logo
Anne Burrell, Food Network Star and 'Worst Cooks in America' Host, Dies at 55

Anne Burrell, Food Network Star and 'Worst Cooks in America' Host, Dies at 55

Yahoo18-06-2025
Anne Burrell — the beloved chef known for her trademark spiky platinum hair, larger-than-life personality and culinary expertise — died on the morning of Tuesday, June 17 at her home in Brooklyn, New York. She was 55.
Reps for the star announced Burrell's death in a release obtained by PEOPLE.
She is survived by her husband Stuart Claxton, whom she wed on Oct. 16, 2021, and his son, Javier, as well as her mother, Marlene, and sister, Jane, her children Isabella, Amelia and Nicolas, and her brother Ben.
"Anne was a beloved wife, sister, daughter, stepmother, and friend — her smile lit up every room she entered," her family said in a statement. "Anne's light radiated far beyond those she knew, touching millions across the world. Though she is no longer with us, her warmth, spirit, and boundless love remain eternal."
A fan-favorite on the Food Network, Burrell was best known as the longtime host of Worst Cooks in America, where her passion for food and mentorship turned disastrous kitchen hopefuls into capable cooks.
Her infectious enthusiasm, signature laugh and fierce kitchen skills made her a standout in the world of food television.
Born on Sept. 21, 1969, in Cazenovia, New York, Burrell discovered her love for cooking early, inspired by her mother's home-cooked meals and television icon, Julia Child.
She studied English and Communication at Canisius College in Buffalo before pursuing a culinary career at the prestigious Culinary Institute of America, where she graduated in 1996.
Burrell's love of Italian cuisine led her to the Italian Culinary Institute for Foreigners, where she completed apprenticeships and developed a deep appreciation for the philosophies of Italian cooking. Returning to the Big Apple, she worked at acclaimed restaurants including Felidia under Lidia Bastianich and Savoy in Soho, where she honed her craft in Mediterranean cuisine.
In the early 2000s, Burrell transitioned into teaching at the Institute of Culinary Education and eventually made her way to television.
Food Network audiences first met Burrell as a sous chef on Iron Chef America. Her charisma and culinary chops led to her own Emmy-nominated show, Secrets of a Restaurant Chef, which premiered in 2008 and ran for nine seasons.
From there, Burrell became Food Network staple, also appearing on Chef Wanted, Chopped, Food Network Star, and most recently, the competition series House of Knives, which just premiered in March 2025.
Burrell authored two cookbooks: 2011's Cook Like a Rock Star, which made her a New York Times bestseller, and Own Your Kitchen: Recipes to Inspire and Empower.
Outside the kitchen, she was deeply committed to philanthropy. She served on the advisory board of the Garden of Dreams Foundation, was a celebrity ambassador for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and was a dedicated member of City Harvest's Food Council.
"I feel so lucky to be able to share my true passion in life with others," Burrell was known for saying.
Burrell and Claxton met on Bumble in 2018.
"I have to say, I love being married," she told PEOPLE exclusively during City Harvest's 40th Anniversary Gala in April 2023. "We're together all the time because Stuart works from home. It's the being together all the time, but it's also the adventure together."
This is a breaking story, more to come
Read the original article on People
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rose Leiman Goldemberg, 97, dies; her ‘Burning Bed' was a TV benchmark
Rose Leiman Goldemberg, 97, dies; her ‘Burning Bed' was a TV benchmark

Boston Globe

time4 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Rose Leiman Goldemberg, 97, dies; her ‘Burning Bed' was a TV benchmark

