MasterChef Australia

Ten doing the first thing wrong with Masterchef and running it overtime. What guesses have we got at how much overtime it will be shown? X Men was just advertised for an 8:30 start… im going to say it will start at 8:53

Surprised it was bang on the EPG. Wish they advertised the times correctly

the shows are slated for 8.40 this week. As per the EPG. I can’t see how that is wrong to show it beyond 9pm. All networks do it.

doesn’t make it right.

I’m not - isn’t he the guy that said he was ‘ready to go on his food journey’? Sounds like he’s full of shit.

This show is soooo fake. Gary is as annoying as ever, the over the top good/bad music is so silly, the favouring of contestants that are ‘good TV’ so pathetic.

Its not what the ads are saying.

Doesn’t Masterchef almost always run to 8.40? If it’s the same as previous years it’s usually 8.40 most days with Sunday’s having 90 minute episodes.

Why don’t they advetude their shows for an 8:40 start then?

I haven’t really noticed this year but in previous years I’m sure they have,

I’m a bit over these dragged out get into the top 24 style episodes. I don’t care enough about the contestants yet to be excited who gets in or want to watch a pressure test for the one last spot in the 24. Zzzzzz.

I much preferred when they had a Top 50… and they did a variety of multiple express faster paced challenges to hand out aprons. I don’t think they’ve done that for 2 or 3 years but it was more exciting.

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It was a top 50 audition to start with on Sunday. 19 people made it to the top 24 and 20 were eliminated. Matt Preston told the Herald Sun that so many aprons were handed out on that day it forced the producers to devise a new challenge for the 11 remaining contestants, hence last night’s episode and tonight’s pressure test.

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Last years winner Billie is on tomorrow night, setting the first mystery box :slight_smile:
Brother also VS. sister will be very interesting!!

Do you know what I always look forward to Masterchef the first two episodes, however, have put me off the season a little. I am just finding it a bit slow to get into. MKR and The Voice seem to do the opposite to Masterchef and get straight into it and then slow down before gaining steam again. Perhaps this is something Masterchef can look at adopting for future seasons. I will watch tomorrow night when Billie is on and hope it can gain some pace again.

Here is the top 24 of season 8: article and their profiles have been posted on the show’s website

I find it strange that seven people did the pressure test in tonight’s episode but only four (including Melissa who did not get a mention in the first two episodes) did the recounts. Were they chosen because of their back stories or did the producers believe they had the best chances of getting the last apron?

MasterChef Australia: The Top 24 Revealed. Who Will Be Australia’s Next MasterChef?

The highly anticipated new season of MasterChef Australia has returned bigger and better than ever, with the best group of amateur chefs boasting the most amazing cooking the competition has ever seen.

Thousands of hopefuls auditioned, with judges Gary Mehigan, George Calombaris and Matt Preston scouring the country to handpick Australia’s best foodies.

With an unrivalled passion for food and a strong desire to join the food industry, the contestants will deliver some of the finest dishes in the history of MasterChef Australia.

An airline captain, a professional golfer, a pharmacy technician and a park ranger are among the Top 24 who have claimed the coveted MasterChef Australia aprons for season eight.

There will be a who’s who of the world’s best chefs joining as guests, including domestic goddess Nigella Lawson, Heston Blumenthal, Marco Pierre White, Curtis Stone, Maggie Beer, Kylie Kwong and Luke Nguyen, to name just a few.

The ultimate winner will walk away with a life-changing experience and the title of Australia’s MasterChef 2016, plus $250,000 and a monthly column in Australia’s leading premium food magazine, Delicious.
Get set to see some inspiring cooking as the contestants fine-tune their skills, compete under pressure, meet some of their culinary idols and face some of the biggest challenges of their lives in their new home – the MasterChef Australia kitchen.

Adam Mizzi, 30, South Australia, Adventure Company Owner
Growing up on a Sydney chicken farm, moving to Tasmania as a teenager and travelling to over 35 countries before settling in Adelaide, Adam Mizzi’s life boasts big adventure. With Maltese heritage, there was always a Mediterranean influence in the Mizzi kitchen and Adam has fond childhood memories of making pastizzis from scratch.

Anastasia Zolotarev, 26, New South Wales, Marketing Co-Ordinator
Born in Belarus, Anastasia and her family moved to Ukraine when the Soviet Union dissolved, before making the tough decision to move to a better life in Australia, landing in Brisbane when she was just five. Anastasia has vivid memories of this culture shock, her exotic lunch boxes magnifying her differences with the other children. The family moved to Sydney after a year and Anastasia has embraced her Aussie home ever since.

Ashley McConnell, 29, Western Australia, Software Sales
Growing up in Rockingham, Western Australia, as the middle of three boys, Ashley recalls spending quality time in the kitchen cooking with his mum, around age five, baking cakes and making a mess in the kitchen. Ashley loved to cook and his mum bought him cookbooks over the years, encouraging his interest further.

