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Jamie Oliver

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English chef and restaurateur (born 1975)
This article is about the celebrity chef. For the Spanish boxer, seeJaime Oliver.
Not to be confused withJames Oliver.

Jamie Oliver
Oliver in 2014
Born
Jamie Trevor Oliver

(1975-05-27)27 May 1975 (age 50)
EducationNewport Free Grammar School
Westminster Kingsway College
Spouse
Juliette Norton
(m. 2000)
Children5
Culinary career
Cooking style
Current restaurants
    • Fifteen
    • Jamie's Italian
    • Jamie Oliver Catherine Street
    • Jamie Oliver Kitchen
YouTube information
Channel
Years active2006–present
Genres
  • Cooking
  • cooking tutorials
Subscribers6.11 million
Views1.039 billion+
Last updated: 24 October 2025[needs update]
Websitejamieoliver.com

Jamie Trevor OliverMBEOSI (born 27 May 1975) is an Englishcelebrity chef, restaurateur and cookbook author.[1] He is known for his casual approach to cuisine, and he has fronted many television shows and opened numerous restaurants.

Oliver reached the public eye when hisBBC Two seriesThe Naked Chef premiered in 1999. In 2005, he started a campaign,Feed Me Better, to introduce schoolchildren to healthier foods, which was later backed by the government. He was the owner of a restaurant chain, Jamie Oliver Restaurant Group, which opened its first restaurant, Jamie's Italian, The chain went intoadministration in May 2019.[2]

Oliver is the second-best-selling British author, behindJ. K. Rowling, and the best-selling British non-fiction author. As of February 2019[update], Oliver had sold more than 14.55 million books. HisTED Talk won him the 2010TED Prize. In June 2003, Oliver was made aMember of the Order of the British Empire for "services to the hospitality industry".

Early life

[edit]

Jamie Trevor Oliver[3] was born and raised inClavering, Essex.[4][5] His parents, Trevor and Sally (née Palmer) Oliver, ran a pub and restaurant, the Cricketers, where he practised cooking in the kitchen with his parents.[6] He has a sister, and was educated atNewport Free Grammar School, inNewport.[7]

He left school at the age of 16 with twoGCSE qualifications in art and geology[8] and went on to attend Westminster Technical College (nowWestminster Kingsway College).[6] He earned aCity & GuildsNational Vocational Qualification (NVQ) inhome economics.[9]

Career

[edit]
Oliver cooking at one of theScandic Hotels in 2014

Oliver's first job was apastry chef atAntonio Carluccio's Neal Street restaurant, where he first gained experience at preparingItalian cuisine, and developed a relationship with his mentorGennaro Contaldo; later in his career Oliver employed Contaldo to help run his chain of high street restaurants, Jamie's Italian.[10] Oliver moved to theRiver Cafe in Fulham, as asous-chef. He was noticed there by theBBC in 1997, after making an unscripted appearance in the documentaryChristmas at the River Cafe.[11]

In 1999, Oliver'sBBC Two showThe Naked Chef debuted, and his cookbook became a bestseller in the United Kingdom.[12] That same year, he was invited to prepare lunch for Prime MinisterTony Blair at10 Downing Street.[12] After three series ofNaked Chef programmes (The Naked Chef,Return of the Naked Chef andHappy Days with The Naked Chef) for the BBC, Oliver moved toChannel 4 in 2002,[13] following BBC Two's decision not to renew his contract with the network, after Oliver had appeared in similarly-themed TV cookery advertisements forSainsbury's supermarket.[14]

His first Channel 4 series was a documentary,Jamie's Kitchen, which began in November 2002, and followed the setting up of Fifteen restaurant in London.

Oliver'sholding company, Jamie Oliver Holdings Ltd., earned enough for Oliver to be listed onThe Sunday Times list of richest Britons under 30 in 2005.[15][16] Oliver's net worth was estimated in 2014 at £240 million.[17] A decade later, his net worth was estimated at £173 million.[18] Oliver was chosen byDisney Pixar to provide the voice of the health inspector in the UK version ofRatatouille.[19] In December 2009, Oliver received the 2010TED Prize.[20] He hostedJamie's 15 Minute Meals onChannel 4, which aired for 40 episodes in 2012.[21]

Restaurants

[edit]
Burgers at Jamie's Italian atOxford

Oliver's restaurant Fifteen, in Westland Place, London continued to train young adults who have a disadvantaged background for careers in the restaurant business until its closure on 21 May 2019.[22][23]

The Fifteen Foundation opened further restaurants inAmsterdam,Cornwall (May 2006) andFifteen Melbourne, Australia (September 2006). The Melbourne restaurant cut ties with Oliver in 2011. The London, Amsterdam and Cornwall restaurants closed in 2019 when his restaurant group went into administration.

