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Gaming fans bring electric energy to Rotterdam as TwitchCon arrives
Gaming fans bring electric energy to Rotterdam as TwitchCon arrives

eNCA

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • eNCA

Gaming fans bring electric energy to Rotterdam as TwitchCon arrives

ROTTERDAM - A few metro stops from Rotterdam's Ahoy Arena, chatter is already flowing among gaming fans -- TwitchCon passes swinging from their necks, animal ears perched on their heads. The Dutch city is hosting TwitchCon this weekend -- the annual event run by United States streaming giant Twitch -- where fans can meet their favourite creators and join the celebrations. Thousands of fans from across Europe turned out to meet their favourite creators and watch live e-sports events, including Fortnite and Elden Ring, staged by Twitch celebrities. "Most of the work that happens on Twitch is online, it's digital," said Mary Kish, a marketing director at Twitch. "You're streaming with other people, you're hanging out with your community for many hours a week. "What happens at TwitchCon is the culmination of all of that goodwill and all of that joy in person at a con, and the energy is electric," said the 39-year-old, who is from the United States. French streamers JL Tomy and Etoiles -- who have 1.3 million and 1.2 million followers -- were also among those in attendance. "It's fun because there are lots of other partner streamers who are like me," said JL Tomy, 28, whose real name is Toma Abdellaoui. "I'm very much a homebody," said the streamer, whose content focuses on GTA, Valorant, League of Legends and e-sports competitions. Acquired by Amazon in 2014 for roughly $842 million, Twitch is the world's leading streaming platform for gaming, with more than 2.5 million hourly viewers on average. While gaming remains core to Twitch since its 2011 debut, the platform has broadened its reach, drawing in entertainment, sports and political figures, as well as livestreaming other major events. Kish said that Twitch's "Just Chatting" category is now its largest non-gaming segment. "There is a massive variety of other people doing other things. Like food and drink, where people are cooking... people who are showing their aquariums in their houses," Kish said. Reflecting that diversity, visitors attended theatre workshops, built Lego models, or watched the annual Drag Queen show, a TwitchCon staple. TwitchCon's next North American edition is scheduled for October 17–19, 2025, in San Diego.

Kristen Kish's Return To Her Birth Country Was Beautifully Complicated
Kristen Kish's Return To Her Birth Country Was Beautifully Complicated

Refinery29

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Refinery29

Kristen Kish's Return To Her Birth Country Was Beautifully Complicated

When Kristen Kish, winner of Top Chef Season 10 and now its host, traveled to South Korea in June 2022, she was nervous. Adopted at four months by an American family, the celebrity chef had never returned to her birth country — and wasn't sure what she would find, feel, or even understand about a place that was hers and yet also wasn't. 'I thought I was supposed to feel this wave of emotion of 'Oh my god, I'm home.' I thought I was supposed to look out into the world of Korean people and feel like I belonged. But it didn't happen,' she tells me over a lavish spread at Borit Gogae, a cozy Korean restaurant in Los Angeles' Koreatown that specializes in banchan. 'I felt more like a tourist and a visitor, which I certainly was and am. But I felt guilty for not feeling those feelings.' It took her a couple days to realize she couldn't force a moment of emotional revelation. 'Me not feeling anything doesn't mean that I have any less respect for where I come from. I need time to discover it,' she says. But there was one moment that gave her what she didn't know she needed. While visiting a hand-carved stamp shop, she decided to get one made with her Korean name. When the shopowner asked her what it was, she hesitated, nervous to tell her adoption story. 'I didn't want to feel like I was being judged. But he said, 'You belong here,' she pauses, her voice catching. 'That for me was the moment of the trip.' The story didn't make it into her debut memoir, Accidentally On Purpose, released last month, but it speaks to the heart of her improbable journey — one shaped by chance and intention, clarity and ambiguity. In the book, Kish shares more about growing up as a Korean adoptee in a white Midwestern family, navigating her queer and Korean identities, and rising to become one of the most recognized chefs on television. In our first episode of Fam Style, Kish and I sit down to talk about how Korean food has helped her connect to her heritage, the idea of belonging, and the layered journey of coming home — all over a meal that tastes like a memory. Fam Style spotlights Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) changemakers across entertainment, food, art, and culture. Over shared meals at AAPI-owned restaurants, we sit down with creators, artists, and innovators to talk about identity, ambition, community, and the stories that shape us. Through intimate conversations and the language of food, we highlight the nuance, joy, and resilience within the AAPI experience — one dish at a time.

