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The F Word (British TV series)

The F Word (also called Gordon Ramsay's F Word[1]) is a British cookery programme featuring chef Gordon Ramsay. The programme covers a wide range of topics, from recipes to food preparation and celebrity food fads. The programme was made by Optomen Television and aired weekly on Channel 4. The theme tune for the series is "The F-Word" from the Babybird album Bugged.

The F Word
GenreFood magazine/Cooking show
StarringGordon Ramsay
Giles Coren (Series 1–2)
Janet Street Porter
(Series 2–5)
Opening theme"The F Word" by Babybird
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series5
No. of episodes51
Production
Running time44 minutes
Original release
NetworkChannel 4
Release27 October 2005 (2005-10-27) –
7 January 2010 (2010-01-07)
Related
The F Word (American TV series)

Programme segments edit

Each episode is based around Ramsay preparing a three-course meal at the F Word restaurant for 50 guests. Diners in the restaurant include celebrities, who participate in conversations, challenges, and cook-offs with Ramsay. Other segments focus on food-related topics such as alternative foods, visits by Ramsay to help people focus on healthy cooking and eating (some visits include taking on the occupations at the workplaces he visits), and even Ramsay himself demonstrating recipes of the courses to the home viewers.[2] Finally, there was a series-long feature on home-reared livestock or poultry that was ultimately served to F Word diners on the series finale.

Series 1 edit

 
Gordon Ramsay

The first series is based around the "Get Women Back in the Kitchen" campaign where Ramsay visited several English households to help women who wanted to improve their culinary skills.[3] The Times's restaurant critic Giles Coren and food writer Rachel Cooke acted as field correspondents who presented reports on unique food fads and healthy eating respectively. Two or three commis (picked from a thousand applicants) squared off in each episode to earn a position at one of Ramsay's restaurants. Ramsay raised turkeys in his garden, so that his children gained a better understanding of where their food came from. Chef and television presenter Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall regularly offered tips on raising free range turkeys. The turkeys were named after other celebrity chefs, for example, Ainsley, Antony, Jamie, Delia, Gary and Nigella. The pudding (dessert) challenge regularly pitted Ramsay with a celebrity guest, with the winner having the honour of serving his or her pudding to the guests at the F-Word restaurant.

Series 2 edit

The series theme emphasises the importance of Sunday lunch, with Ramsay teaching families how to prepare this meal on a regular basis. From the second series onward, the restaurant had 50 paying diners served by an amateur brigade. If guests found any of their food unsatisfactory, they could choose not to pay for that item.[4] Janet Street-Porter became the series' regular field correspondent; Giles Coren only appeared in a one-off segment on the Pimp That Snack website and phenomenon. The celebrity pudding challenge was changed to a general cooking challenge, while Ramsay raised pigs in his garden, which he named Trinny and Susannah.[5] Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall returned to offer advice on raising the pigs. Unlike Series 1, the second series of the show was usually transmitted after the 9pm watershed, meaning that Ramsay's infamous bad language was no longer bleeped out.

Series 3 edit

This series ran a campaign stating that "Fast food doesn't have to mean junk food", with Ramsay showing people how to prepare a simple supper in under 30 minutes, without having to order takeaways or rely on frozen meals or other convenience food.[6][failed verification] The best weekly amateur brigade was rewarded with the prestige of cooking at Ramsay's restaurant at Claridge's in the series finale.[7][failed verification] Ramsay home-reared a pair of Charollais-Welsh lambs, named Charlotte and Gavin.[8] There was also a series-long search for a new "Fanny Cradock" which culminated in the selection of Ravinder Bhogal.[9][failed verification]

Series 4 edit

This series' weekly amateur brigade featured a celebrity and their relatives.[3][failed verification] Janet Street-Porter took on the responsibility of rearing veal calves nicknamed Elton and David in a North Yorkshire farm.[10] Food columnist Tom Parker Bowles appeared on two episodes. In his first appearance, he visited Sardinia to sample casu marzu, a local cheese containing maggots.[11][failed verification] On his second stint, he attempted to cook a whole pig.[12]

Series 5 edit

A fifth series premiered on 3 November 2009 on Channel 4.[13] The series focused on a search for "Britain's best local restaurant".[14][failed verification] 10,000 nominations were narrowed down to 18 restaurant finalists representing nine different cuisines.[15] The second round involved the finalists serving their signature dishes to a panel of diners at their own establishments, followed by a semi-final cook-off at Ramsay's flagship restaurant at Royal Hospital Road in Chelsea.