Ms. Goldemberg was working as a playwright in the mid-1970s when she sent a few story outlines to an unusually receptive television producer. One of them, a drama about immigrants set on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1910, caught his interest. It became a television movie, 'The Land of Hope' (a title Ms. Goldemberg hated), which aired on CBS in 1976. It centered on a Jewish family and their Irish and Italian neighbors. There were labor organizers, gangsters, and musicians, and a rich uncle who wanted to adopt a child to say Kaddish for him when the time came. Such an ethnic stew was a stretch for the network, and critics loved it. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'A thoroughly charming surprise,' John O'Connor wrote in his review for The New York Times. Advertisement As a pilot for a series, 'The Land of Hope' went nowhere, but it made Ms. Goldemberg's reputation, and she began receiving stories to be turned into scripts. 'Where did you spring from?' one network executive asked her, she recalled in a 2011 interview for the nonprofit organization New York Women in Film & Television. 'As though I were a mushroom.' It was Arnold Shapiro, the veteran producer, writer and director behind 'Scared Straight!,' a well-received TV documentary about teenage delinquents being brought into contact with prison inmates, who sent Ms. Goldemberg 'The Burning Bed,' a 1980 book by The New Yorker writer Faith McNulty about the case of Francine Hughes. Advertisement Hughes's story was horrific. For 13 years, she had been terrorized by her alcoholic husband. One day in March 1977, after a brutal beating, she called the police in their Michigan town. Two officers responded and then left, saying there was nothing they could do because they hadn't witnessed the attacks. That night, the beating resumed, and Hughes's husband raped her. When he fell asleep, she doused the bed with gasoline, lit a match, and set the bed on fire. Then she put her children in the car and drove to the county jail to report what she had done. Her husband died that night, and Francine Hughes was charged with first-degree murder. Nine months later, a jury pronounced her not guilty by reason of temporary insanity. The verdict made national headlines. Fawcett, the pinup star of 'Charlie's Angels,' the frothy crime series, was already attached to the project; she had shown her dramatic chops in 'Extremities,' an off-Broadway production about a woman who exacts revenge on her rapist, and wanted to continue working in that vein. Yet the project was initially turned down by all three networks. When it was resurrected, by NBC, in one of those complicated scenarios particular to Hollywood, Shapiro was somehow left out of the production. The movie aired in October 1984, to mostly critical acclaim. (Paul Le Mat played the husband.) It was seen by tens of millions of viewers, and NBC's ratings soared, pulling the network out of third place and putting it on top for the first time in a decade. Fawcett, Ms. Goldemberg, the producers, and even the makeup artist were nominated for Emmy Awards, and the movie set off a national conversation about domestic abuse. Women's shelters, a rarity in those days, began opening all over the country; the film was shown in men's prisons; and Ms. Goldemberg was often asked to speak to women's groups. Advertisement Inevitably, as she recalled in 2011, 'someone would say, 'I couldn't talk about my own abuse until I saw the film.'' She added: 'It wasn't because of me. It was a wonderful performance by Farrah, and the timing was right. It was just a remarkable confluence of the right things happening at the right time.' Still, Ms. Goldemberg began fielding entreaties from other actresses who wanted her to write star vehicles for them, projects akin to 'The Burning Bed.' She did so for one of Fawcett's fellow angels, Jaclyn Smith, cowriting the TV movie 'Florence Nightingale' for her. Broadcast in April 1985, it did not have the same impact as 'The Burning Bed'; most critics found it soapy and forgettable. A Lucille Ball vehicle fared much better. Ball wanted a script about homelessness, and when she and Ms. Goldemberg met at her Beverly Hills house, Ball laid out her terms: She wanted to play a character with some of the personality traits of her grandmother, and named for her. Ms. Goldemberg came up with 'Stone Pillow,' a television film about a homeless woman named Florabelle. In his Times review, under the headline 'Lucille Ball Plays a Bag Lady on CBS,' O'Connor called the movie 'a carefully contrived concoction' but praised Ball 'as wily and irresistible as ever.' Advertisement Rose Marion Leiman was born on May 17, 1928, on Staten Island, N.Y. Her mother, Esther (Friedman) Leiman, oversaw the home until World War II, when she became an executive secretary at Bank of America; her father, Louis Leiman, owned a chain of dry-cleaning stores in New Jersey. Rose earned a bachelor's degree in 1949 from Brooklyn College, where she had enrolled at 16, and a Master of Arts in English from Ohio State University. She married Raymond Schiller, a composer who followed her from Brooklyn College to Ohio State, in 1949; he later became a computer systems designer. They divorced in 1968. Her marriage, in 1969, to Robert Goldemberg, a cosmetic chemist, ended in divorce in 1989. Her first television-related job was at TV Guide in the 1950s, writing reviews of shows airing on what was then a new medium. She eventually began writing plays. Ms. Goldemberg is survived by a son, Leiman Schiller, and three stepchildren, David Goldemberg, Kathy Holmes, and Sharanne Goldemberg. This article originally appeared in

Under-the-Radar New Restaurants to Check Out in Los Angeles, July 2025
Under-the-Radar New Restaurants to Check Out in Los Angeles, July 2025

Eater

time4 hours ago

  • Eater

Under-the-Radar New Restaurants to Check Out in Los Angeles, July 2025

is an editor of the Southern California/Southwest region, who covers the evolving landscape of LA's food scene. Brand new restaurants open every day across the Southland, usually without too much fanfare. This periodic compilation highlights some of the most notable and under-the-radar places that have sprouted up recently. From the San Fernando Valley to the South Bay, from the Westside to the San Gabriel Valley — let's dive right in. For the biggest restaurant openings in town, check out this companion list. Venice— Venice just gained a new hangout inspired by sun-drenched Italian summers. Venice Beach Club, a new restaurant from the team behind Dive Palm Springs and and Supperclub Hollywood, serves an approachable, easygoing menu with dishes like pizza, burgers, steak frites, and crudo. Wine, beer, cocktails, and zero-proof drinks are also available. 2 Rose Avenue, Venice, CA 90291. Koreatown— The One Jokbal, a new Korean restaurant specializing in pig trotters, opened in Koreatown in June. The restaurant specializes in three types of jokbal — spicy, barbecue, and garlic — available by themselves, or in combinations with rice balls and bossam. The restaurant also serves a handful of other dishes including tteokbokki, a spicy buckwheat noodle salad, and build-your-own rice balls. 338 S. Western Avenue, Suite A, Los Angeles, CA 90020. Canoga Park— Crane & Elephant, a new Japanese restaurant, landed in Canoga Park this summer, bringing a new destination for ramen, curry, and more to the San Fernando Valley. The menu comprises starters like gyoza and takoyaki, alongside tonkotsu ramen, beef curry, udon soup, and more. 22205 Sherman Way, Canoga Park, CA 91303. Studio City— The Windy City comes to Los Angeles at Pearl's Red Hots, a new hamburger and hot dog joint in Studio City that opened in June. Try the Klassic Kraut Dog with sauerkraut, mustard, and onion on a poppyseed bun, or the Pearl with chili, mustard, and onion. Pearl's also offers Italian beef sandwiches, smash burgers, and sides like onion rings. 4359 Tujunga Avenue, Studio City, CA 91604.