In June 2008, Oliver launched a restaurant, Jamie's Italian, his first high street business venture, inOxford, England.[24] At its peak, there were 42 Jamie's Italian restaurants in the UK. The brand was franchised via the Jamie Oliver Restaurant Group (JORG), and included branches in Australia (which Oliver part-bought back in November 2016 after its founders went bankrupt),[25] Canada, Cyprus, Hong Kong, Iceland, Ireland, Qatar, Russia, Taiwan, Turkey, the UAE and Singapore.[26]

In 2011, Oliver, an advocate of cooking meals from scratch and using local produce, caused controversy after it turned out the sauces used in Jamie's Italian in Glasgow were from an industrial park almost 400 miles (640 km) away inBicester.[27] That same year, he came under fire for lack of food safety protections in his restaurants and illnesses associated with under-cooking mincemeat that may have been contaminated withE. coli.[28]

In 2011, Oliver set up Barbecoa, a barbecued meat-based restaurant with his friend, American barbecue expert Adam Perry Lang. There were two outlets, both in London, one in Piccadilly and a second inSt Pauls. In 2014 the Piccadilly outlet voluntarily closed for 24 hours after hygiene inspectors gave it the second-lowest rating.The Times reported they had found mouse droppings, mouldy carcasses and out-of-date meat.[29] In February 2018, JORG confirmed that they had "instructed a firm ofreal estate agents to ascertain the potential value and market suitability of two of our sites".[30] On 19 February 2018, Barbecoa Ltd went into administration, with Oliver immediately buying back the St Paul's site in a pre-packed agreement via a new subsidiary.[31]

In 2014, he partnered withToronto restaurateur King Street Co. and executive chef Rob Gentile to open 10 planned branches of Jamie's Italian, including a location inYorkdale Shopping Centre. The business collapsed in 2020.[32]

In January 2017, chief executive Simon Blagden announced the closure of six restaurants in the UK affecting 120 jobs, at sites inAberdeen,Cheltenham,Exeter,Royal Tunbridge Wells, and in London atLudgate andRichmond.[26]

In January 2018, as part of an agreement with creditors to secure £71.5M of debt, JORG proposed to enter the UK company Jamie's Italian Ltd into acompany voluntary arrangement, seeking rent reductions on eight outlets and closing a further 12 inBath,Bristol,Bluewater,Chelmsford,Harrogate,Kingston,Milton Keynes,Reading, andSt Albans, andGreenwich,Piccadilly andThreadneedle Street in London. As part of the agreement, court papers revealed that Jamie's Italian had debts of £71.5m, including £2.3 million in wages owed to staff; £30.2 million of overdrafts and loans; £41.3 million owed to landlords,HM Revenue and Customs, suppliers and other creditors; with £47 million of the debts covered by loans fromHSBC Bank and Oliver's other companies.[33][34][35]

The group went intoadministration on 21 May 2019 with 22 of 25 restaurants closed and 1,000 jobs lost.[36] Jamie's Italian restaurants and Jamie Oliver's Diner atGatwick Airport continued operations until they were sold to catering companySSP Group. Jamie Oliver's Fifteen Cornwall at Watergate Bay, as well as 61 overseas locations and the catering services operated byAramark in the U.S., are all operated by franchisees so they were unaffected.[37]

In January 2020,KPMG, the firm administrators, said that most of the £80 million Oliver's restaurant chain owed after its collapse in May 2019 will not be recovered. Hundreds of suppliers, as well as some town councils, will bear the brunt of the losses.[38] In 2020, anemployment tribunal ruled that Oliver's restaurants broke labour laws by failing to consult employees prior to making them redundant.[39][40]

In November 2023, Oliver opened a new restaurant in London, his first since the collapse of his restaurant chain. Jamie Oliver Catherine Street was launched in partnership with Andrew Lloyd Webber’s LW Theatres at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.[41] In March 2024, Oliver opened a restaurant inSerbia,Jamie's Italian Belgrade, his first in this part of Europe, located in theBelgrade Waterfront quarter.[42]