Brett Carter, 43, Western Australia, Airline Captain
Born in Melbourne as the second of four children, Brett has probably been to more cities than most people have had hot dinners thanks to his work as an international airline captain. Travelling during his childhood due to his father’s role in the RAAF, the family lived in Victoria, Queensland and the Northern Territory before Brett followed in his father’s footsteps, becoming an air force cadet in his teens and winning a flying scholarship.

Cecilia Vuong, 31, Victoria, Teacher
Born in the small Tuscan town of Travelle, near Florence, Italy, Cecilia’s culinary influences span her Italian homeland, to traditional Chinese flavours from her father and uncle and Vietnamese tastes from her mother. Cecilia successfully made it through the Judges’ Auditions for MasterChef Australia Series 6 in 2014 but had to withdraw from the competition due to a head injury she sustained on a snowboarding trip before her application.

Charlie Sartori, 24, Victoria, Professional Golfer
Growing up in Sorrento on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula, Charlie Sartori was a sporty child from the word go. Following his older brother onto the golf course, Charlie was a member at Portsea Golf Club at around age eight. At the time he chose to get stuck into his junior footy and cricket instead and it was not until age 14 when he played a nine-hole tournament with a mate that the penny dropped for Charlie and he was hooked.

Chloe Bowles, 24, Queensland, Nanny
With a past working in events and currently employed as a nanny on the Gold Coast, food and cooking have never been far from Chloe’s mind when she thinks about her long-term future. A permanent fixture at the kitchen bench beside her mum from age two, Chloe has always loved to cook and really got stuck in from the age of 10.

Con Vailas, 31, Victoria, Restaurant Supervisor
Growing up in a close-knit family, Con learnt most of what he knows in the kitchen from his talented mum. Along with dad, who immigrated to Australia at a young age, Con has learnt the values of family and hard work from his parents. With three sisters, Con says cooking was always a big part of their family life growing up in Hobart, Tasmania, their Greek heritage meaning that food was always central to bringing people together.

Elena Duggan, 32, New South Wales, Teacher
Having grown up in Noosa, Queensland, Elena loves being on, near or in the water. With her family running a scuba diving business when she was young, there were plenty of good times and holidays spent on the water and, of course, an abundance of seafood, which she loves to both cook and eat.

Elise Franciskovic, 28, Queensland, Pharmacy Technician
Growing up in the Far North Queensland town of Cairns, Elise’s family home backed onto the rainforest, meaning it was not uncommon to see cassowaries wandering into the house, monitor lizards lounging by the pool and bush turkeys roaming in the yard. Elise is the middle child in her family, with two elder sisters and two younger brothers.

Harry Foster, 21, Queensland, Cocktail Bartender
Harry is a walking advertisement for tourism and events in Queensland, having lived in many of the Sunshine State’s northern towns and cities. It is fair to say that Harry knows how to cram a whole lot into life. Born in Rockhampton, he was very young when his parents separated, after which he lived with each of them at various times in Rockhampton, Rollingstone, the Sunshine Coast, Cairns and Townsville.

Heather Day, 32, South Australia, Sales Manager
Interested in cooking from the age of four, Heather was taught to cook by her mum, dad, grandmother and older sister. She got into cooking more seriously aged 14 when she became a vegetarian, not eating meat again until she was 21. After graduating high school, Heather pursued business studies, gaining an Advanced Diploma in Management (Hospitality) and a Bachelor in Business from TAFE.

Jimmy Wong, 49, New South Wales, Sustainability Specialist
As the eldest of four children, Jimmy proves that the apple does not fall far from the tree when it comes to a passion for food. Jimmy’s parents ran a grocery store and Chinese restaurant when he was young, where his late father worked front of house and his mother worked in the kitchen. Jimmy will compete alongside his sister Theresa, who is also a MasterChef Australia contender this year.

Karmen Lu, 24, Western Australia, Waitress
Currently working as a waitress, Karmen is very much at home in the high-vis vest and hard-hat attire of the mining industry. Holding a Bachelor of Science in Mine and Engineering Surveying, Karmen is now getting ready to don some brand new attire: her MasterChef Australia apron. The eldest of two daughters, Karmen was born in Perth to parents who emigrated from Vietnam in 1982.

Matt Sinclair, 27, Queensland, Coffee Roaster
Growing up in Sydney’s Sutherland Shire holds great memories for Matt, of a happy family life with mum, dad and elder sister. Inspired in the kitchen by two strong women in particular, Matt credits his grandmother and late great grandmother Elsis, in part, for his passion for food. The learning came full circle in 2014 when Matt catered for his grandmother’s 80th birthday.

Miles Pritchett, 46, Queensland, Park Ranger
Clermont in rural Queensland is a long way from the MasterChef Australia kitchen – over 2,000 kilometres, in fact – but that is how far Miles Pritchett is prepared to travel to be a part of the competition. A jack-of-all trades, Miles completed a Bachelor of Environmental Science in late 2014 and now works as a ranger for Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service.