U.S. version edit

On 30 September 2016, Fox announced that The F Word would go to the United States sometime in 2017.[16] On 3 February 2017, it was announced that it would air for the summer.[17] Each installment of the series will be presented live and will feature surprise guests and VIPs as well as foodie families from across the U.S. battling in cook-offs.[16]

The series premiered on 31 May 2017 on Fox.[18]

Episode guide edit

Series 1 edit

No. Celebrity guest Original U.K. air date
1 Al Murray and Martine McCutcheon 27 Oct 05
2 Joan Collins and Helen Cosgrove 3 Nov 05
3 Christopher Parker 10 Nov 05
4 Rachel Cooke 17 Nov 05
5 Jonathan Ross and Gary Rhodes 24 Nov 05
6 Richard Wilson, Nancy Dell'Olio, Kim Woodburn and Aggie MacKenzie 1 Dec 05
7 Jimmy Carr, Sarah Beeny and Davina McCall 8 Dec 05
8 Colin Jackson, Martine McCutcheon and Janet Street-Porter 15 Dec 05
9 Sharon Osbourne and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall 21 Dec 05

Series 2 edit

No. Celebrity guest Original U.K. air date
1 Kathy Burke and Angela Griffin 21 Jun 06
2 Cliff Richard and Janet Street-Porter 28 Jun 06
3 Darren Gough and Jeremy Clarkson 5 Jul 06
4 Dermot O'Leary and Janet Street-Porter 12 Jul 06
5 John Humphreys and Dean Lennox 19 Jul 06
6 Michelle Collins and Jonathan Ross 26 Jul 06
7 Nick Knowles and Jessie Wallace 2 Aug 06
8 John Thompson 9 Aug 06
9 Janet Street-Porter, David Walliams and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall 16 Aug 06

Series 3 edit

No. Celebrity guest Original U.K. air date
1 Dawn French and Natasha Kaplinsky 8 May 07
2 Ronnie Corbett and Girls Aloud 15 May 07
3 James May and Denise Van Outen 22 May 07
4 Alex James 29 May 07
5 Chris Moyles and Meera Syal 5 Jun 07
6 Ian Botham and Dom Joly 12 Jun 07
7 Jonathan Ross and Sara Cox 19 Jun 07
8 Gok Wan and Cat Deeley 26 Jun 07
9 Ricky Gervais and Johnny Vegas 3 Jul 07

Series 4 edit

Series 5 edit

No. Celebrity guest Original U.K. air date
1 Katie Price 3 Nov 09
2 Lenny Henry 10 Nov 09
3 none 17 Nov 09
4 none 24 Nov 09
5 Rory Bremner 1 Dec 09
6 Kelly Brook 8 Dec 09
7 Ian Wright 15 Dec 09
8 Dita Von Teese and Peter Andre 22 Dec 09
9 Johnny Vaughan, Kate Silverton, and Fay Ripley 29 Dec 09
10 none 5 Jan 10
11 none 6 Jan 10
12 none 7 Jan 10

International broadcasters edit

The show has been broadcast around the world including the following countries:

Country Broadcaster
  Argentina Film&Arts
i-Sat
  Australia 7TWO
Nine Network
[19]
  Canada BBC Canada

Food Network Canada[20]
Casa
  Czech Republic Prima Love
  Finland Jim
MTV3
  Greece Skai TV
  Hong Kong Asia TV
  Hungary Paprika TV
  Ireland TV3
  Italy Rai 5
  Netherlands RTL 4
  New Zealand TV One
  Norway VOX
  Philippines Lifestyle Network
  Poland BBC Lifestyle
  Portugal Sic Radical
  Quebec Casa
  South Africa BBC Lifestyle
  South Korea Dong-a TV
  Sweden Kanal 5
  United States BBC America
FOX