Television shows

[edit]
YearProgrammeRunning timeDescription/Notes
1999–2001The Naked Chef3 series
6+8+8 episodes
(~29 min.)
+ 3 Christmas specials
(~29 min.)
Oliver's first series. It originally ran for three series plus three subsequent Christmas specials. The title was a reference to the simplicity of Oliver's recipes and has nothing to do with nudity. Oliver has frequently admitted that he was not entirely happy with the title, which was devised by producerPatricia Llewellyn.
In the UK edit of the show, the opening titles include a clip of him telling an unseen questioner, "No way! It's not me, it's the food!" The success of the programme led to the booksThe Naked Chef (1999)Return of the Naked Chef (2000) andHappy Days with the Naked Chef (2001).
Pukka TukkaChannel 4 special (2000)
2002Oliver's Twist2 series
26+26 episodes
(~23 min.)
Following the success of his first seriesThe Naked Chef Oliver produced 52 episodes for his new show, the title of which is a pun on Dickens' famous novel. The series follows Oliver inviting friends and relatives over for food and travelling around London - visiting markets and food stores. The theme tune was performed by his band, Scarlet Division, and the show has been aired in over 70 countries.
Jamie's Kitchen5 episodes
(~48 min.)
The 2002 documentary series followed Oliver as he attempted to train a group of disadvantaged youths, who would, provided that they completed the course, be offered jobs at Oliver's new restaurant "Fifteen" in Westland Place, London.
2003Return to Jamie's Kitchen2 episodes
(~48 min.)
A follow-up toJamie's Kitchen. Cameras returned to restaurant "Fifteen", to see how the trainees have been coping in the hectic kitchen environment without Jamie's presence.
2005Jamie's School Dinners4 episodes
(~48 min.)
A four-part documentary series. Oliver took responsibility for running the kitchen meals inKidbrooke School,Greenwich, for a year. Disgusted by the unhealthy food being served to schoolchildren and the lack of healthy alternatives on offer, Oliver began a campaign to improve the standard of Britain's school meals. Public awareness was raised and subsequently theBritish Government pledged to spend £280m on school dinners (spread over three years). Tony Blair acknowledged that this was a result of Oliver's campaign. Following the success of the campaign, Oliver was named "Most Inspiring Political Figure of 2005" in the Channel 4 Political Awards 2006. In episode 2 ofJamie's School Dinners, Oliver's Fifteen London restaurant was visited by former US PresidentBill Clinton, who asked to see Oliver. Oliver declined.[why?][clarification needed] 36 people showed up for a booking of 20 and many of them were on aSouth Beach Diet and refused the special menu that had been prepared, although it had been approved in advance.[43]
Jamie's Great Italian Escape6 episodes
(~24 min.)
Atravelogue series, first broadcast onChannel 4 in Britain in October 2005. It follows Oliver as he travels around Italy in a blue VW van (plus a trailer for cooking). He is about to turn 30 and this is his personal adventure to rediscover his love of cooking.[44]
2006Jamie's Kitchen AustraliaA 10-part Australian television show based upon the originalJamie's Kitchen.
Jamie's ChristmasDVD film with Jamie's Christmas-themed recipes.
2007Jamie's Chef4 episodes
(~48 min.)
A four-part series continuing whereJamie's Kitchen left off. Five years and fifty trainees later, the series aims to help the winning trainee establish their own restaurant at "The Cock", a pub nearBraintree, Essex. The charitable Fifteen Foundation retained ownership of the property and has provided a £125,000 loan for the winner,Aaron Craze, to refurbish the establishment. As of 13 January 2008, the Cock has closed down and reopened as a regular pub.[45][46]
Jamie's Return to School Dinners1 episode
(~60 min.)
One-off programme which revisits some of the schools from the earlier School Dinners series as well as exploring how rural schools without kitchens can improvise to ensure children get a hot, nutritious meal during the school day.[citation needed]
Jamie at Home2 series
13+13 episodes
(~26 min.)
Featured Oliver presenting home-style recipes and gardening tips, with many ingredients coming from his substantial home garden in Clavering, Essex.Jamie at Home airs on the Food Network in the United States. Due to licensing restrictions, only two recipes from eachJamie at Home episode appear online; also, access to recipes is limited to users within the United States.[47]
Jamie at Home - Christmas Special1 episode
(~48 min.)
One-off Christmas special toJamie at Home.
2008Jamie's Fowl Dinners~75 minutesA special with Jamie backingHugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's "Hugh's Chicken Run" in trying to get the British to eatfree range chickens.[48]
Jamie's Ministry of Food4 episodes
(~47 min.)
