arts & entertainment Inside The Food Network In his new book, author Allen Salkin goes behind the business, media and cultural story of how food conquered television. I Suzanne Chessler A Contributing Writer lien Salkin, who spent time in Michigan covering a controver- sial media trial for the New York Post, returns to the state calling attention to a considerably wider-reaching media attraction: the Food Network. While the earlier trip had to do with TV personality Jenny Jones and a show that gained public controversy but never aired, his upcoming visit has to do with many cooking show personalities and the reasons their programs continue on or go off the air. Salkin will introduce From Scratch: Inside the Food Network (G.P. Putnam's Sons; $26.95) during the upcoming JCC Jewish Book Fair. He will speak at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 13, at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. "This book is a unique confection of a rags-to-riches business story in the build- ing of a media empire combined with the delicious candy of the backstory of favorite stars:' Salkin explains in a phone interview from his New York home. The author, who spent three years researching and writing the book, launched his career after attending the University of California-Berkeley and then traveling the world. He accepted odd jobs while showing early interest in writing poetry and trying to sell short stories. "I took some journalism classes at the University of California-Los Angeles and was getting articles published in the uni- versity paper;' recalls Salkin, 40ish, single and thinking about upcoming projects. "My first article was about a garlic festi- val. Because I was a reporter, I got into the festival for free, moved to the front of the line and tasted everything. When I wrote the article, an ex-girlfriend read it and was impressed. "I said to myself, 'I'm getting free food and being published while impressing women; this is a good career:" Salkin advanced his journalism studies at New York University, landed an intern- ship at the New York Post and moved into varied freelance work. His assignments reached from the Jewish publication Heeb to the New York Times, where he secured full-time employment. "That elevated my career:' he says. "My most famous story was about celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz's financial problems. IN: What would you like to see if there was a show dedicated to Jewish cooking? AS: I don't feel I have to be told how to render shmaltz or make the perfect matzah ball. I would want the show to tell me how to make some unique matzah ball or lake. The shows I like the most and the chefs I like the most stir the viewers' creativity. They don't just present something that's delicious; they present something that tickles the brain. The strain of Jewish life I appreciate the most is our restless and amazing creativity. "The quality of the New York Times allowed me to gain the reputation that opened up celebrities attached to the Food Network. That's how I am where I am today" Salkin previews his appearance for the Detroit Jewish News: IN: What will you talk about during your book fair appearance? AS: I hope I can explain the way that creativity can be fostered and squelched. That's one theme of the book. I want to tell stories that will entertain people — things they don't know about their favorite stars, such as Mario Batali (who has a summer place in northern Michigan). I will answer questions. In its early days, the network was so low-budget and willing to take chances that a lot of the most interesting shows — Emeril Live, Iron Chef, Good Eats — start- ed back then. As the company has become more conservative with the Scripps Network Interactive business empire, they seem to be taking fewer chances. As a result, they seem not to have been developing the kind of shows that America fell in love with a decade ago. "There is something relentlessly comfortable about Ma [Garten]." — Allen Salkin IN: What has been the Jewish presence on the Food Network over time? AS: David Rosengarten, the big- gest star of the first couple of years, was one of the longest- 014 surviving stars in s. petsolOtte the early days with BtS ‘0, ota01 !-- Nigh Food News and tt tyte Scenes St° Views. David had .the-Se tci Be learned his love vc% 14 of food from his t. father, who had a dream to open a seafood res- taurant. Unfortunately, it failed. David carried memories of his father, recipes and the smell of seafood cooking forward into his own appreciation for food and, in a way, made his father's dreams come true by becoming a food star him- self. Of course, there's Ina Garten. You have to look a little bit to find a Jewish Ina recipe. She doesn't go out front proclaim- ing that she's a Jewish television star. She's portraying this next-door neighbor type. My mother was at a talk Ina gave in L.A., and someone asked Ina about her heritage. She didn't give a long story about it. FROM JN: Did you watch , osot l‘\` FO OD the Food Network regularly before you got the idea for the book? AS: The network first got my attention with Emeril Live, and then I watched some Iron Chef and Iron Chef America. I knew who Rachael Ray was. I prob- ably watched ESPN more. What happened to me was being sent to Miami in winter to cover a food festival — I know, a tough assignment — and I was amazed that these chefs had handlers, talent agents and bodyguards around them. Fans had paid top dollar — some had come out on crutches — just to take a glimpse of Rachael Ray and others. I wondered how this happened. When I left the New York Times, I realized I was going to be the man to figure out how this happened and tell this story. It's not that I'm some great chef or Food Network fanatic. I am somebody who loves asking people questions and turning them into stories. E~W IN: What do you think is the special experience derived from watching chefs? AS: If you go to a gym, the televi- sion has ESPN or the Food Network on because we want something comfortable when we're "in pain." There is something relentlessly com- fortable about Ina and her side remarks, including what she's making for [her hus- band], Jeffrey. It's like you're in her brain. Everybody wants to get an invitation to Ina's house. People go to her house and peer through the hedges. She has to call the police. We feel connected to her. IN: Why did you include comments by Gael Green, a food critic who grew up in Michigan? AS: What's important about Gael is that she was on this so early. She was a foodie before there was a word "foodie." I quote her review of Bobby Flay's first restaurant. She says something about "foodniks." Gael was almost struggling to invent the word "foodie." There was a sense there was something like that, and she was a prototype. JN: Can you talk about the issue of anti-Semitism that you reference with regard to Guy Fieri? [Guy denies that he once said, "Jews are cheap."[ AS: The guy who came up with the idea for Diners, Drive-ins and Dives got into a legal struggle with the Food Network. Guy Fieri was pulled into it when the Food Network wanted to switch producers. There were lots of negative things that got said on both sides. A newspaper print- ed allegations about what Guy said. Guy has always been nice to me, and I think he's a fascinating American character. Food Network on page 47 JN October 17 • 2013 41