Gordon Ramsay's Secret Service
- Fernsehserie
- 2025–
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWith the help of a secret source on the inside, Gordon Ramsay gathers raw, unfiltered evidence and gets a 360-degree view of the major issues facing each restaurant.With the help of a secret source on the inside, Gordon Ramsay gathers raw, unfiltered evidence and gets a 360-degree view of the major issues facing each restaurant.With the help of a secret source on the inside, Gordon Ramsay gathers raw, unfiltered evidence and gets a 360-degree view of the major issues facing each restaurant.
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Using blue light on everything to check for dirt and toughing things with bare hands is not ok!
Gordon!
I see him doing this in hell kitchen to and i cant understand it.
Please stop doing this.
I like Gordon he is "the man" and is very reasonable and mostly calm in a situation where he has to be.
But this i don't get and he should know not to do this it gives a bad example.
DONT'T TOUGHT DIRTY STUFF IN A KITCHEN!
USE GLOVES and use a water and soap to wash your hands!
And if you go to a restaurant where people do not wearing nets over hair and beard is also disgusting!
Tell them PLEASE you know how to Ramsey.
Gordon!
I see him doing this in hell kitchen to and i cant understand it.
Please stop doing this.
I like Gordon he is "the man" and is very reasonable and mostly calm in a situation where he has to be.
But this i don't get and he should know not to do this it gives a bad example.
DONT'T TOUGHT DIRTY STUFF IN A KITCHEN!
USE GLOVES and use a water and soap to wash your hands!
And if you go to a restaurant where people do not wearing nets over hair and beard is also disgusting!
Tell them PLEASE you know how to Ramsey.
It's called Secret Service but has a spy theme? They use the word "insider" annoyingly often and there's a whole climax leading up to finding out who it is but they don't give the audience a reason to care. They never explain what they're working towards so on episode 1 you have to just guess what's happening. And they don't give you enough backstory on the people to empathize with them so there's a disconnect between audience and show subject. As a huge fan of Kitchen Nightmares, this show feels like it was made by AI and is relying on a half-baked gimmick. I'm sad! I created an IMDB account just to review this show I feel so passionate!!
Ditch the forced drama set ups. We loved Kitchen nightmares because the drama was more sincere and natural. Gordon spent days with the owners and staff in the original series. This is just supplanting real emotion and situations with dramatic set ups.
Gordon is forcing himself to sound like he's in a continuous state of emergency. Even the real secret service isn't this dramatic and Hollywoodish. Actually, if Gordon took these restaurants as seriously as a real secret service agent would then I could follow along.
Take your own advice on how to cook and run a restaurant and keep it simple, tasteful, and honest.
You've got too much money to play with and it's ruining what should be another hit. Fire that shady and greedy writing executive that's ruining a great name with this mediocre bs.
Gordon is forcing himself to sound like he's in a continuous state of emergency. Even the real secret service isn't this dramatic and Hollywoodish. Actually, if Gordon took these restaurants as seriously as a real secret service agent would then I could follow along.
Take your own advice on how to cook and run a restaurant and keep it simple, tasteful, and honest.
You've got too much money to play with and it's ruining what should be another hit. Fire that shady and greedy writing executive that's ruining a great name with this mediocre bs.
With several new cheesy spy themed graphics and sound effects. Otherwise, it's exactly the same format as Kitchen Nightmares. It is still moderately entertaining, but would be better without all the extra gimmicks and such. I'm not entirely sure why a show like this has to have all the extra dramatic nonsense. People like home makeover shows and the like (HGTV is very popular and nobody is screaming and crying on those shows), and other cooking shows/travel shows featuring restaurants just keep it classy, but for some reason Fox thinks nobody will watch Gordon Ramsay if he's not making somebody cry. Personally, I would really like this show if it was a little lighter on the gimmicks and manufactured drama.
Gordon Ramsay's Secret Service attempts to freshen up the Kitchen Nightmares concept with a "spy mission" twist, but the result is a half-committed, muddled show that can't decide what it wants to be. The espionage angle - complete with hidden cameras and late-night inspections, feels like an afterthought. It's introduced with dramatic flair, then quickly dropped, as if the producers lost interest halfway through the pitch.
The real problem, though, is the formula itself. Ramsay leans harder than ever into manufactured drama and predictable beats: introduce chaos, storm into the restaurant, kick everyone out, have a heart-to-heart, and deliver a free renovation. There's little room for nuance, and even less for actual mentorship or education. Every episode revolves around a forced emotional epiphany, usually presented as if the struggling owner has somehow missed the obvious fact that their business is hemorrhaging money.
What made Ramsay's earlier shows compelling was the sense of real stakes and genuine teaching or transformation. Here, it all feels hollow. The staff are portrayed as hopeless, the tension feels scripted, and the "solutions" are barely shown. There are no meaningful insights into fixing operations, improving management, or elevating food quality. It's drama for drama's sake, with none of the satisfying payoff.
At its core, Secret Service is a show caught between reinvention and repetition. Ramsay seems unsure whether he's creating a new kind of intervention series or simply doubling down on a worn-out format. The only real innovation is how loudly the same story is told each week.
Even for die-hard Gordon Ramsay fans, this show risks doing more harm than good; it doesn't entertain, it doesn't teach, and it might just make you question why you were a fan in the first place.
The real problem, though, is the formula itself. Ramsay leans harder than ever into manufactured drama and predictable beats: introduce chaos, storm into the restaurant, kick everyone out, have a heart-to-heart, and deliver a free renovation. There's little room for nuance, and even less for actual mentorship or education. Every episode revolves around a forced emotional epiphany, usually presented as if the struggling owner has somehow missed the obvious fact that their business is hemorrhaging money.
What made Ramsay's earlier shows compelling was the sense of real stakes and genuine teaching or transformation. Here, it all feels hollow. The staff are portrayed as hopeless, the tension feels scripted, and the "solutions" are barely shown. There are no meaningful insights into fixing operations, improving management, or elevating food quality. It's drama for drama's sake, with none of the satisfying payoff.
At its core, Secret Service is a show caught between reinvention and repetition. Ramsay seems unsure whether he's creating a new kind of intervention series or simply doubling down on a worn-out format. The only real innovation is how loudly the same story is told each week.
Even for die-hard Gordon Ramsay fans, this show risks doing more harm than good; it doesn't entertain, it doesn't teach, and it might just make you question why you were a fan in the first place.
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