A four-part series that aired from 30 September to 21 October 2008;[49] based inRotherham, South Yorkshire.[50] Oliver aimed to make the town "the culinary capital of the United Kingdom" and tried to get the town's inhabitants to learn how to cook fresh food and establish healthy eating as part of daily life.[51] The 'Pass It On' campaign also featured in this series with the local townspeople being taught one of a selection of recipes and passing it on to family members and friends.[50] The 'Pass It On' campaign gained a following on the social networking website Facebook which has a group and fan page with users signing up to chart their progress. As a result of the series, the first Ministry of Food Centre was set up in Rotherham offering cooking classes to local people. Further Ministry of Food Centres have opened across the UK and in Australia.[citation needed]
Eat to Save Your Life~75 minutesIn this television documentary Jamie Oliver uses dramatic demonstrations to illustrate the dangers of unhealthful eating.
Jamie Cooks... Christmas1 episode
(~48 min.)
Christmas special in which Jamie shares recipes for celebrating the festive season on a tight budget.
What's Cooking? with Jamie OliverVideo game
2009Jamie Saves Our Bacon~75 minutesPart of Channel 4's British Food Fight Season, a thematic sequel toJamie's Fowl Dinners. In the special, Oliver looks at the state of pig farming in the UK and EU. It was broadcast on 29 January 2009.[52]
Jamie's American Road Trip6 episodes
(~48 min.)
A Channel 4 series following Oliver in the US, where he meets and learns from cooks at street stalls, off-road diners and down-to-earth local restaurants. Along the way, he picks up new recipes and learns how other cultures adapt when they come to the USA.[53]
Jamie's Family Christmas5 episodes
(~48 min.)
A short series on Channel 4 with Oliver cooking traditional and new Christmas dishes. Unusually, the series includes members of Oliver's family: a family member (wife, children, sister etc.) appears in a supporting role with the preparation of particular recipe interspersed with more traditional Jamie alone delivery to an off-camera person. First broadcast 15 December 2009.[54]
2010–2011Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution2 series
6+6 episodes
(~44 min.)
A series that aired during 2010 and 2011 onABC in the United States. In the first series, Oliver visited Huntington, West Virginia, statistically one of the unhealthiest cities in the US, to try to improve its residents' eating habits. In 2010, the show won an Emmy for Outstanding Reality Programme.[55] In the second series, Oliver visited Los Angeles, where his crusade to change school meals was met with resistance. Oliver was ultimately barred from filming at any Los Angeles public school. The show's cancellation was announced by ABC in May 2011, two weeks before the final episode of the series had aired. In one episode it showed what mechanically separated chicken looks like.[56] The program also aired in the United Kingdom on Channel 4 under the titleJamie's American Food Revolution, Australia on Channel 10 under the original title, and in Malaysia on TLC channel (Astro Channel 707) under the original title.
2010Jamie's 30-Minute Meals40 episodes
(~24 min.)
A Channel 4 series that aired during October–November. The programme focused on home-cooked meals that could be put together within the titular timeframe, using simple, 'not cheffy' techniques, with an emphasis on educating viewers about the cooking processes themselves.[57]
Jamie's Best Ever Christmas2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-part Christmas special. Also broadcast as "Jamie's Kids Best Ever Christmas" in some regions.
Jamie's Christmas Lock-in1 episode
(~47 min.)
TV-special in which Oliver invites a selection of celebrity guests as well as his family and friends to host a night of music, chat, his twists for a perfect Christmas party.
2011Jamie Does...6 episodes
(~48 min.)
A Channel 4 series following the success ofJamie's American Road Trip. Oliver travels across Europe and North Africa, cooking local dishes. Countries visited include Morocco, Spain, Greece, France, Italy and Sweden. Known asJamie Oliver's Food Escapes in the US.
Jamie's Dream School7 episodes
(~43 min.)
A Channel 4 series that looks at young people's educational problems and attempts to uncover whether they are down to personal circumstance, society or the education system itself. It also examines how the new teachers get on as they try to translate their real-life expertise into the realities of the classroom. ProfessorRobert Winston, historianDavid Starkey, barristerCherie Blair, journalist and political aideAlastair Campbell, actorSimon Callow, now-disgraced artistRolf Harris, musicianJazzie B and Olympic gold medallistDaley Thompson all offer their opinions during the series. As a result of the series, many of the pupils return to education and one, Danielle Harold, pursues an acting career and wins a role in BBC's long-running soap opera,EastEnders.[citation needed]
Jamie's Fish Suppers10 episodes
(~4 min.)