July's Funniest Signs: 29 Comedy Gold Moments
July's Funniest Signs: 29 Comedy Gold Moments

Buzz Feed

time4 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

July's Funniest Signs: 29 Comedy Gold Moments

July is ending, and I can hardly believe it! Every week, we scour the funniest signs from Reddit to bring you a little pause in the day for some top-tier comedy. And, now, we've decided to round up all the ones you couldn't get enough of from the entire month for some extra laughs. So, here are 29 signs you loved in July, and what our BuzzFeed readers had to say about them: "The Raccoon was the best. All are funny, but that raccoon was genius.💜" —angelicchicken782 "If I may add: A cockroach can shit 💩 a better president!" —radpotato85 "TBF, speaking as a lactose-intolerant person, ice cream makes *us* happy too.... while we are eating it. It's only LATER that it makes us unhappy," —etconner "My high school had a smoking area 😂" —missmissymaria143 "Short, sweet and simple to the point." —MissMiddleEarthling "Yet ANOTHER reason the English language is SO stupid. I say this as a native English speaker. We have so many dumb rules and contradictions that make no sense. Countries should be pronounced like Count - trees because ou sounds like OW like house or out, right? Or maybe it's one of the times it's pronounced like Oooh like soup or youth. Or maybe it's only of the times it's pronounced like Uhh like trouble or cousin. Or maybe its one of the times it sounds like uhhh like would or could. Or maybe it's one of the times it's pronounced like shawa like anxious or nervous. Or maybe it's one of the times it's pronounced like Oh like shoulder or though. THE LIST GOES ON! WHY?!? Make it make sense! No wonder English is so hard to learn!" —Lalalace1640 "Funny and clever!" —hiddencupcake431 "The mythical double male adapter cord. It's too much power for us humans. Seriously though. ⚡️⚡️" —voiceofdecent "Please do NOT experience driving on shrooms and coke lol" —pennypiper "Seemed pretty obvious to me. Boobs and balls. Granted they should have just put women/men, but some places like to get cute." —flyerboy6 "Is Lowkey something I would put bahahaggagaahgagha" —Katieisthebaddest69 "'Shit & Split'! That little TP doodle complete with a heart! Lemme get a cross stitch of that sign! 😂" —thisisnothappening "Revving your engine… I want to make one for speeding. The offenders are mostly teenage boys who speed down my street. I'd love to see their reaction!" —slysword775 "It's one of those papers you hand back facedown." —@deliciousgoose90 "Eastern NC has a community named Jackass Flats. Oregon has a community named Nimrod. Those are a couple of the more entertaining communities I've personally visited." —savorycookie506 "I have worked on washing machines that were used for horse blankets and a couple that had human shit in them. I would rather work on the ones with human shit. A 1,500 pound animal sweating heavily for hours into a blanket, and shedding pounds of hair too. No thanks." —nathaniel "Out of seven kids, my youngest sister (20 years younger) and I (second oldest) were the only accidental kids. My second daughter was an accident. Her daughter was an accident. Thank you for our lives. The three of us have a house together." —smartwitch66 "I'm curious how many folks will pee on the floor because they saw it on the sign." —keathome2010 "Do they realise instructions are updated as things need to be accounted for. Do not drink the contents of the battery is there BECAUSE the previous generation drank it." —artisticelf953 "I love the mask one" —kimw28 "We just going to ignore the other sign saying not to feed the cute chickens because they will get aggressive and steal your lunch? Lol." —artisticcaptain33 "Super funny" —Theatre kid "😄" —magicalcupcake737 "Whoever wrote this sign missed two gigantic loopholes: high school students under 17 are banned from the store (but dropouts can come in?); banned 6am - 6pm (but ya'll come hang out late at night?)" —cuteasteroid638 "Makes me miss Austin. I drove by that El Arroyo on West Fifth when I worked downtown. The signs always made me smile, so I was in a good mood when I arrived at work." —shabooshabah "When God speaks, people listen. Absolutely BRILLIANT." —angelicpepper541 No one commented, but this and the next one were thumbnail images that people loved... LOL: And, finally, just for anyone who resonates with this: We're going to continue to share great signs from Reddit, but we also want to see what YOU find as well! So, if you see a sign that makes you LOL, snap a pic, and share the photo in the comments below. You could be featured in our next roundup!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store