In South Korea, the show was renamed Cook-King[21]

Controversy and criticism edit

Women in the kitchen edit

A major component of series 1 was Ramsay's "Get Women Back in the Kitchen" campaign. In a self-administered survey, he found that three-quarters of women could not cook, with some 78% never cooking a regular evening dinner.[citation needed] Ramsay's findings were met with mixed reactions. While some of his contemporaries, like Nigella Lawson, previously stated similar opinions, other celebrity chefs, like Clarissa Dickson Wright, felt Ramsay's proposition was "rubbish and about ten years out of date".[22] Wright felt that these comments undermined the increased enrollment of women at culinary schools across the United Kingdom. It was claimed that his desire was to help women who want to be able to cook but lack the confidence or motivation.[citation needed]

Animal slaughter edit

  • The second-to-last episode of the first series featured the slaughter of six turkeys that were raised in Ramsay's garden. The scene had been preceded with a content warning. 27 viewers complained about the slaughter, leading to an investigation by Ofcom. Conversely, the media watchdog and Channel 4 also received 18 letters of support to counter the complaints. In 2004, Ramsay had also been criticised by the broadcast watchdog for swearing on-air.
  • In the second series, viewers also saw the slaughter of his two pigs, which were raised throughout the series. They were taken to an abattoir and their brains stunned with an electric shock before being slaughtered.[23] A few months earlier, another Channel 4 series, Jamie's Great Italian Escape (featuring Jamie Oliver) also received similar complaints after it featured the slaughter of a lamb.
  • Similarly the lambs he kept were slaughtered at the end of series three. Warnings were given to viewers before the start of the programme explaining the graphic nature of the footage, there was no censoring of the death or evisceration of the animal.
  • In series four, Ramsay received criticism for "sky fishing" for puffins, having their necks broken and eating the animals' raw flesh and heart of two birds, a local tradition in Iceland. Ofcom received 42 complaints, but no rules were deemed broken. Ofcom "also noted the birds were killed in a humane way with minimal suffering".[24]

DVD releases edit

North America edit

BFS Entertainment has released all five series of The F Word on DVD in Region 1.

DVD name Episodes Release date
The F Word – Series 1 9 17 February 2009
The F Word – Series 2 8[25] 17 March 2009
The F Word – Series 3 9 6 October 2009
The F Word – Series 4 12 20 April 2010
The F Word – Series 5 12 25 October 2011

United Kingdom edit

IMC Vision has released the first four series of The F Word on DVD in Region 2.

DVD name Episodes Release date
The F Word – Series 1 & 2 18 22 October 2007
The F Word – Series 3 9 10 March 2008
The F Word – Series 4 12 27 October 2008