A Channel 4 television program in which Oliver cooked 10 fish recipes as a part of Big Fish Fight campaign.[58] In some regions the ten mini episodes were re-edited into one 47-minute programme.
Jamie Cooks Summer1 episode
(~47 min.)
TV special in which Oliver cooked summer dishes in various outdoor locations.[59] It was restructured with additional footage into a 3-part 2012 series titled "Jamie's Summer Food Rave Up" (also broadcast as "Jamie's Big Summer Feastival" in some regions).
Jamie's Great Britain6 episodes
(~47 min.)
A Channel 4 series in which Oliver travels the length and breadth of the country in search of new ideas and inspiration for recipes and to find out what makes British food great.[60]
Jamie's Christmas with Bells On2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-part Christmas special. Filmed at Jamie Oliver's Essex home and featuring family and friends, the program provides a collection of Christmas classics and new ideas.
2012Jamie's 15-Minute Meals40 episodes
(~24 min.)
Following on from the success of "Jamie's 30 Minute Meals", with people becoming ever more time-poor, the 15-Minute Meals series showed, in real time, how delicious fresh meals could be put together in a quarter of an hour. Based on the recipes in theJamie's15 Minute Meals book.
Jamie & Jimmy's Food Fight Club4 episodes
(~48 min.)
4-part series with childhood friendJimmy Doherty. The series is based around a "studio" in a café at the end of Southend Pier, Essex which Jamie and Jimmy would visit as children. The series also involves "food fights" with other European countries – for example, a competition to see whether British artisanal beers and ales are better than their Belgian counterparts.
2013Dream School USAUS version ofJamie's Dream School with actor David Arquette in the mentoring role.
Jamie's Money Saving Meals / Save with Jamie2 series
6+6 episodes
(~48 min.)
A Channel 4 series based on the recipes in theSave with Jamie book which aims to help people to save money while still cooking delicious food using fresh ingredients and some store cupboard staples. A second series aired from June 2014 in the UK. Also known asSave with Jamie in some regions, with slightly different formatting and titles, as well as less focus on the Pricing (as this was tailored to UK pricing).
2014 -Jamie & Jimmy's Friday Night Feast8 series
60 episodes
(~47 min.)
Oliver and Doherty join forces again at their end-of-the-pier café to make top feasts for the weekend. This series focused on championing "lost" British classic foods such as theBedfordshire clanger andMaid of Honour Tarts and each episode features a different Celebrity in the Café helping them cook.
2014Jamie's Comfort Food8 episodes
(~24 min.)
or
6 episodes
(~47 min.)
in some regions
An eight-part series based on the recipes in theJamie's Comfort Food book which aims to teach people how to make rich, fun and delicious comfort food for larger groups. In some regions the series was re-edited into six longer episodes with additional footage.
Jamie's Cracking Christmas1 episode
(~47 min.)
Christmas special in which Jamie Oliver aims to raise Christmas cooking to a new level with recipes including roast goose, cheeky cocktails and a panettone treat.
2015Jamie's Super Food2 series
7+8 episodes
(~24 min.)
The series focuses on the recipes in theJamie's Super Food book which aims to teach people how to make rich, fun and delicious food that tastes good and is full of nutrients and is good for us. During the series Jamie Oliver travels to some of the healthiest places in the world to uncover the secrets of how people there live longer and healthier lives. The first series was re-edited into 47-minute episodes in some regions with additional footage.
Jamie's Sugar Rush1 episode
(~47 min.)
One-off television documentary, which looks at the sugar in products and why we should be worried about it, that was screened in the UK prior to the start of "Jamie's Super Food".
Jamie's Night Before Christmas1 episode
(~46 min.)
Christmas special in which Jamie presents his classic and new festive favourite recipes.
2016Jamie's Super Food Family Classics6 episodes
(~44 min.)
The series follows on from the original Jamie's Super Food series and focuses on the recipes in theJamie's Super Food Family Classics book. It aims at teaching people how to make rich, fun and delicious Family "Classic" meals that taste good and is full of nutrients, good for them and that the whole family will enjoy.
Jamie Oliver's Christmas Cookbook1 episode
(~47 min.)
Jamie Oliver has been cooking Christmas for his family for 20 years. In this one-off Christmas special he wants to show us his ultimate recipes – the ones he's decided that really are the very very best for Christmas. Based on the book of the same title.
2017-2020Jamie's Quick & Easy Food4 series
26 episodes
(23-28 min.)
A Channel 4 series based on the recipes in Oliver's book5 Ingredients: Quick & Easy Food which aims to show people how to cook great food from just five ingredients - plus a few staples - quickly and easily.
2017Jamie's Italian Christmas1 episode
