in 2007 filmed on
Kitchen Nightmares in 2010 Ramsay's first documented role in television was in two
fly-on-the-kitchen-wall documentaries:
Boiling Point (1999) and
Beyond Boiling Point (2000), but he had appeared previously as a judge on a MasterChef-like series for young catering students in 1997, with his then restaurant partner, where he was seen bullying the young man that had won the chance to spend a week working in Ramsay's restaurant. Ramsay appeared on series three of
Faking It in 2001, helping the prospective chef, a burger flipper named Ed Devlin, learn the trade. This episode won the 2001
BAFTA for "Best
Factual TV Moment." In 2004, Ramsay appeared in two British television series. ''
Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares aired on Channel 4 and saw the chef troubleshooting failing restaurants over one week. This series ran its fifth series in 2007. Hell's Kitchen, a reality show which aired on ITV1, saw Ramsay attempt to train ten British celebrities to be chefs, as they ran a restaurant on Brick Lane in the East End of London, which opened to the public for the two-week duration of the show. Although he was the creator of Hell's Kitchen'', Ramsay only starred in the first series, as he signed a four-year contract with Channel 4, ruling out any possibility of him appearing on future episodes of the ITV-produced show. In May 2005, the
Fox network introduced Ramsay to American audiences in an
American version of ''Hell's Kitchen'' produced by Granada Entertainment and A. Smith & Co. The show follows a similar premise to the original British series, showcasing Ramsay's perfectionism and infamously short temper. Ramsay had also hosted an American version of
Kitchen Nightmares, which premiered on Fox on 19 September 2007. On 23 June 2014, Ramsay announced he was ending the series. In June 2018, ''
Gordon Ramsay's 24 Hours to Hell and Back, a new series with a premise much like Kitchen Nightmares'' but a shorter timeline, premiered on Fox. Ramsay has presented five series of a food-based magazine programme titled
The F Word; it launched on Channel 4 on 27 October 2005. The show is organised around several key recurring features, notably a brigade competition, a guest cook competition, a food-related investigative report, and a series-long project of raising animals to be served in the finale. The guest cook (usually a celebrity) prepares a dish of their own choosing and places it in competition against a similar dish submitted by Ramsay. The dishes are judged by diners who are unaware of who cooked which dish and, if the guest wins (as they have on numerous occasions), their dish is served at Ramsay's restaurant. The American version premiered on 31 May 2017 on Fox. at
Fort Irwin during
MasterChef Season 5 in 2014 In July 2006, Channel 4 announced that it had re-signed Ramsay to an exclusive four-year deal at the network, running until July 2011. The series became one of the highest rated shows aired on Channel 4 each week. During one episode of
The F Word, Ramsay cooked in
Doncaster Prison in Marshgate for its inmates. The chef was so impressed by the speed at which a prisoner, Kieron Tarff, chopped vegetables that he offered him a job at his restaurant following his release in 2007. In 2010, Ramsay served as a producer and judge on the
American version of
MasterChef. (A second season of the show began in June 2011, again starring Ramsay.) On that same show, he was joined by culinary judges
Graham Elliot and
Joe Bastianich. He starred in a travelogue about his visit to
India, ''
Gordon's Great Escape followed by a series set in Asia. He hosted the series Ramsay's Best Restaurant'', which was the first British series by Ramsay's own production company, One Potato Two Potato. Ramsay joined several other celebrity chefs in the 2010 series,
The Big Fish Fight, where he, along with fellow chef
Jamie Oliver and a few others, spent time on a
trawler boat to raise awareness about the discarding of hundreds of thousands of sea fish. In March 2012, Fox announced the coming of Ramsay's fourth series for the Fox network,
Hotel Hell; the series is similar to
Kitchen Nightmares, except that it focuses on struggling hotels, motels, and other lodging establishments in the United States. Originally slated for debut 6 April 2012 and 4 June 2012, the series debuted 13 August 2012. In August 2021, he signed a deal with Fox.