References edit

  1. ^ Plunkett, John (11 June 2008). "Gordon Ramsay's F Word hits series high". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  2. ^ "Grilling Gordon Ramsay". Channel 4. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  3. ^ a b "The Real Gordon Ramsay". Channel 4. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  4. ^ "The Brigades". Channel 4. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  5. ^ "Pork for thought". Channel 4. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  6. ^ "Fast Food Recipes". Channel 4. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  7. ^ "The F Word Brigades - Series 3". Channel 4. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  8. ^ . Farmers Guardian. 22 May 2007. Archived from the original on 8 October 2007. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  9. ^ "Find me a Fanny". Channel 4. 6 September 2007. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  10. ^ Wilson, Ben (22 June 2008). . The Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 11 July 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
  11. ^ "Episode 6 - The Cherry-Oliver brigade". Channel 4. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
  12. ^ . The Scotsman. Archived from the original on 6 October 2008.
  13. ^ . Halifax Evening Courier. 26 September 2009. Archived from the original on 29 September 2009.
  14. ^ "Gordon Ramsay's F Word Series 5". Channel 4.
  15. ^ Tompkins, Michelle (8 January 2010). "It's F-lipping F-antastic!". Swindon Advertiser. Retrieved 16 January 2010.
  16. ^ a b "GORDON RAMSAY'S "THE F WORD" TO AIR LIVE IN 2017 ON FOX". Fox.com. Fox Broadcasting Company. Retrieved 30 September 2016.
  17. ^ "Facebook". Facebook.
  18. ^ Malone, Michael (22 March 2017). "'F Word With Gordon Ramsay' Debuts on Fox May 31". Broadcasting Cable. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  19. ^ 7TWO Schedule 30 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Honey, Kim (29 April 2008). "Gordon Ramsay heats up Star kitchen". Toronto Star. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  21. ^ Cook-King Ramsay(Promo page) 10 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine (Korean), Dong-ah TV, Retrieved on 3 August 2007
  22. ^ Innes, John "Saucy Ramsay pans female chefs", The Scotsman, 24 October 2005
  23. ^ Adams, Guy "Ramsay reduced to tears as pigs go under knife", The Independent, 9 August 2006
  24. ^ "Ramsay cleared over puffin eating". BBC. 15 September 2008. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
  25. ^ Episode 2 of series 2 is not present in the BFS DVDs; the case lists "clearance issues" as the cause of the omission. . Archived from the original on 9 January 2013. Retrieved 15 January 2013.

External links edit

  • Gordon Ramsay's F Word on Channel 4
  • The Daily Record: "How do you eat a plate of gannet? A. Er, like a gannet."
  • BBC - "Complaints as Ramsay kills turkey"
  • The F Word at IMDb