(~47 min.)
One-off Christmas special, where Jamie makes an Italian inspired Christmas feast.
2018Jamie Cooks Italy8 episodes
(~24 min.
45-48 min.
in some regions)
Jamie and his mentor, Gennaro, go on a tour of Italy where they cook up traditional Italian and Italian-inspired dishes and meet some of the local people.
Jamie's Quick & Easy Christmas1 episode
(~48 min.)
Christmas special in which Jamie Oliver applies his quick and easy principles to cooking at Christmas.
2019Jamie's Meat-Free Meals /Jamie's Ultimate Veg8 episodes
(~23 min.)
or
6 episodes
(~45 min.)
in some regions
Jamie wants people to eat less meat and try more vegetables, finding inspiration from countries around the world to cook a stunning collection of stunning hearty and healthy veg dishes that are easy and delicious. In some regions the series was re-edited into six longer episodes with additional footage.
Jamie's Easy Christmas Countdown1 episode
(~47 min.)
Christmas special that was first shown on 15 December 2019 onChannel 4.[61]
Jamie and Jimmy's Festive Feast1 episode
(~47 min.)
Jamie & Jimmy's Friday Night Feast Christmas special with special guestTaron Egerton, premiered on 25 December 2019 on Channel 4.[62]
2020Jamie: Keep Cooking and Carry On20 episodes
(~23 min.)
Premiered on 23 March 2020, Jamie prepares food with limited ingredients and substitutions, for the locked down and homebound, for the crowd isolated by theCOVID-19 pandemic. Episodes are filmed on Jamie's and his family's phones, with his family serving as crew.[63][64][65][66][67][68] The show has been criticised for using techniques and ingredients not found in a typical home, instead only found in a home where people cook traditionally or ambitiously.[69]
Jamie: Keep Cooking Family Favourites / Jamie's Easy Meals For Every Day2 series
8+10 episodes
(~23 min.)
A television series based on the recipes from Oliver's7 Ways book, which aims to show people how to cook simple, affordable and delicious meals using common household ingredients. Series one premiered 17 August 2020 onChannel 4.[70] Series two premiered on 22 February 2021 on Channel 4.[71]
Jamie: Keep Cooking at Christmas2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-part Christmas special, first shown during December 2020 onChannel 4[72]
Jamie and Jimmy's Festive Feast1 episode
(~47 min.)
Jamie & Jimmy's Friday Night Feast Christmas special with special guestsJoe Wicks &Sam Smith, premiered on 29 December 2020 on Channel 4.[62]
2021Jamie Oliver: Together6 episodes
(~47 min.)
Six-part series,[73] which sees Jamie sharing menus for those first meals with our loved ones since the COVID-19 lockdowns began.
Jamie: Together At Christmas2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-part Christmas special which aired in the UK as part of the Channel 4 programme "Jamie Oliver: Together", while it also has been presented at other services as individual program,[74] with the episode titles "Christmas Party" and "Christmas Dinner", respectively.
Selena + ChefCelebrity chef; S3-E10
2022The Great Cookbook Challenge With Jamie Oliver7 episodes
(~47 min.)
Seven-part series.[75]
Jamie's One-Pan Wonders8 episodes
(~23 min.)
Eight-part series, in which Oliver introduces recipes and provides guide for meals cooked in just one pan.[76]
Jamie's £1 WondersOriginal one-off
(~47 min.)
First shown on 31 October 2022 on Channel 4[77]
Jamie's Easy Christmas2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-part Christmas special, first shown during December 2022 onChannel 4[78]
2023Jamie's £1 Wonders / Jamie Oliver: Cooking For Less6 episodes (~47 min.)Six-partChannel 4 series, that aired during March–April 2023.[79]
Jamie Cooks The Mediterranean4 episodes
(~47 min.)
Four-partChannel 4 series, first shown during September–October 2023.[80]
Jamie's Five Ingredient Meals4 episodes
(~47 min.)
Channel 4 series, first shown during October-November 2023.[81]
Jamie’s Christmas Shortcuts2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-partChannel 4 series.[82]
2024Jamie’s Air-Fryer Meals2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-partChannel 4 series[83]
Jamie Cooks Spring3 episodes
(~47 min.)
Three-partChannel 4 series. It is the first series in Oliver's year-long quest to ‘cook the seasons’ featuring dishes made with seasonal ingredients.[84]
Jamie: What to Eat this Week3 episodes
(~47 min.)
Three-partChannel 4 series, the second featuring dishes made with seasonal ingredients[85]
Jamie: What to Eat this Week: Autumn3 episodes
(~47 min.)
Three-partChannel 4 series featuring dishes made with Autumn ingredients[86]
Jamie: Fast and Simple5 episodes
(~47 min.)
Five-partChannel 4 series featuring tasty quick meals[87]
Jamie Cooks Christmas2 episodes
(~47 min.)
Two-partChannel 4 festive cookery series[88]
2025Jamie Cooks: Georgia1 episode
(~47 min.)
One-offChannel 4 programme[89]
Jamie’s Dyslexia RevolutionOne-off documentary
(~47 min.)
One-offChannel 4 documentary[90]
Eat Yourself Healthy5 episodes
(~47 min.)
Five-partChannel 4 series[91]