Guest appearances In September 2005, Ramsay, along with Jamie Oliver,
Heston Blumenthal,
Wolfgang Puck, and
Sanjeev Kapoor, were featured in
CNN International's
Quest, in which
Richard Quest stepped into the shoes of celebrity chefs. In 2006 and 2008, Ramsay took part in a television series for
ITV, following the lead-up to
Soccer Aid, a celebrity charity football match, in which he played only the first half, nursing an injury picked up in training. Ramsay captained the Rest of the World XI against an England XI captained by
Robbie Williams. '' in 2008 During his second appearance on the
BBC's
Top Gear, he stated that his current cars were a
Ferrari F430 and a
Range Rover Sport Supercharged, the latter replacing the
Bentley Continental GT he previously owned. On 14 May 2006, he appeared on
Top Gear in the "
Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car" segment. Ramsay held the top spot on
Top Gear's celebrity leader board, with a lap time of 1:46.38 until overtaken by
Simon Cowell. Ramsay starred in part of a
National Blood Service "Give Blood" television advertisement in England, in which he said that he would have died from a ruptured
spleen had it not have been for another person's blood donation. On 13 October 2006, he was guest host on the first episode of the BBC's comedy panel show
Have I Got News for You's 32nd series. On 27 December 2007, Ramsay appeared in the
Extras Christmas special. In January 2008, Ramsay also guest featured on Channel 4's
Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack as the
Big Brother housemates took part in his
Cookalong Live television show. Gordon spoke directly to the
Big Brother House via the house plasma screens, regularly checking on the progress of the contestants. In 2011, during the results show of
American Idol, footage of the top 5 contestants taking on a challenge of cooking with Gordon Ramsay was shown. The Top 5 were given 10 minutes to make the best
omelettes. In November 2011, Ramsay appeared on the
Simpsons episode "
The Food Wife". In February 2017, Ramsay made a guest appearance on
New Girl episode "Operation: Bobcat". Ramsay made an appearance on 11 December 2017 broadcast of
Please Take Care of My Refrigerator, a South Korean reality television show on
JTBC. In November, Ramsay drew criticism for appearing as a brand ambassador for the mass-produced Korean beer
Cass; Ramsay defended it as unpretentious and affordable. Ramsay voices the character Bolton Gramercy in
Big Hero 6: The Series. The character, a chef with a fiery temper, is loosely based on him.
Legal proceedings In 1998, following Ramsay's resignation from the Aubergine, A-Z restaurants sued him for £1 million citing lost revenue and breach of contract, but eventually settled out of court. In June 2006, Ramsay won a
High Court case against the
London Evening Standard newspaper, in which
Victor Lewis Smith had alleged, after reports from previous owner Sue Ray, that scenes and the general condition of Bonaparte's had been faked for ''Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares''. Ramsay was awarded £75,000 plus costs. Ramsay said at the time: "I won't let people write anything they want to about me. We have never done anything in a cynical fake way." In August 2007, the case was dismissed voluntarily and ordered into
arbitration as stipulated in their contract. On 21 March 2012, Ramsay filed a $2.7 million lawsuit against his former partners of his restaurant in
Montreal, Quebec, the Laurier Gordon Ramsay (since renamed The Laurier 1936), over lost licensing fees and defamatory statements made against him. On 16 April 2013, just over a year later, Laurier 1936 closed. In January 2014, Ramsay lost a high court case in relation to the York & Albany pub. Ramsay claimed that his father-in-law had misused a "ghost writing" machine to make Ramsay a personal guarantor for the £640,000 annual rent of that pub. Ramsay tried to nullify the 25-year lease, signed in 2007. The judge said that Ramsay had known about the guarantee beforehand but that he had total trust in his father-in-law, Christopher Hutcheson, and left the deal to him. The judge dismissed the case and ordered Ramsay to pay all legal costs and outstanding monies, in total more than one million pounds. In May 2022, A New York Superior Court judge ended an eight-year legal battle between Gordon Ramsay and his former business partner at The Fat Cow Gordon Ramsay restaurant in Los Angeles, Rowan Seibel, ruling that Gordon Ramsay should be paid $4.5 million (£3.6 million) in damages and court fee coverage. ==Public image==