‘Top Chef's' Kristen Kish doesn't hesitate to talk about kitchen sexism in her new memoir
‘Top Chef's' Kristen Kish doesn't hesitate to talk about kitchen sexism in her new memoir

Los Angeles Times

time10-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

‘Top Chef's' Kristen Kish doesn't hesitate to talk about kitchen sexism in her new memoir

Here's Looking at You's Lien Ta talks about the death of chef Jonathan Whitener, chef Jonathan Gil talks about running a restaurant with Stage IV cancer, and the chef trying to get as many Angelenos as possible to try Sri Lankan food. Also, our nominees for the James Beard Media Awards. I'm Laurie Ochoa, general manager of L.A. Times Food, with this week's Tasting Notes. Nearly every female chef I've met hates to talk about being a female chef. Just, chef, please. It's a stance that Dominique Crenn asserted when she won the World's 50 Best Restaurants' award for 'world's best female chef' in 2016. 'She famously called it 'stupid,'' Heather Platt wrote last year in this paper of Crenn's feelings about her award. ''A chef is a chef.'' Even with the stories of yelling, groping and much worse behavior emerging since the #MeToo reckoning, the knowledge that the stresses of the industry also take a toll on men has conditioned some of us to believe that while women may not have an easy time in the business, they can still advance in the industry if they are tough enough. Here in Los Angeles, after all, it's not hard to name female chefs who lead their own restaurants, including Socalo's Susan Feniger and Mary Sue Milliken, n/naka's Niki Nakayama and Carole Iida-Nakayama, A.O.C.'s Suzanne Goin, Mozza's Nancy Silverton, Playa Provision's Brooke Williamson, Jar's Suzanne Tract, Kismet's Sara Kramer and Sarah Hymanson, Highly Likely's Kat Turner and many, many more than the handful of veterans who were making their way to the top during the 1970s, '80s and '90s. Indeed, some of the war stories we've frequently heard about women in restaurant kitchens have a quaint quality. In 1983, Ruth Reichl wrote a feature story for California magazine that began with the story of Milliken's first attempt (ultimately successful) to work at Chicago's Le Perroquet. 'Jovan Trboyevic, the owner, said he would never hire a pretty girl like me — it would cause chaos in the kitchen,' Milliken told Reichl. 'He offered me a job as a hat check girl instead.' By the time current 'Top Chef' host Kristen Kish was establishing herself in Chicago and Boston restaurants, 'hat check girl' was a job associated with black-and-white movies, not actual restaurant work. So I took notice when Kish, in her new memoir 'Accidentally On Purpose,' devoted the better part of a chapter to the disrespect she received in a male-dominated kitchen after she won Season 10 of 'Top Chef' in 2013. It was so bad that less than a year after attaining what she'd thought of as her dream job — chef de cuisine at a fine-dining destination restaurant, Boston's now-closed Menton — she quit. We're talking about a chef who proved to be the epitome of calm and unflappability in the midst of reality TV drama during her season as a 'Top Chef' contestant and the ultimate team player when she declined to blame a fellow contestant for the dish that led to Kish being eliminated from the competition. (Kish worked her way back into the game she ultimately won thanks to her cooking on 'Last Chance Kitchen.') She's also rappelled down a waterfall to harvest watercress in Panama for the National Geographic series 'Restaurants at the End of the World.' The irony is that Menton, Boston's first Relais & Châteaux restaurant, was a woman-owned restaurant. It was one of several businesses overseen by the hospitality company founded by Barbara Lynch, who was forced to close all of her restaurants last year because of a number of factors, including the fallout from a 2023 investigation of workplace abuse by New York Times reporter Julia Moskin. In her book, Kish does not question any of the accounts of employees who shared their stories with Moskin and others in the press about their boss (the incidents detailed appear to have happened after Kish left the company in 2014). Still, she views Lynch as a supportive mentor who gave her credit for dishes she created and was the one to suggest her as a contestant to 'Top Chef's' producers. Instead, Kish blames her issues in Menton's kitchen on the ungenerous attitudes of her male colleagues (while emphasizing that she has 'worked with many wonderful men over the years') and on a corporate decision to give her the top job at Menton without the power to make menu changes and subjecting her to a 'training period.' 'Barbara, along with the company's director of operations and its wine director — both of whom were women — were pulling for me to have the job' after 'Top Chef,' she wrote in the book. 'But there were also two men in the upper echelon of the organization who were not in agreement and didn't buy that I was ready for it.' The experience was the opposite of what Kish had experienced at another of Lynch's restaurants, the 10-seat Stir, where the menu changed nightly with the seasons and the chefs cooked as they talked and joked with customers across the counter — great training for her 'Top Chef' run. Yet at Menton, without the full support of the company, 'the team, mostly men,' Kish writes, felt free to be 'recalcitrant at best and more often perniciously undermining. ... Sometimes I was disregarded or ignored. ... Later, on my rare days off or when I was traveling ... they were changing dishes without my knowledge. ... It was a sort of psychological warfare for which I wasn't prepared. Not a single cell in my body wanted to engage in this kind of ... conflict.' Among the untrue rumors she heard about herself was that the only reason she had the Menton job was because she was having an affair with Lynch. 