
BBC star leading the race to replace John Torode on MasterChef – after star is ‘asked to step down' from show
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A popular BBC star is the front runner to replace John Torode on MasterChef.
Australian star Torode, 59, has been asked to step down from his long-running role on the show after an historic accusation of racism, which he has no memory of and denies ever happened.
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Matt Tebbutt is a front runner to replace John Torode on MasterChef
Credit: PA
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Torode has denied using racist language after an allegation was made against him
Credit: PA
The claim against him emerged as part of an investigation into his shamed former co-star Gregg Wallace that saw 45 of 83 allegations of bad behaviour upheld against him.
While food critic Grace Dent has already led the celebrity version of the show and is a favourite to present the amateur version too, Saturday Kitchen's Matt Tebbutt is also being lined up.
It's believed he has already landed the job fronting MasterChef: The Professionals.
A TV insider said: 'Both Grace and Matt are well thought of at the Beeb and the one thing they want in the wake of the show's recent crisis is familiarity and safety.
'They're also conscious that having a male and female pairing is a welcome break from it being fronted by two blokes.'
Meanwhile, Torode was cited — but not named — in findings published over a racist remark he allegedly made during a private conversation.
Torode, who has hosted the BBC1 cooking show with Wallace since 2005, was shocked to be told of the allegation — which did not receive a complaint at the time but had been raised with investigators.
In a farcical turn of events, the BBC was unable to specify the time or date of the allegation, narrowing it down to '2018 or 2019'.
Shockingly, sources said the BBC and production company Banijay asked John to resign from the beleaguered show last week and claim he had mental health problems — to which he refused.
He issued a statement to The Sun confirming he was the individual in the Wallace investigation who was 'alleged to have used racial language on one occasion'.
'Devastated' Gregg Wallace FIRED by BBC over MasterChef sexual comments
However John — married to actress and ex-Celebrity MasterChef contestant Lisa Faulkner, 53 — believes it never even happened.
The dad of four said: 'The allegation is I did so sometime between 2018 or 2019, in a social situation, and the person I was speaking with did not believe it was intended in a malicious way and I apologised immediately afterwards.
"I have absolutely no recollection of any of this, and I do not believe that it happened
'However, I want to be clear that I've always had the view that any racial language is wholly unacceptable in any environment.
'I'm shocked and saddened by the allegation as I would never wish to cause anyone any offence.'
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John married actress and ex-Celebrity MasterChef contestant Lisa Faulkner
Credit: PA:Press Association
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John and Gregg began hosting a revamped MasterChef in 2005
Credit: Shine Ltd
It is understood to be the only issue involving him in the report, though a source close to him said he is 'absolutely devastated to have been pulled into this mess'.
They went on: 'He was at drinks after filming when he is alleged to have used an inappropriate racial term.
"The witness said he apologised instantly, and he was mortified.
'The witness even stated he didn't use the term as a slur.
'No one complained at the time, but it's been brought up during the inquiry.
"Shockingly he was only made aware of the incident two weeks ago and was only informed on Friday that it would be upheld."
The BBC called John on Thursday night, followed by an email on Friday, asking him to step back.
He was told to have his answer by Monday.
A source claimed: 'They ambushed him, and it was suggested he quit due to the stress and scrutiny of the furore around the show.
'Obviously he was absolutely shocked and appalled and told them quite firmly he didn't have any mental health issues.
"To try to use mental health as a get-out clause seems incredibly low — and is also deeply unfair to those with genuine mental health trauma.
'John absolutely loves MasterChef, and doesn't want to lose his job because of an investigation into his co-star."