Books

[edit]

Oliver has published over 30 books. He is the second-best-selling British author, behindJ. K. Rowling, and the best-selling British non-fiction author since records began.[92] As of February 2019[update], Oliver had sold more than 14.55 million books, generating just under £180m for the chef.[93]

In 2023, Oliver released his first children's book "Billy and the Giant Adventure". A sequel,Billy and the Epic Escape was released the following March, depicted the same children as the first book on a fantastic summer vacation. Led by an AustralianIndigenous Australian education advocacy group, the sequel was sharply criticised for its representation of Indigenous Australians, and as being insensitive to the history of theStolen Generations. In November, Oliver recalled the book and said he apologised for unintentionally causing offence.[94]

Other media appearances

[edit]

Oliver has twice guest-hosted Channel 4'sThe Friday Night Project and has appeared twice in the "Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car" segment ofBBC Two'sTop Gear. In his first appearance he attempted to make a green salad in the back of hisVolkswagen Microbus, which was fitted with aPorsche engine, whilethe Stig drove it around theTop Gear test track.[citation needed]

Oliver is the second British celebrity chef (afterRobert Irvine) to appear as a challenger onIron Chef America, taking on Iron ChefMario Batali in 2008 in a losing battle withcobia as the theme ingredient.[95]

Oliver was one of the judges in theOprah's Big Give hosted byOprah Winfrey in the United States in 2008.[96]

Oliver had an Australian tour in 2006, when he performed in Sydney and Melbourne. Following the entertaining format of his first live show, the 2006 Australian tour featuring special guests including mentorGennaro Contaldo, and students from Fifteen London. He performed a new song written by Leigh Haggerwood calledFish Stew which Oliver cooked to and also drummed along to at the end of the show. The shows were featured in a one-off TV documentary calledJamie Oliver: Australian Diary.[97]

On 27 December 2022, Oliver was the guest editor on theToday Programme onBBC Radio 4.[98]

Advertising

[edit]
Oliver giving a talk at Davos about driving a healthy and sustainable food revolution.

From June 2000, Oliver became the public face of theSainsbury's supermarket chain in the UK, appearing on television and radio advertisements and in-store promotional material. The deal earned him an estimated £1.2 million every year.[12][99]

He was criticised bySainsbury's CEOJustin King after Oliver criticised the "junk" sold by supermarkets that ends up in the lunchboxes of millions of children. King reportedly hit back, saying: "Dictating to people—or unleashing an expletive-filled tirade—is not the way to get engagement."[100] In July 2011, after eleven years, the partnership between Oliver and Sainsbury's ended. The final television advertisement was for Christmas 2011.[101]

Oliver also promotes a range of non-stick pans and cookware forTefal and has appeared in Australian television commercials forYalumba wines, usingDel Boy's catchphrase of "Lovely Jubbly".[102]

In August 2013, Oliver and Canadian supermarket chainSobeys announced a partnership in improving nationwide nutrition and advertising campaigns.[103]

In October 2013, he began a partnership with the Australian chainWoolworths Supermarkets on a series of better nutrition initiatives and advertising campaigns.[104] In 2014, Oliver became the culinary face ofWoolworths Supermarkets.[105] Oliver came under strong criticism over the funding of the advertising surrounding his relationship with the supermarket.[106]

In January 2016, Oliver andHelloFresh, an international meal kit subscription service, announced a partnership to incorporate his recipes to the weekly subscription deliveries. Customers receive one recipe written by Oliver with all the exact ingredients and steps for the dish.[107]

In September 2018, Oliver created a series of recipes and tips forTesco and participated in the promotion of the company's food products.[108]

In 2019, Oliver partnered withRoyal Dutch Shell to offer a Jamie Oliver Deli by Shell branded range at 500 Shell petrol stations in the UK for £5 million. The deal was criticised as a way to improve their image due to Shell's lack of action on climate change, corruption and bribery allegations and damaged Oliver's image of working in the interests of children and for action on climate change.[109][110][111][112][113][114]

Charity work and campaigning

[edit]

Oliver conceived and established theFifteen charity restaurant, where he trained disadvantaged young people to work in the hospitality industry. Following the success of the original restaurant in London, more Fifteens have opened around the globe: Fifteen Amsterdam opened in December 2004, FifteenCornwall in Newquay in May 2006 andFifteen Melbourne in September 2006 with an Australian friend and fellow chefTobie Puttock.[115] Fifteen Melbourne has since closed, as has Fifteen Cornwall.[116][117]

In 2005, Oliver initiated a campaign originally called "Feed Me Better" to move British schoolchildren towards eating healthy foods and cutting outjunk food. As a result, the British government also pledged to address the issue. His public campaign for changes in nutrition resulted in people voting him as the "Most Inspiring Political Figure of 2005", according to aChannel 4 News annual viewer poll.[12] His emphasis on cooking fresh, nutritious food continued as he createdJamie's Ministry of Food, a television series where Oliver travelled to inspire everyday people inRotherham,Yorkshire, to cook healthy meals. Another television series isJamie Oliver's Food Revolution (2010–11), where he travelled first toHuntington, West Virginia and then toLos Angeles to change the way Americans eat, and address their dependence on fast food.[12]

