There isn’t anything quite like Hell’s Kitchen Season 16. Chef Gordon Ramsay returned with his high culinary standards, but the cast exceeded what audiences expected when it came to drama. However, it was certainly uneven, as it primarily weighed on the blue team that originally held all male chef contestants before Ramsay made any shakeups. Hell’s Kitchen fans remember season 16 as having the worst blue team in the history of the reality competition show, and they aren’t wrong.
‘Hell’s Kitchen’ Season 16 viewers called it ‘unwatchable’ L-r: Gordon Ramsay and Matt Hearn | Greg Gayne/Fox Related
‘Hell’s Kitchen’ Winners: What Do They Win, and Where Are They Now?
According to the official Hell’s Kitchen Reddit page, fans called season 16’s blue team “unlikable,” “a mess,” “dysfunctional,” and “unwatchable.” This all came back to the way that the team interacted with one another and the competing red team.
‘Hell’s Kitchen’ Season 16 viewers called it ‘unwatchable’ L-r: Gordon Ramsay and Matt Hearn | Greg Gayne/Fox Related
‘Hell’s Kitchen’ Winners: What Do They Win, and Where Are They Now?
According to the official Hell’s Kitchen Reddit page, fans called season 16’s blue team “unlikable,” “a mess,” “dysfunctional,” and “unwatchable.” This all came back to the way that the team interacted with one another and the competing red team.
- 3/7/2023
- by Jeff Nelson
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Good Morning Britain viewers have objected to the claim that outgoing UK prime minister Boris Johnson will be “missed” by the public.
Johnson’s controversial tenure as the nation’s leader is coming to an end after just over three years, with Liz Truss set to take over.
Throughout his time in office, Johnson was criticised for his handling of a number of key issues, including the Covid pandemic and the cost of living crisis. He was also widely condemned for his role in the “Partygate” scandal, which saw him become the first prime minister to have been officially found to have broken the law.
Speaking on Gmb on Tuesday morning (6 September) shortly after Johnson’s farewell address to the nation, journalist Andrew Pearce said: “It’s going to be a dull place without him.”
Presenter Susanna Reid said that she “totally agreed with” him, adding: “Perhaps it is what we need.
Johnson’s controversial tenure as the nation’s leader is coming to an end after just over three years, with Liz Truss set to take over.
Throughout his time in office, Johnson was criticised for his handling of a number of key issues, including the Covid pandemic and the cost of living crisis. He was also widely condemned for his role in the “Partygate” scandal, which saw him become the first prime minister to have been officially found to have broken the law.
Speaking on Gmb on Tuesday morning (6 September) shortly after Johnson’s farewell address to the nation, journalist Andrew Pearce said: “It’s going to be a dull place without him.”
Presenter Susanna Reid said that she “totally agreed with” him, adding: “Perhaps it is what we need.
- 9/6/2022
- by Louis Chilton
- The Independent - TV
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With annual CG confab Siggraph slated to start Monday in Vancouver, DreamWorks Animation announced its intent to release its proprietary renderer, MoonRay, as open-source software later this year.
MoonRay has been used on feature films such as How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World, Croods: A New Age, The Bad Guys and upcoming Puss in Boots: The Last Wish.
“We are thrilled to share with the industry over 10 years of innovation and development on MoonRay’s vectorized, threaded, parallel, and distributed code base,” said Andrew Pearce, Dwa’s vp of global technology. “The appetite for rendering at scale grows each year, and MoonRay is set to meet that need. We expect to see the code base grow stronger with community involvement as DreamWorks continues to demonstrate our commitment to open source”.
MoonRay uses DreamWorks’ distributed computation framework, Arras, also to be included in the open-source code base.
With annual CG confab Siggraph slated to start Monday in Vancouver, DreamWorks Animation announced its intent to release its proprietary renderer, MoonRay, as open-source software later this year.
MoonRay has been used on feature films such as How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World, Croods: A New Age, The Bad Guys and upcoming Puss in Boots: The Last Wish.
“We are thrilled to share with the industry over 10 years of innovation and development on MoonRay’s vectorized, threaded, parallel, and distributed code base,” said Andrew Pearce, Dwa’s vp of global technology. “The appetite for rendering at scale grows each year, and MoonRay is set to meet that need. We expect to see the code base grow stronger with community involvement as DreamWorks continues to demonstrate our commitment to open source”.
MoonRay uses DreamWorks’ distributed computation framework, Arras, also to be included in the open-source code base.
- 8/5/2022
- by Carolyn Giardina
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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