Mimi Baines, 26, Victoria, Product Manager
Mimi enters the MasterChef Australia kitchen not only with skills nurtured by her beloved grandmother, but with a competitive edge born from being a girl with two brothers. Having grown up in Melbourne with mum, dad and two older brothers, Mimi always held her own with the boys around the house and the three siblings enjoyed their sports, with Mimi excelling at tennis, skiing and running.

Nathaniel Milevskiy, 29, Queensland, Paramedic Student
Growing up in Cairns on a diet of sports, it is a wonder Nathaniel had much time for anything else. For Nathaniel, life was full of baseball, hockey, archery and many other sports. When mum and dad, both teachers, accepted work in the US, it was the start of a grand adventure for the family, who moved to Massachusetts. Aged 15, Nathaniel got in on the action too, being awarded a baseball scholarship as a catcher at The Winchendon School in Massachusetts.

Nicolette Stathopoulos, 19, Victoria, Student
Although she might be MasterChef Australia 2016’s youngest contestant, Nicolette’s talent should not be underestimated. Cooking seriously since she was aged 11, Nicolette and her older brother enjoyed a childhood filled with many happy memories and lots of food shared with their extended Greek family.

Nidhi Mahajan, 30, South Australia, Call Centre Worker
Not fulfilled by her high-flying job in corporate insurance in Chandigarh, India, Nidhi was seeking more balance and a simpler life. In March 2013, Nidhi and husband Sumit, 33, a self-employed software engineer, decided that simply changing jobs or cities was not going to cut it. Lured by the Australian weather and lifestyle, they packed up and moved to the other side of the world, settling in Adelaide.

Olivia Robinson, 26, New South Wales, Restaurant Manager
Growing up, Olivia threw herself into every extracurricular activity, proving that she is definitely a jill-of-all-trades. From music, dance and swimming to netball, gymnastics, choirs and bands, she did it all. A gifted musician, Olivia has played saxophone for over 10 years and also plays clarinet, a little piano, basic guitar and the ukulele. Also a keen singer, she has been a part of Vox, a branch of Sydney Philharmonia, as well as writing and performing her own songs.

Theresa Visintin, 44, New South Wales, Mum
Theresa was born in Singapore before moving to Toronto, Canada, and then to Australia at age 10, later living in Western Australia for six years. Currently, she and her family are based in Vancouver, Canada, for her husband’s work. Under her maiden name of Theresa Wong, she appeared in several Australian television shows in the early 1990s including Home and Away and Paradise Beach. Theresa will compete alongside older brother Jimmy, who is also a MasterChef Australia contender this year.

Trent Harvey, 29, New South Wales, Electrician
Growing up on the family apple orchard in Batlow, New South Wales, Trent has lived and breathed the wholesome country life with dad and a younger brother. With fond memories of milking cows, catching rabbits and fishing for trout, Trent’s love for fresh produce goes way back. As a teen Trent was into music and sports, especially loving his motocross racing, getting on his first motorbike aged just three. He raced bikes from 10, reaching state and national level.

Zoe Konikkos, 31, Victoria, Sales Manager
Zoe has reached a now-or-never moment. Talked out of becoming a chef by her mum as a teenager, she is now determined to make food her future. From a Greek Cypriot background, Zoe’s paternal grandparents immigrated to Australia in the 1950s to flee the war in Cyprus, while her maternal grandparents immigrated here in the 1960s to also seek a better life. She describes her upbringing with mum and dad as very European, not speaking English until she went to kindergarten.

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Definitely. These episodes have been crap - MKR is by far the better show at the moment.

We watched 1 hour of 7 of the worst cooks in the 50 making a dessert (and only then focusing on about 3 of them) whilst we saw about two seconds of each of the other people who got into the top 24 the other night.

Why would I find it suspenseful that a 22 year old girl who couldn’t make a simple pasta yesterday might somehow weasel her way into the top 24 tonight because the judges think she looks good for TV?

Gary and George are as insufferable as ever. I seriously can’t stand them.

I’m not sure why you watch Masterchef? You seem to hate everything about it. So tune out…

I wasn’t so hooked by the first two episodes but I actually enjoyed last nights episode and the best of the seasons so far. Pressure tests are things which separate this show from the likes of MKR. Was great to see Miles get through.

He also bitched about everything he saw on MKR but now says:

:laughing:

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Well, people generally tune out of something they’ve watched since the beginning when they decide the show is irretrievably gone.

It’s not a case of watching it every day one season and then just switching off after a bad episode. :laughing:

It is. Just because one thing is better than another, doesn’t mean it has no faults.

Guess I’m caught in a hard place here between a Seven fanboy and a MC fanboy. :stuck_out_tongue:

Come out from under your bridge. No need to be a troll about everything. :stuck_out_tongue_closed_eyes:

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