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Scottish Sun
6 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Gregg Wallace is the one in the wrong – not BBC bosses, his accusers or ‘snowflakes'
I WROTE this about Gregg Wallace when his career went phut over inappropriate behaviour allegations – and I'll write it again. The one thing he needs to get straight in his addled head is that he's the one in the wrong. 2 Gregg Wallace needs to get it straight in his head - he's the one in the wrong Credit: PA 2 He might not have meant any harm, but he caused plenty. Credit: BBC Not his bosses at the BBC. Not a world he sees as snowflakes. And most definitely not the women whose complaints put him in a corner. He did it all to himself, with words and actions he wrongly thought were just a bit of fun. Yet even now that more than half the 83 allegations made against him have been upheld by an independent inquiry, he's STILL at it, claiming to have been a victim of 'trial by media, rumour and clickbait'. No, Gregg, no. You're not any kind of victim. You're the culprit – as in, if you hadn't said and done the things you did, none of this would have happened. As for the get-out clause that he's been diagnosed with autism late in life? The suggestion seems to be that had he understood his own mind better years ago, he might have behaved differently – there's an element of a big boy doing it and running away in there. And in any case, he then blurts the line that, 'I was the headline this time, but I won't be the last', which suggests that it's now all the big bad world's fault. Bottom line? He might not have meant any harm, but he caused plenty. Which is why it's time for him to shut that great big pizza oven of a gob and take his dumps. Masterchef meltdown as BBC asked John Torode to RESIGN over 'racist remark' before Gregg Wallace sacking Things to do in Denver when you have no clean pants AS you fly over the handlebars of a speeding bike, all your brain should be thinking about is how to land without smashing too many bones. In the split second it happened to me on a Colorado forest trail last Wednesday, though, all mine could scream was: 'DON'T RIP THOSE JEANS!!' Because they were the only ones I had. Aer Lingus had made damn sure of that. On the Monday, I'd arrived in Denver from Glasgow en route to the ski town of Aspen, only to find my luggage hadn't made it past the stopover point of Dublin. As I write this, a very nice man called David has just phoned to say it should finally be on a plane to Glasgow tonight. But I still fear it might well be in Timbuktu by the time we go to press. Why so cynical? Well, it starts with the reply from the Irish national airline's baggage rep in Denver when I asked when they might get the wee fella to me, words I still hear in my sleep: 'Once we receive any further updates, you will be notified.' So began a saga that may well end up as a movie called Things To Do In Denver When You Have No Clean Pants. Call centre jockey Aer Lingus then repeated that promise of updates 27 times in seven days but only followed through on it once; at 11.58am on Saturday — two minutes before I started heading home, still wearing the clothes I'd arrived in — when a call centre jockey rang to proudly proclaim: 'Hi, Mr William — your bag is now on Aer Lingus flight 59 to Denver.' It was one of those moments when you want to scream obscenities that would have Frankie Boyle tutting. But then your mammy's teachings kick in, so you put on your politest voice and reply: 'But I phoned yesterday, explained I'd be leaving Denver today and pleaded for the bag to go to my home address in Glasgow.' 'So you DON'T want it to go to Denver, Mr William?' 'Funnily enough, I do not.' 'Well, once we receive any further updates, you will be notified . . . ' This was always how it was going to end. All week, the joke with my colleagues, Gemma and Kate — both, ironically, journalists from Ireland — had been that a wee black roll-along duffle would arrive at the hotel two minutes after we left the parking lot. After a daily regime of shuffling to the hotel laundry in a bathrobe to wash the clothes I stood in — and constant apologies to our hosts for turning up like a tramp to everything from a Lyle Lovett gig and a symphony orchestra recital to dinner at the highest of high-end restaurants — it felt like this was how it HAD to end. And the girls had said: 'Surely no one can be that incompetent!' Well, far be it from me to suggest Aer Lingus are an incompetent organisation, because they plainly are not. All I'll say is that the competence of all but two of the employees dealing with my situation over the past week oscillated between defensiveness, obstructiveness, selective deafness and temporary amnesia. Whether via phone or message, there was never a, 'Hang on and I'll see what I can do'. No offer of compensation. So little initiative or empathy you began to wonder if maybe you weren't dealing with humans at all, but bots. I give you Ricky. When I complained that he'd answered five successive questions by saying that — all together now — 'Once we receive any further updates, you will be notified', his response was that once they received any further updates, I'd be notified. Then there was Eva, who announced on Friday that the bag was going to Denver. And who, when I almost wept that its destination should, in fact, be Glasgow, replied she was confirming my request for it to go to . . . Denver. The first exception to this rule of dumb is Geraldine, who led the cabin crew back to Dublin and could not have been more apologetic on behalf of her entire nation. The second is a smiley young woman called Melissa, who handles Aer Lingus customer services at Denver Airport and who, when I found her on Saturday afternoon and began recounting the saga, stopped me and said: 'Are you Mr Leckie? We've been talking about you all week . . . ' Melissa then physically went to the plane when it landed from Dublin, found my bag, got them to check it back onboard and met me at the gate with a photo of the wee fella wearing a bright orange tag reading: TRANSFER TO GLASGOW, YOU EEJITS! Finally, I could relax. Back on home soil 12 hours later, I even stood at the mouth of the carousel ready to photograph our joyous reunion. Sadly, dear reader, I instead have to finish by telling you this. I'd gone over the handlebars last Wednesday because an idiot American dad showed off to his kids by performing a back-wheel skid that forced me to swerve and tumble down a grass bank. Yet even the pain of landing smack on my right shoulder dulls when compared to that of standing in Glasgow baggage reclaim like a spare one at a wedding, before being told my bag had been taken off in Dublin. If you didn't laugh, you'd cry. So here goes. Ha fecking ha . . .


