dish that embodied their culinary

  • landscape and turning it into what some were calling, quote, "rice with stuff."

  • One tweet summed up the controversy succinctly, saying, quote, "this is an insult not only

  • to our gastronomy but to our culture."

  • Add in the fact that Oliver's recipe came during massive political upheaval across Spain,

  • and that didn't help the ragebut it did help unify an entire country against him.

  • Later, Oliver appeared on The Graham Norton Show, and of course, the topic came up.

  • Oliver said it had gotten so bad he had received death threats over the ill-advised recipe,

  • but did he apologize?

  • He had this to say:

  • "By the way, just FYIit tastes better with chorizo.

  • Trust me or don't trust me!”

  • You're starting it again, stop it!"

  • In 2018, the UK kicked off a campaign to try to lower the amount of sugar in the average

  • person's diet.

  • The so-called sugar tax would raise the price of soft drinks, and it goes without saying

  • that Jamie Oliver was one of the campaign's staunchest supporters.

  • Not long after the price hike kicked in, The Telegraph reported he was already campaigning

  • for extending the products covered to include other high-sugar foods, but there was a bit

  • of a catch.

  • Way back in 2016, when he started celebrating his war on sugar, people were quick to point

  • out that he really should practice what he preached.

  • A quick look at the recipes on his website showed an almost insane amount of sugar in

  • some of them, right in plain sight and in recipes aimed at children.

  • Many of his drinks called for tablespoons of sugar per drink, and his "Children's Party

  • Cake" contained three times the recommended amount of daily sugar per slice.

  • There was a supposedly "healthy" breakfast that had more sugar in it than a bowl of Frosties,

  • and he even had a recipe for gammon ham that called for four liters of cola.

  • Basically, people saw some hypocrisy at work, and they didn't let Oliver get away with it.

  • Stop by a Shell service station in the UK, and you're likely to see something surprising:

  • the Jamie Oliver Deli. Oliver worked with the gas giant to create and sell around 80

  • different products, but not everyone is impressed with the partnership.

  • When it was announced in 2018, environmental groups were quick to call him out on the apparent

  • hypocrisy.

  • Shell, The Guardian says, has been linked to everything from destroying the environment

  • and contributing to climate change to involving themselves in billion-dollar bribes, charges

  • which Shell denies.

  • But given that Oliver has been lauded by the UN for his work as a, quote, "environment

  • champion," it seems like the two are completely at odds, which is what led people to accuse

  • him of selling out for a nearly $6.3 million payday.

  • Oliver addressed the controversy by pointing out that he was just making food available

  • to people, saying,

  • "I think I've earned trust over the last 20 years and I would hope that people think I've

  • thought about it correctly.

  • [...] My job's to work for the British public and push Shell to be the best we can be and

  • also to disrupt the market."

  • In 2013, Jamie Oliver was kicking off a new show called Save With Jamie.

  • That's all well and good, but in the run-up to the show he made some shockingly tone-deaf

  • statements about poverty.

  • Critics were quick to point out that talk like that is especially gauche when your net

  • worth is in the millions.

  • Among the comments that raised particular ire was his condemnation of a family struggling

  • to make ends meet, who were eating, quote, "chips and cheese out of Styrofoam containers,

  • and behind them is a massive TV," leading Oliver to suggest that the family didn't have

  • their priorities right when it came to finances.

  • Jack Monroe from The Independent called the comments, quote, "not only out of touch but

  • support[ive] of dangerous and damaging myths."

  • But the backlash didn't stop there.

  • Oliver went on to lament how he couldn't transport Britain's poor to the Mediterranean, where

  • he claimed even the poorest people ate really well.

  • He sang the praises of affordable mussels and pasta and fresh tomatoes, while ignoring

  • the fact that in 2010, Barcelona had a higher percentage of citizens relying on food banks

  • than Britain did.

  • And things there were dire.

  • Reporting by The New Statesman said that many couldn't even afford to cook what they'd been

  • given, relying on social dining rooms to serve them their hot meals after their gas and electricity

  • were cut off.