word, british, series, this, article, about, british, cooking, show, american, cooking, show, word, american, series, other, uses, word, word, also, called, gordon, ramsay, word, british, cookery, programme, featuring, chef, gordon, ramsay, programme, covers, . This article is about the British cooking show For the American cooking show see The F Word American TV series For other uses see F word The F Word also called Gordon Ramsay s F Word 1 is a British cookery programme featuring chef Gordon Ramsay The programme covers a wide range of topics from recipes to food preparation and celebrity food fads The programme was made by Optomen Television and aired weekly on Channel 4 The theme tune for the series is The F Word from the Babybird album Bugged The F WordGenreFood magazine Cooking showStarringGordon RamsayGiles Coren Series 1 2 Janet Street Porter Series 2 5 Opening theme The F Word by BabybirdCountry of originUnited KingdomOriginal languageEnglishNo of series5No of episodes51ProductionRunning time44 minutesOriginal releaseNetworkChannel 4Release27 October 2005 2005 10 27 7 January 2010 2010 01 07 RelatedThe F Word American TV series Contents 1 Programme segments 1 1 Series 1 1 2 Series 2 1 3 Series 3 1 4 Series 4 1 5 Series 5 1 6 U S version 2 Episode guide 2 1 Series 1 2 2 Series 2 2 3 Series 3 2 4 Series 4 2 5 Series 5 3 International broadcasters 4 Controversy and criticism 4 1 Women in the kitchen 4 2 Animal slaughter 5 DVD releases 5 1 North America 5 2 United Kingdom 6 References 7 External linksProgramme segments editEach episode is based around Ramsay preparing a three course meal at the F Word restaurant for 50 guests Diners in the restaurant include celebrities who participate in conversations challenges and cook offs with Ramsay Other segments focus on food related topics such as alternative foods visits by Ramsay to help people focus on healthy cooking and eating some visits include taking on the occupations at the workplaces he visits and even Ramsay himself demonstrating recipes of the courses to the home viewers 2 Finally there was a series long feature on home reared livestock or poultry that was ultimately served to F Word diners on the series finale Series 1 edit nbsp Gordon RamsayThe first series is based around the Get Women Back in the Kitchen campaign where Ramsay visited several English households to help women who wanted to improve their culinary skills 3 The Times s restaurant critic Giles Coren and food writer Rachel Cooke acted as field correspondents who presented reports on unique food fads and healthy eating respectively Two or three commis picked from a thousand applicants squared off in each episode to earn a position at one of Ramsay s restaurants Ramsay raised turkeys in his garden so that his children gained a better understanding of where their food came from Chef and television presenter Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall regularly offered tips on raising free range turkeys The turkeys were named after other celebrity chefs for example Ainsley Antony Jamie Delia Gary and Nigella The pudding dessert challenge regularly pitted Ramsay with a celebrity guest with the winner having the honour of serving his or her pudding to the guests at the F Word restaurant Series 2 edit The series theme emphasises the importance of Sunday lunch with Ramsay teaching families how to prepare this meal on a regular basis From the second series onward the restaurant had 50 paying diners served by an amateur brigade If guests found any of their food unsatisfactory they could choose not to pay for that item 4 Janet Street Porter became the series regular field correspondent Giles Coren only appeared in a one off segment on the Pimp That Snack website and phenomenon The celebrity pudding challenge was changed to a general cooking challenge while Ramsay raised pigs in his garden which he named Trinny and Susannah 5 Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall returned to offer advice on raising the pigs Unlike Series 1 the second series of the show was usually transmitted after the 9pm watershed meaning that Ramsay s infamous bad language was no longer bleeped out Series 3 edit This series ran a campaign stating that Fast food doesn t have to mean junk food with Ramsay showing people how to prepare a simple supper in under 30 minutes without having to order takeaways or rely on frozen meals or other convenience food 6 failed verification The best weekly amateur brigade was rewarded with the prestige of cooking at Ramsay s restaurant at Claridge s in the series finale 7 failed verification Ramsay home reared a pair of Charollais Welsh lambs named Charlotte and Gavin 8 There was also a series long search for a new Fanny Cradock which culminated in the selection of Ravinder Bhogal 9 failed verification Series 4 edit This series weekly amateur brigade featured a celebrity and their relatives 3 failed verification Janet Street Porter took on the responsibility of rearing veal calves nicknamed Elton and David