Oliver began a formal campaign to ban unhealthy food in British schools and to get children eating nutritious food instead. Oliver's efforts to bring radical change to the school meals system, chronicled in the seriesJamie's School Dinners, challenged the junk-food culture by showing schools they could serve healthy, cost-efficient meals that kids enjoyed eating.[118] His efforts brought the subject of school dinners to the political forefront and changed the types of food served in schools.[119]

In December 2009, Oliver was awarded the 2010 TED Prize for his campaigns to "create change on both the individual and governmental levels" to "bring attention to the changes that the English, and now Americans, need to make in their lifestyles and diet".[20] In 2010, he joined several other celebrity chefs on the seriesThe Big Fish Fight, in which Oliver and fellow chefsHugh Fearnley-Whittingstall andGordon Ramsay made a variety of programmes[clarification needed] to raise awareness about the discarding of hundreds of thousands of saltwater fish because the fishermen are prohibited from keeping any fish other than the stated target of the trawl.[120] He is a patron of environmental charityTrees for Cities.[121]

In April 2022, he co-organized together with Ukrainian chefYurii Kovryzhenko a charity dinner in London within an initiative #CookForUkraine to raise money for Ukrainians who suffered from Russian invasion of Ukraine.[122]

Oliver and Gordon Ramsay are spokespeople for the "Big Fish Fight", which campaigns for sustainable seafood, but were criticised for their use of endangered fish.[123][124]

Oliver has been criticised for underestimating the cost of supposedly cheap food he encouraged poor people to prepare for themselves, as well as for an unrealistic view of poverty inBritain andround the Mediterranean.[125]Cookery writer and poverty campaignerJack Monroe stated that Oliver's comments "support damaging myths that poor people are only poor because they spend their money on the wrong things, rather than being constrained by time, equipment, knowledge or practicalities".[126]

Views and criticism

[edit]

Oliver has spoken out againstMarco Pierre White, who has been critical of Oliver in the past, and the swearing ofGordon Ramsay.[127]

In February 2017, Oliver criticised theRed Tractor scheme, earning the ire of farming leaders, such asMinette Batters, the president of the NFU. Oliver said: "Chickens are bred to grow fast with a high ratio of meat to bone, but this makes them heavy so they can struggle to walk...I think people would be shocked by the reality of what we are buying...I personally wouldn't feed it to my kids."[128] Batters responded: "There are a lot of people on tight budgets and they must not be disadvantaged in all of this. It is about making sure we can provide quality affordable, safe, traceable food to everybody regardless of budgets, regardless of background."[129]

In 2005, Oliver was widely criticised by animal rights groups for slaughtering a lamb on his TV show without first stunning it, withPETA stating that it showed to the public problems with the methods used within slaughterhouses. PETA spokesman Sean Gifford said that it was hoped the footage "could turn the more die-hard carnivore into a vegetarian". TV regulatorOfcom reported seven complaints from the public.[130]

In 2020, YouTuber and comedianNigel Ng via his character Uncle Roger criticized Jamie Oliver's egg fried rice recipe video for using several unconventional and allegedly inauthentic ingredients and techniques. The video went viral and currently has 30 million views, and ignited conversations regarding Jamie Oliver's pattern of presenting inauthentic recipes of international cuisines.[131]

Awards and honours

[edit]

On 13 May 2001, Oliver's seriesThe Naked Chef won the BAFTA award forBest Feature at the prestigious2001 British Academy Television Awards, held at theGrosvenor House Hotel inPark Lane,London.[132]

In June 2003, Oliver was awarded the MBE in theQueen's Birthday Honours.[133]

On 21 August 2010, Oliver won an Emmy forJamie Oliver's Food Revolution at the62nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards. The series tackled the problem of childhood obesity in America.[134]

In 2013, Oliver was awarded an Honorary Fellowship by theRoyal College of General Practitioners for his work in tacklingchildhood obesity by improving the nutritional value of school dinners.[135]

In 2019, Oliver was awarded theOrder of the Star of Italy with the rank of Knight.[136] The investiture took place at the Italian embassy in 2021.[137]

Personal life

[edit]

In July 2000, Oliver married the former model and writer Juliette Norton, usually known as "Jools".[138] They have five children.[139][140] Oliver has severedyslexia, and read his first novel,Catching Fire, by American novelistSuzanne Collins (the second book in the three-bookThe Hunger Games series) in 2013, at the age of 38.[141]

During the summer of 2019, Oliver and his family moved intoSpains Hall, the 16th-century mansion inFinchingfield,Essex. The property is located on a 70-acre (28 ha) estate and includes a six-bedroom farmhouse, three-bedroom lodge, swimming pool, tennis court and converted stables.[142]

References

[edit]
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Further reading

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