Tuned In

The Morning After: Can't Live With Your Design, Can't Live Without It

Last night, Top Design wrapped up its second season; no spoilers here, because it’s still sitting on my Tivo, but I thought I’d open the doors to anyone who wants to discuss.

Up to this point, I thought the second season had been better than the first, picking a more memorable cast—including Eddie, the worst ambassador for the Martha Stewart brand since, well, Martha Stewart—and making better use of its judges. But it’s still not in my top tier of Bravo luxury-lifestyle shows. One series that is, Top Chef, returns next week—to New York City, where God intended it to be. Does either of these shows measure up to Project Runway in your eyes? For its own sake, Bravo had better hope so.

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  • jimatl

    I actually think that Top Chef has surpassed PR in my mind.

    Which is kind of weird because you can’t taste the food through TV (yet). But you pretty much anyone can “judge” fashion for themselves.

    I think that TC enlists a more impressive (to me) roster of judges and I like the “Quick Fire” challenges that keep the 1-hour show from dragging. Finally, I think that the casting process enlists a more diverse pool of challengers – from hash house cooks to haute cuisine — not to mention more interesting racial/ethnic/gender/SO/geographic balance.

  • amasea

    Me too, jimatl. I loooove Top Chef.
    Not that I don’t like Project Runway, it’s dang good. Maybe it’s because I like food more than fashion, and can cook a lot better than I can sew, so I can actually make some of the things they make on the show.
    Top Design was OK, and I agree with James that the cast was better. Indonesian Opera Dude was awesomely, awesomely gay in a way I had not previously been familiar with, it was fun watching Ondine rise from a nonentity to a competitor, and Nathan’s designs kicked some ridiculous ass. And Eddie, the stylist you loved to hate. The tweaks they made to the show this year really worked, including less use of the three-sided empty white boxes. I think the formula could use a little more tweaking, but I’ll be back for season three if there is one. On the other hand, I thought HGTV’s Design Star got worse in its second season, and I didn’t even watch through to the end, which I did for the first two seasons (voted and everything).

  • amasea

    oops, I meant Design Star got worse in its most recent season (I think its third).

  • alekshy

    I agree with jimatl. Top Chef is my favorite Bravo show, and PR is only a guilty pleasure. The addition of the Quick Fire is genius. The winner of it has a lot to live up to for the main challenge and then often fails, and the loser of the Quick Fire knows he or she needs to step up (or grill up, sautee up, etc.).
    .
    Also the hosts of Top Chef are far more enjoyable than the lame, boring, botoxed judges of Top Design or Shear Genius. But I have to admit that Heidi takes the German-chocolate cake for best Bravo host. But with Padma and Tom Calichio (sp!) I love Top Chef
    .
    And jimatl is also right about the spectrum of competitors. On the new season there is a culinary student in the show, the only one. Everyone else is either an owner of their own restaurant or a head chef somewhere. I can’t wait. I can’t wait.
    .
    As you can tell, I can’t wait.

  • mollytink

    I have to agree — I think Top Chef has surpassed Project Runway. I love both, but there’s something about Top Chef that makes it a little more engaging. Maybe the regular change in scenery? Not only does it rotate cities, but the chefs regularly get out and interact with the real world, which definitely adds to the show. The PR contestants may get 1 or 2 challenges where they scavenge from cars or recycle bins for materials or attend a fancy party, but the vast majority of their time is spend inside Parson’s.

  • alekshy

    You’re right, Project Runway seems too into itself with limiting the contestants’ interactions with us outside folk, and too uppity, while Top Chef is more raw and realistic.

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