in a North Yorkshire farm 10 Food columnist Tom Parker Bowles appeared on two episodes In his first appearance he visited Sardinia to sample casu marzu a local cheese containing maggots 11 failed verification On his second stint he attempted to cook a whole pig 12 Series 5 edit A fifth series premiered on 3 November 2009 on Channel 4 13 The series focused on a search for Britain s best local restaurant 14 failed verification 10 000 nominations were narrowed down to 18 restaurant finalists representing nine different cuisines 15 The second round involved the finalists serving their signature dishes to a panel of diners at their own establishments followed by a semi final cook off at Ramsay s flagship restaurant at Royal Hospital Road in Chelsea U S version edit Main article The F Word American TV series On 30 September 2016 Fox announced that The F Word would go to the United States sometime in 2017 16 On 3 February 2017 it was announced that it would air for the summer 17 Each installment of the series will be presented live and will feature surprise guests and VIPs as well as foodie families from across the U S battling in cook offs 16 The series premiered on 31 May 2017 on Fox 18 Episode guide editSeries 1 edit No Celebrity guest Original U K air date1 Al Murray and Martine McCutcheon 27 Oct 052 Joan Collins and Helen Cosgrove 3 Nov 053 Christopher Parker 10 Nov 054 Rachel Cooke 17 Nov 055 Jonathan Ross and Gary Rhodes 24 Nov 056 Richard Wilson Nancy Dell Olio Kim Woodburn and Aggie MacKenzie 1 Dec 057 Jimmy Carr Sarah Beeny and Davina McCall 8 Dec 058 Colin Jackson Martine McCutcheon and Janet Street Porter 15 Dec 059 Sharon Osbourne and Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall 21 Dec 05Series 2 edit No Celebrity guest Original U K air date1 Kathy Burke and Angela Griffin 21 Jun 062 Cliff Richard and Janet Street Porter 28 Jun 063 Darren Gough and Jeremy Clarkson 5 Jul 064 Dermot O Leary and Janet Street Porter 12 Jul 065 John Humphreys and Dean Lennox 19 Jul 066 Michelle Collins and Jonathan Ross 26 Jul 067 Nick Knowles and Jessie Wallace 2 Aug 068 John Thompson 9 Aug 069 Janet Street Porter David Walliams and Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall 16 Aug 06Series 3 edit No Celebrity guest Original U K air date1 Dawn French and Natasha Kaplinsky 8 May 072 Ronnie Corbett and Girls Aloud 15 May 073 James May and Denise Van Outen 22 May 074 Alex James 29 May 075 Chris Moyles and Meera Syal 5 Jun 076 Ian Botham and Dom Joly 12 Jun 077 Jonathan Ross and Sara Cox 19 Jun 078 Gok Wan and Cat Deeley 26 Jun 079 Ricky Gervais and Johnny Vegas 3 Jul 07Series 4 edit No Celebrity guest Original U K air date1 Wendi Peters and Geri Halliwell 13 May 082 Krishnan Guru Murthy and Kate Garraway 20 May 083 McFly and Ben Miller 27 May 084 Melanie Blatt Liam Gallagher Nicole Appleton and David Blunkett 3 Jun 085 Paddy McGuinness Dara o Briain and Jamelia 10 Jun 086 Neneh Cherry Andrea Oliver John Prescott Tom Parker Bowles and Dannii Minogue 17 Jun 087 Angela Griffin and Meat Loaf 24 Jun 088 Matt Dawson Joanne Salley Edith Bowman and Tom Parker Bowles 1 Jul 089 Mica Paris and Jo Brand 8 Jul 0810 Christopher Biggins Jessica Hynes and Rob Brydon 15 Jul 0811 Jon Snow Erin O Connor and Emma Bunton 22 Jul 0812 Graham Norton 29 Jul 08Series 5 edit No Celebrity guest Original U K air date1 Katie Price 3 Nov 092 Lenny Henry 10 Nov 093 none 17 Nov 094 none 24 Nov 095 Rory Bremner 1 Dec 096 Kelly Brook 8 Dec 097 Ian Wright 15 Dec 098 Dita Von Teese and Peter Andre 22 Dec 099 Johnny Vaughan Kate Silverton and Fay Ripley 29 Dec 0910 none 5 Jan 1011 none 6 Jan 1012 none 7 Jan 10International broadcasters editThe show has been broadcast around the world including the following countries Country Broadcaster nbsp Argentina Film amp Artsi Sat nbsp Australia 7TWONine Network 19 nbsp Canada BBC Canada Food Network Canada 20 Casa nbsp Czech Republic Prima Love nbsp Finland JimMTV3 nbsp Greece Skai TV nbsp Hong Kong Asia TV nbsp Hungary Paprika TV nbsp Ireland TV3 nbsp Italy Rai 5 nbsp Netherlands RTL 4 nbsp New Zealand TV One nbsp Norway VOX nbsp Philippines Lifestyle Network nbsp Poland BBC Lifestyle nbsp Portugal Sic Radical nbsp Quebec Casa nbsp South Africa BBC Lifestyle nbsp South Korea Dong a TV nbsp Sweden Kanal 5 nbsp United States BBC AmericaFOXIn South Korea the show was renamed Cook King 21 Controversy and criticism editWomen in the kitchen edit A major component of series 1 was Ramsay s Get Women Back in the Kitchen campaign In a self administered survey he found that three quarters of women could not cook with some 78 never cooking a regular evening dinner citation needed Ramsay s findings were met with mixed reactions While some of his contemporaries like Nigella Lawson previously stated similar opinions other celebrity chefs like Clarissa Dickson Wright felt Ramsay s proposition was rubbish and about ten years out of date 22 Wright felt that these comments undermined the increased enrollment of women at culinary schools across the United Kingdom