'I don't know if one of the male chefs from the company would have walked back into something like that,' Kish told me onstage when I interviewed her and 'Top Chef' head judge Tom Colicchio at last month's L.A. Times Festival of Books. 'They probably would have been praised and celebrated. There were people who wanted my position and my job. And I don't think [many] at the top echelon of the restaurant actually thought I was going to do well.' Then there was the time she and Lynch went to a gathering in London for Relais & Châteaux restaurants and encountered a male chef who bluntly told Kish, 'You're too pretty to be a chef.' Suddenly, the gulf between Kish and Milliken decades earlier wasn't so vast. Kish writes that Lynch instantly scolded the male chef for his insult: 'She told him in no uncertain terms to get ... out of there and leave us alone. And while I felt protected, it also made me sad. It was very clear that this was something Barbara had probably been dealing with her whole career. There was almost a rote reaction that many women in many fields would likely recognize — one they needed to cultivate in order to survive and succeed. Always playing defense, working harder, stirring up responses to pull out when some entitled overbearing dude shows up, seeming to think he matters more.' Of course, Kish's story has a happy ending. Leaving Menton could have ended her career as a chef since she was getting so many offers to appear on television ('Iron Chef: Quest for an Iron Legend,' 'Fast Foodies' and 'Restaurants at the End of the World'), something she is very good at. But she now oversees the restaurant Arlo Grey by Kristen Kish in Austin, while balancing life with her wife, Bianca Dusic, and hosting duties on Bravo's 'Top Chef.' I'll have more to share from my conversation with Kish and Colicchio in next week's newsletter. Meanwhile, here's what else has been happening ... During a wide-ranging interview with Food's Stephanie Breijo, restaurateur Lien Ta, the founder of Here's Looking at You, shared how mentally exhausting the restaurant business can be after revealing this week that she is closing her Koreatown restaurant on June 13. Of course, the slow pandemic recovery and erratic business after the recent fires factored into her decision, but it was the sudden death last year of her co-founder, the chef Jonathan Whitener, that weighed most on Ta. 'Eating his food,' Ta told Breijo, 'lifted my soul. ... The truth is that I created this restaurant with Jonathan, and he's eternally my collaborator. The remaining team are all in agreement that we want this to remain Jonathan's restaurant. We are missing our leader. Signing on for another five-year lease doesn't make sense when your leader is gone.' Ta also talked about the 'horrible dread' she felt at times 'wondering if anyone was going to book a reservation or come in at all, and who we were going to cut [from service].' 'I was definitely buried in a lot of grief,' she added. 'Sometimes I wasn't really sure what to focus on this last year, to be honest … a lot of restaurant owners are sort of programmed to always find solutions, to get through the day or the week or whatever your metric is. I've been doing that for a long time.' Breijo also had an intense conversation with chef Joshua Gil, who has Stage IV cancer and is in a contract dispute with his his former Mírame and Mírate business partner, but still recently was able to transform a strip-mall Mongolian barbecue restaurant into a Baja-style seafood spot called Three Flames with 'tacos, burgers, loaded fries and some of the city's most creative new tostadas and specials' while keeping the Mongolian barbecue. 'I'm a very stubborn a—,' Gil told Breijo. 'I like telling people, 'I'm Mexican. I don't know how to give up.'' One concession to his illness is that he is leaning hard on Anthony Rodriguez, who worked with Gil at Mírame and Mírate. 'These days he sees Rodriguez as the chef,' Breijo wrote, 'and himself as a cook who sometimes creates recipes.' 'I've been sitting with our identities: who we are, our images of who we are,' Gil said. 'I haven't donned the [chef's] whites in a long time, and yet I'm still referred to as 'chef.' We never lose that. It doesn't matter how away from the kitchen you are. You're constantly being called 'chef' by those that know you as such, and it's [hard] holding on to that livelihood, that lifestyle.' Nominations for the James Beard Media Awards, covering books, broadcast media and journalism, were announced on Wednesday. Among the many excellent cookbooks and broadcast, video and audio shows nominated is 'The SalviSoul Cookbook: Salvadoran Recipes and the Women Who Preserve Them' by L.A.'s Karla Tatiana Vasquez. As former Food reporter Cindy Carcamo wrote in her profile of Vasquez last year, 'SalviSoul' is 'the first-ever Salvadoran cookbook to appear on a Big Five imprint.' Food editor Daniel Hernandez talked with Vasquez after news of the nomination came out for our Cooking newsletter, which will publish tomorrow. (Subscribe for free here.) We also received the happy news that three of our own Food journalists are nominated for Beard awards. Restaurant critic Bill Addison is nominated in the dining and travel category for his recent guide to dining in San Francisco. Food's senior editor Danielle Dorsey is nominated in the home cooking category for her story 'The warmth of Black traditions around the Thanksgiving table.' And columnist Jenn Harris is up for the Craig Claiborne Distinguished Criticism Award. Her nominated stories are reviews of Sophy's Cambodian restaurant in Long Beach and Star Leaf in Pasadena, plus a column on why chili crisp and chili crunch are terms that should not be trademarked. The winners will be announced at a ceremony in Chicago on June 14.