The Sun
6 minutes ago
- The Sun
BBC looks at licence fee overhaul as whopping 300,000 fewer Brits sign up for £174.50 a year cost
THE BBC is looking into a licence fee overhaul with hundreds of thousands of households refusing to pay up. The broadcaster's annual report released today says competition from streaming services has created a "moment of real jeopardy for the sector". 1 An estimated 300,000 households have stopped paying. The report revealed 23.8m licences were in force at the end of the year, down from 24.1m in 2023-24. The drop means a loss of about £50m in revenue for the corporation. It comes as BBC Director-General Tim Davie was shown to have been given a £15,000 annual pay rise despite a string of controversies. And departing Match of the Day host Gary Lineker ended his time with the Corporation by topping its pay league for the eighth consecutive year, raking in £1.35million. Key points in the BBC Annual Report Gary Lineker has topped the list of highest earners for another year He was followed by Zoe Ball, who remains second best-paid at the Beeb despite her dramatic pay cut More than two thirds of the broadcaster's top 20 earners received pay rises BBC Breakfast star Naga Munchetty received a boost to her pay, but co-host Charlie Stayt's salary stayed the same Disgraced presenter Huw Edwards did not feature on the list after his exit from the broadcaster Meanwhile the number of people paying for a TV licence fell by around 300,000 last year - almost two per cent in all BBC boss Tim Davie breaks silence on MasterChef future as John Torode asked to quit over 'racist remark' BBC Chair Samir Shah says in the annual report: 'The fight is on, and it is vital we now think very carefully about the kind of media environment we want for the UK.' He added they were searching for 'the best future funding model for the BBC'. Shah said: 'I have already set out some views on this and the board will be saying more over the coming months,' he said. Masterchef meltdown as BBC asked John Torode to RESIGN over 'racist remark' before Gregg Wallace sacking 'But all of us are clear that we want to make sure we protect the BBC as a universal service and help it not just to survive, but thrive, for a generation and more.' Licence fee income increased slightly year on year, totalling £3.8bn in 2024-25. However, the small rise was down to the 6.7% inflationary increase in the fee to £169.50 a year. 'The current collection method remains fair, effective, and good value for money,' the report said. 'As we approach the end of the charter, we will proactively research how we might reform the licence fee to secure the benefits of a well-resourced, universal BBC of scale for the long term.' 'Inappropriate behaviours' Today's report also features a column by Dr Shah in which he references the "profoundly shocking revelations" involving disgraced News At Ten anchor Huw Edwards. He announced in October the Beeb's board had commissioned an independent review into its "workplace culture". It came in the wake of Edwards, as well as "several further cases of inappropriate behaviours and abuses of power", Dr Shah wrote. In his column, he added: "The first thing to say is that the BBC is a wonderful place to work. "Our staff are dedicated, hardworking and treat each other with respect. "However, there are pockets in the organisation where this is not the case. There are still places where powerful individuals - on and off-screen - can abuse that power to make life for their colleagues unbearable." It comes after former MasterChef host Wallace launched a scathing attack on the broadcaster and threatened his "next move" yesterday after he was sacked. The one-time greengrocer turned TV personality, 60, was axed after an investigation upheld 45 out of the 83 allegations made against him. The bombshell inquiry, carried out by law firm Lewis Silkin for production company Banijay, unveiled a litany of complaints against him. Most of them involved inappropriate sexual language and humour and a further 10 were made about other people - two of which were substantiated. Davie was also asked today about whether Wallace's co-host John Torode would remain on the show, after the presenter confirmed on Instagram he had a standalone allegation of racist language upheld in the same report. The director-general said: "There has to be follow-up, so the BBC, in some ways, we're quite simple on this, if someone is found to not live up to the values we expect, the independent company, Banijay, in this case, to take action and report back to us on what they have done. "These aren't BBC employees, but we absolutely expect action to be taken, that's the first thing I'd say." 'Get a grip quicker' Last week BBC bosses were told to "get a grip quicker" after the live stream of punk rap duo Bob Vylan's Glastonbury set was left on air despite controversial comments which some interpreted as antisemitic. Ofcom boss Dame Melanie Dawes insisted there is a risk the public lose faith in the corporation if coverage isn't pulled swiftly and investigations are lengthy. The broadcaster had apologised after the band's lead singer chanted 'death, death' to Israeli defence forces during their festival set last month. The regulator also stepped in to launch a probe into Beeb doc Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone, which faced backlash when it was revealed the narrator was the son of a Hamas official. The BBC previously admitted to breaching their own editorial guidelines by failing to disclose this to viewers. An independent probe into the documentary was commissioned by the broadcaster earlier this year. The broadcaster spent £400,000 of licence payers' cash making the doc, which was branded a propaganda show for the evil terror group Hamas, The Sun revealed in February. In a shocking revelation, the main narrator of the heart-tugging, supposedly factual exposé - 13-year-old Abdulla Eliyazour - was the son of senior Hamas official Dr Ayman Al-Yazouri.


