Restaurant_Revolution

<i>Restaurant Revolution</i>

Restaurant Revolution

Australian reality television series


Restaurant Revolution was an Australian cooking reality television series which screened on the Seven Network in 2015. The show consisted of five teams of one, two, three or four people with a pre-existing relationship competing to turn their vision for a restaurant into a reality.[1] The teams were given the chance to design and run their own pop-up restaurant with viewers able to dine in and experience the food, service and atmosphere.[2] The show was hosted by Scottish-born restaurateur Jock Zonfrillo.

Quick Facts Restaurant Revolution, Genre ...

Teams are scored and judged by a panel of experts.[3] The industry expert panel consists of Neil Perry (chef and restaurateur), Erez Gordon (front-of-house specialist), John Lethlean (food critic) and Jess Ho (brand strategist). They were also scored on how much profit they made each week.

Restaurants and contestants

The teams were from the five largest capital cities in Australia. Their restaurants were constructed out of shipping containers located in an iconic spot for each city. The layout for every restaurant was identical and each seated 60 guests. It was up to the teams to determine the theme, atmosphere, exterior and interior details of their restaurants. All restaurants officially opened to the public on 14 July, a few weeks before they aired on the show.[4]

More information City, Location ...

Competition details

  • Restaurant Pre-opening - During this first stage of the competition, teams must earn cash to be able to build the interior of their restaurants, purchase supplies and prepare their staff. For each of the first two challenges, there was a total cash pool of $100,000 on offer. The experts distributed this cash based on how well the teams pitch or present their potential restaurant, food and service. The team who best meets the expert's requirements receives $40,000, second receives $20,000, third and fourth get $15,000 each and finally the worst performing team receives only $10,000. In the final 'last chance pitch', the experts only gave a total of $40,000 to the three best teams, with two teams missing out on the final cash offer.
  • Team Lunch - Each week, one team hosts a lunch inviting in all other teams, where they will be able to judge the food and service of each competing restaurant. Teams are given $50 to use for tips, which they can use up to all or none of. This process happens alongside the Weekly reviews. In Week 5, it was revealed that for every $10 tip, the team earns 1 point on their final scores.
  • Weekly Reviews - The experts will individually visit each of the restaurants on a weekly rotation. They judge the food and service based on their visit and give the team an overall score out of 10. A 5th 'secret critic' also joins the experts judging one team a week. Their identity remains anonymous, therefore teams do not know when or who will arrive to judge. Teams are also ranked for their profitability, with the team earning the highest profit margin getting 5 points added to the expert score and then the other teams ranked 4 to 1 point/s. The team with the highest overall score will gain one extra 4 seat table to use for the following week's service, while the lowest scoring team, loses a 4-seat table, which remains present but is taped off as if it was damaged. From Week 2, there are also chef's special challenges. The team who sells the most of this dish earns 2 bonus points on top of their profit score.
    • Week 2 Chef's Special – Teams are to create a 'chef's special' dish. It must be completely new and not a variation of their existing menu, priced at no lower than $15.
    • Week 3 Chef's Special – 'State on a plate'. Teams must create a special dish that represents their home state.
    • Week 4 Chef's Special – Teams must create a burger that represents their restaurant.
More information Pre-opening Week, Week 1 ...

Episodes and ratings

Restaurant Revolution suffered low ratings during its launch. As a result, Seven has taken action by reducing the show's running from four to two to just one night a week.[5][6] The program also moved starting time.[7]

More information Ratings Week, Episode No. ...

See also


References

  1. "Restaurant Revolution". mycastingnet.com. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  2. "Seven reveals Restaurant Revolution locations". TV Tonight. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  3. "The Revolution is coming - Throng". throng.com.au. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  4. Knox, David (1 August 2015). "Seven Retreats On Restaurant Revolution After Dire Launch". TV Tonight. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  5. Knox, David (5 August 2015). "Seven Downgrades Restaurant Revolution Once Again". TV Tonight. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  6. Knox, David (17 August 2015). "Bumped (Again): Restaurant Revolution". TV Tonight. Retrieved 17 August 2015.
  7. Knox, David (29 July 2015). "Tuesday 28 July 2015". TV Tonight. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  8. Knox, David (30 July 2015). "Wednesday 29 July 2015". TV Tonight. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  9. Ward, Miranda (31 July 2015). "The Ashes on Gem beats all reality shows with Restaurant Revolution losing more viewers". mUmBRELLA. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  10. Knox, David (4 August 2015). "Monday 3 August 2015". TV Tonight. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  11. Knox, David (7 August 2015). "Humiliating Ashes Draws Bumper Crowd to GEM". TV Tonight. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
  12. Knox, David (14 August 2015). "Thursday Sport Wins For Nine". TV Tonight. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  13. Knox, David (21 August 2015). "11.9% Share For GEM As Ashes Give Nine The Night". TV Tonight. Retrieved 21 August 2015.
  14. Knox, David (28 August 2015). "Season High For Footy Show As Nine Wins Thursday". TV Tonight. Retrieved 28 August 2015.
  15. Knox, David (4 September 2015). "Seven Off Key on Thursday". TV Tonight. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  16. Knox, David (11 September 2015). "Bachelor Lifts TEN Into Second, Seven Lands Third". TV Tonight. Retrieved 11 September 2015.

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