When Kristen Kish, ‘Top Chef' Host, Hits the Mute Button
When Kristen Kish, ‘Top Chef' Host, Hits the Mute Button

New York Times

time26-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

When Kristen Kish, ‘Top Chef' Host, Hits the Mute Button

In her new memoir, 'Accidentally on Purpose,' Kristen Kish reflects on her childhood as a Korean adoptee in Michigan, coming out as gay in her late 20s, winning Season 10 of 'Top Chef' and struggling with anxiety. Yet Kish, who now hosts the Bravo competition series, is known for her laid-back interactions with contestants. 'If my anxiety level was at a million growing up and being a young adult, it is certainly now in the hundreds,' she said. 'It has drastically reduced because I've given time and energy to managing it in the best way I can.' Kish, 41, in her book recounts an upbringing filled with meatloaf, casseroles and Sunkist candies. Such down-to-earth predilections have stuck with her despite her upscale culinary career. 'People ask what my guilty pleasure food is,' she said. 'I don't feel any guilt around anything. I want it, I like it, it's delicious — I have no shame.' In a phone interview last month, the globe-trotting restaurateur shared her favorite travel snacks, how she keeps in touch with her parents and the thing you'll probably see her doing while she's cooking. These are edited excerpts. One of my favorite airplane snacks. The honey mustard flavor is specifically glorious, especially when you're flying — you know how they say your taste buds go a bit muted. These are salty, there's enough sweetness from the mustard, and the crunch is exceptional. I would rather eat five little packs of these over one meal they're offering. I can't live without my evening WhatsApp. That can last two minutes or 45, it depends on the day and how much we have to say. Sometimes we're not saying anything at all. I worry about them. They're fine, they're healthy, they live their life, they probably have a busier social calendar than I do. But when I go to bed, I need to know that I saw their faces. I always travel with a backward flat brim and a forward dad hat. I'll wear one and have another hanging off my backpack. The backward hat's for walking around. The forward hat's for airplanes and cars (I can't lean back with the backward). It's purely mental stability, like a security blanket. You know when you're watching something and all of a sudden you're like, 'Oh my God, the noise is just too much'? I will sit there and mute the TV and keep watching it. It's not that I need 10 minutes of quiet, I just need a few seconds of relief. I also definitely mute during commercials. There was a point when I wore kitchen clogs, which I found uncomfortable. Then, Birkenstocks, but your heel's exposed. Your sock's going to get soaked, especially when you're flooding the floors to clean at the end of the night. Blundstones are waterproof and they look good. I can go from the airplane to out in the wild, right into the kitchen and I feel like they fit all those scenarios. When I opened my restaurant in the Line hotel in Austin, it was in every single room. My wife had to tell me what it was because I was like, 'What are these wooden sticks in here for?' I travel with it and when I'm in dressing rooms, studios and hotels, it just makes everything smell familiar to me, regardless of where I am. When I'm eating different flavors throughout the day — snacking on things or trying 15 dishes on 'Top Chef' — at a certain point, my mouth starts to just feel gross. Brushing my teeth, tongue scraping and flossing help me reset a little bit. A lot of women's pants have little pockets that go down maybe three inches. I need them to touch my thigh. Because I'm not a purse kind of person, I like to fit my wallet, keys and mints all in my pocket if I can. I have a stylist for any clothes that I wear in public or on television. When fending for myself, I'm going to wear pants that are two times too big, comfortable and with deep pockets. Lululemon dance studio relaxed fit mid-rise cargo pants are so comfortable. Not only do they have deep pockets, they also have cargo and back pockets. My preference is the stick. I always carry it in my left pocket; that's just where it lives. I don't leave home without it and it's stashed in random places in our house — on my desk, in the junk drawer downstairs, two in our bedroom. I buy them in bulk and take great pride in finishing them. My mom used to tell me, 'You look like I look like a cow chewing gum.' But it keeps cadence and there's something in the rhythm of chewing where if I'm doing a task, especially if I'm cooking for hours, it's a place for the anxiety to go. You know, how people relax with knee bouncing.

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