The Guardian
7 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Tim Davie insists he is still right person to lead BBC after series of scandals
Tim Davie has insisted he is still the right person to lead the BBC, after a succession of issues that has seen the culture secretary accuse him of overseeing a 'series of catastrophic failures'. The BBC's director general has been under the most intense pressure of his five-year tenure after incidents including the livestreaming of Bob Vylan's performance at the Glastonbury festival, as well as a Gaza documentary that breached the broadcaster's editorial guidelines. This week, the BBC also admitted opportunities were missed to deal with the behaviour of Gregg Wallace, after an independent report substantiated 45 allegations made against the former MasterChef presenter, including claims of inappropriate sexual language and one incident of unwelcome physical contact. It has led to criticism from the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, who suggested the corporation was suffering from a failure in leadership. However, Davie insisted there had been consequences for staff responsible for the Glastonbury broadcast and a Gaza documentary that failed to disclose its child narrator was the son of a Hamas official. Speaking at the launch of the BBC's annual report, Davie said he had already taken action to improve the culture at the BBC after previous high-profile scandals such as the departure of disgraced presenter Huw Edwards – including the dismissal of staff. In a defence of his performance, Davie said the controversy around Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone had been the most challenging he had dealt with during his tenure. However, he said he was the right person to lead the BBC as it faced an onslaught of competition from streamers and a continued decline in the number of households paying the licence fee. 'I simply think I'm in a place where I can work to improve dramatically the BBC and lead it in the right way,' he said. 'We will make mistakes, but I think as a leadership, and myself, I've been very clear – and I think we have been decisive. 'When you go through tough times, one of the things that I focus on as a leader is there has never been a more important time for public service broadcasting. Gaza has been the most challenging editorial issue I've had to deal with. But the importance of fair, balanced reporting, the need for high-quality homegrown programming in the face of massive pressure, has never, ever been greater. 'I believe my leadership and the team I've assembled can really help the BBC thrive in that environment.' Davie said the BBC had 'already seen dismissals' as a result of an action plan drawn up after a series of scandals around conduct, including the Edwards scandal. The former presenter ultimately pleaded guilty to three counts of making indecent images of children. Neither Davie, nor Samir Shah, the chair of the BBC, would name any individuals who had lost their jobs. Davie said action was also being taken against senior figures involved in the Gaza failing and the live streaming of Bob Vylan at Glastonbury. Pascal Robinson-Foster, who goes by the name Bobby Vylan as part of the duo, was shown leading chants of 'death, death to the IDF', referring to the Israel Defense Forces. Davie faces another difficult decision over the future of the latest series of MasterChef, which has already been delivered to the BBC and in which Wallace features almost throughout. The decision has become even more difficult after the show's other presenter, John Torode, announced that he was the subject of a substantiated allegation of using racist language. He denies the incident happened. Davie said MasterChef's producer, Banijay, had to 'follow up' on the allegation and report back to the BBC. He said he had made no decision over the series, but was concerned about the effort put in by the amateur chefs involved. 'One of my overwhelming concerns is that we've got all the amateur chefs that gave their heart and soul to this programme,' he said. 'We have to reflect on that, talk to them – and I'm sure Banijay are doing that – consult them, think about the audience, and then make a call. That's what we're going through now.' He said there was a future for the show. 'A great programme that's well loved by audiences is much bigger than individuals,' he said. The BBC's annual report highlighted the strengths and serious challenges the BBC faces as streaming and YouTube continue to split audiences. The BBC is still managing to reach 94% of UK adults every month, while its digital platform iPlayer was the UK's fastest-growing long-form on-demand service last year. However, the number of households paying the BBC licence fee fell for the seventh consecutive year, down 300,000, the report stated.