  • As they put it, "poverty isn't picturesque by the Mediterranean either."

  • You've heard of "pink slime," right?

  • Did you know you can thank Jamie Oliver for popularizing the whole idea?

  • That's according to a $1.2 billion lawsuit filed against ABC for airing the episode of

  • Food Revolution where he made the comments.

  • The lawsuit was filed by Beef Products, Inc., a processing firm in South Dakota who had

  • their products targeted and condemned as being filled with ammonia.

  • The negative publicity had catastrophic consequences for the companystores started dropping

  • their products, and that led to an 80 percent drop in sales.

  • Three of the company's four plants were closed, and 700 people lost their jobs.

  • According to The Independent, a huge part of the problem was Oliver's claims.

  • This is not fit for human consumption.”

  • They also weren't happy with his demonstration of how meat was processedin lieu of having

  • access to the actual equipment, Oliver's show used a washing machine and household ammonia.

  • All of that, the company said, was grossly misleading.

  • Surprisingly, Oliver wasn't even named on the lawsuit, which ABC and Disney reportedly

  • paid $177 million to settle.

  • It's not just people in his native Britain that have a problem with Jamie Oliver.

  • In 2014, he outraged Australia after he teamed up with the grocery store Woolworths for an

  • advertising campaign promoting the importance of produce.

  • That's not offensive in itself.

  • But problems started when it came out that the cost of the campaign was being passed

  • along to the farmers and growers it was supposed to be benefiting.

  • They were being charged 40 cents on each crate of vegetables, and that adds up fast.

  • One farmer found himself faced with owing about $200,000 USD over the course of the

  • six weeks the campaign was running.

  • Representatives appealed to Oliver to side with the farmers and ask Woolworths to stop

  • requiring the payments.

  • Smart Company says that Oliver responded he was just an employee of the company and didn't

  • have any say over business decisions, while Woolworths said the payment was completely

  • voluntary.

  • After an investigation by the Australian Consumer and Competition Commission Woolworths was

  • cleared of wrongdoing, to the outrage of many farmers and their representatives.

  • When Jamie Oliver took a stand against the way in which many commercially sold chickens

  • have historically been raised, he made it clear he was really against it.

  • He characterized established practices as being morally wrong, and called on viewers

  • to change the way they shop to put pressure on the industry to be more responsible.

  • Where's the problem?

  • That came when it was revealed he had signed a multi-million-dollar deal with the massive

  • UK supermarket giant Sainsbury's.

  • The director of the animal rights organization Animal Aid put it this way:

  • "If he's going to lecture the public he needs first to stop profiting from animal exploitation."

  • For Sainsbury's part, the company confirmed plans to move to conform to food standards

  • put forward by the RSPCA, but also claimed that those standards only applied to eggs,

  • and that they had no plans to change their practices regarding the 90 million chickens

  • they sold annually.

  • Later that same year, in 2008, Sainsbury's announced that they were expanding their animal

  • welfare programs to cover chickens, too.

  • It was a move which Oliver partially took credit for.

  • Jamie Oliver is an equal opportunity annoyer, and in 2017 it was Iceland's turn to take

  • issue with him.

  • It started when he posted a photo of the place he was sourcing salmon from for his new restaurant:

  • the Arnarlax salmon farm.

  • What followed was a deluge of comments condemning his support of the controversial farm.

  • One of the biggest problems environmentalists and farmers had with Arnarlax was that they

  • had imported Norwegian salmon, and there were serious fears that the fish would escape and

  • do permanent damage to the environment and native species.

  • While Oliver's social media team worked to reassure concerned consumers, people weren't

  • buying into the reassurances, and boycotts against Oliver's businesses were threatened.

  • It should be a reaction he's used to by now.

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Jamie Oliver has a shocking track record of making people very, very angry, and often

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Chef Jamie Oliver Has Made Some Serious Enemies

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    chatarow 發佈於 2022 年 02 月 07 日
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