It was claimed that his desire was to help women who want to be able to cook but lack the confidence or motivation citation needed Animal slaughter edit The second to last episode of the first series featured the slaughter of six turkeys that were raised in Ramsay s garden The scene had been preceded with a content warning 27 viewers complained about the slaughter leading to an investigation by Ofcom Conversely the media watchdog and Channel 4 also received 18 letters of support to counter the complaints In 2004 Ramsay had also been criticised by the broadcast watchdog for swearing on air In the second series viewers also saw the slaughter of his two pigs which were raised throughout the series They were taken to an abattoir and their brains stunned with an electric shock before being slaughtered 23 A few months earlier another Channel 4 series Jamie s Great Italian Escape featuring Jamie Oliver also received similar complaints after it featured the slaughter of a lamb Similarly the lambs he kept were slaughtered at the end of series three Warnings were given to viewers before the start of the programme explaining the graphic nature of the footage there was no censoring of the death or evisceration of the animal In series four Ramsay received criticism for sky fishing for puffins having their necks broken and eating the animals raw flesh and heart of two birds a local tradition in Iceland Ofcom received 42 complaints but no rules were deemed broken Ofcom also noted the birds were killed in a humane way with minimal suffering 24 DVD releases editNorth America edit BFS Entertainment has released all five series of The F Word on DVD in Region 1 DVD name Episodes Release dateThe F Word Series 1 9 17 February 2009The F Word Series 2 8 25 17 March 2009The F Word Series 3 9 6 October 2009The F Word Series 4 12 20 April 2010The F Word Series 5 12 25 October 2011United Kingdom edit IMC Vision has released the first four series of The F Word on DVD in Region 2 DVD name Episodes Release dateThe F Word Series 1 amp 2 18 22 October 2007The F Word Series 3 9 10 March 2008The F Word Series 4 12 27 October 2008References edit Plunkett John 11 June 2008 Gordon Ramsay s F Word hits series high The Guardian London Retrieved 25 May 2010 Grilling Gordon Ramsay Channel 4 Retrieved 13 May 2008 a b The Real Gordon Ramsay Channel 4 Retrieved 13 May 2008 The Brigades Channel 4 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Pork for thought Channel 4 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Fast Food Recipes Channel 4 Retrieved 13 May 2008 The F Word Brigades Series 3 Channel 4 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Welsh lambs to star in Gordon Ramsay s F Word Farmers Guardian 22 May 2007 Archived from the original on 8 October 2007 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Find me a Fanny Channel 4 6 September 2007 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Wilson Ben 22 June 2008 The kitchen thinker are you for veal The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 July 2008 Retrieved 23 June 2008 Episode 6 The Cherry Oliver brigade Channel 4 Retrieved 23 June 2008 Scotland on Tuesday The Scotsman Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Chef Gordon Ramsay spotted at Calderdale restaurant Halifax Evening Courier 26 September 2009 Archived from the original on 29 September 2009 Gordon Ramsay s F Word Series 5 Channel 4 Tompkins Michelle 8 January 2010 It s F lipping F antastic Swindon Advertiser Retrieved 16 January 2010 a b GORDON RAMSAY S THE F WORD TO AIR LIVE IN 2017 ON FOX Fox com Fox Broadcasting Company Retrieved 30 September 2016 Facebook Facebook Malone Michael 22 March 2017 F Word With Gordon Ramsay Debuts on Fox May 31 Broadcasting Cable Retrieved 22 March 2017 7TWO Schedule Archived 30 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Honey Kim 29 April 2008 Gordon Ramsay heats up Star kitchen Toronto Star Retrieved 25 May 2010 Cook King Ramsay Promo page Archived 10 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Korean Dong ah TV Retrieved on 3 August 2007 Innes John Saucy Ramsay pans female chefs The Scotsman 24 October 2005 Adams Guy Ramsay reduced to tears as pigs go under knife The Independent 9 August 2006 Ramsay cleared over puffin eating BBC 15 September 2008 Retrieved 16 September 2020 Episode 2 of series 2 is not present in the BFS DVDs the case lists clearance issues as the cause of the omission The F Word DVD news Box Art and Details for the F Word the Complete Collection Set TVShowsOnDVD com Archived from the original on 9 January 2013 Retrieved 15 January 2013 External links editGordon Ramsay s F Word on Channel 4 The Daily Record How do you eat a plate of gannet A Er like a gannet Macleans ca You go Gordon Ramsay BBC Complaints as Ramsay kills turkey The F Word at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The F Word British TV series amp oldid 1179680368, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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