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Gregg Wallace live: BBC says MasterChef will air tonight as ex host blames women jibe on feeling ‘under siege’

In a video posted on Instagram, the presenter said he was ‘under a huge amount of stress’

Athena Stavrou,Holly Evans,Katie Rosseinsky,Andy Gregory
Monday 02 December 2024 19:45 GMT
MasterChef’s Gregg Wallace issues apology after ‘middle class women’ comment amid misconduct allegations

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Gregg Wallace has apologised for saying allegations of inappropriate behaviour were made by “middle-class women of a certain age”, claiming he felt “under siege”.

Wallace said in a video posted on Instagram that he was “not in a good place” and he is “under a lot of stress”.

“I wasn’t in a good headspace when I posted it, I’ve been under a huge amount of stress, a lot of emotion, I felt very alone, under siege yesterday when I posted it,” he said, adding that he will “take some time out”.

Downing Street condemned Wallace’s remarks about middle class women as “inappropriate and misogynistic”.

The BBC is resisting calls to pause broadcasts of MasterChef as it investigates allegations by 13 individuals of sexually inappropriate comments made by Wallace, who stepped down from the programme on Thursday.

The current series of MasterChef: The Professionals, with Wallace as a judge, will continue to be aired as planned. “MasterChef is life-changing for the chefs that take part and the show is about more than one individual,” a BBC spokesman said.

“Any behaviour which falls below the standards expected by the BBC will not be tolerated,” the broadcaster reiterated.

Gregg Wallace: From troubled childhood to troubling reputation, this TV stalwart is facing self-destruction

Gregg Wallace was always an unlikely TV star. Prematurely bald, stout, and the proud wearer of thick glasses, he seemed destined for an unglamorous life amid the vegetable stalls of the capital, rather than on TV screens across the country.

And yet, the presenter, who today has stepped back from his role as a judge on MasterChef after a series of historic sexual misconduct allegations came to light, has made himself part of the furniture at the BBC. And that makes his rapid fall from grace even more troubling for the corporation, though Wallace’s lawyers say it is entirely false that he engages in behaviour of a sexually harassing nature.

Wallace was born in Peckham, in southeast London, in 1964. The Sixties were a time when Peckham, a traditionally working-class neighbourhood with a large African-Caribbean population, started to be redeveloped and re-energised, turning it into a vibrant, multicultural and upwardly mobile area.

Nick Hilton writes:

Gregg Wallace: From troubled childhood to troubling reputation

The greengrocer-turned-presenter is stepping back from ‘MasterChef’ while allegations of historical misconduct are investigated. Nick Hilton looks back on his career as an unlikely TV star, which followed a tough start in life

Alex Croft2 December 2024 19:45

BBC should examine how complaints against stars are dealt with, Tory MP says

A Tory frontbencher has suggested that the BBC must examine how complaints against its stars are dealt with.

Shadow paymaster general Richard Holden told Sky News: “Quite clearly there’s a lot of issues facing the BBC over this. He’s been a star presenter for a number of years, and quite clearly a lot of this stuff’s been mentioned before.

“And so this needs to be properly looked at, not just around his behaviour, but around how things are dealt with when things are mentioned as well.”

Asked whether the BBC should pull its MasterChef Christmas special, Mr Holden said: “This is going to be a decision for them as far as a broader view. I think it’s really important that they look at this.”

Alex Croft2 December 2024 19:22

BBC executive raised concerns over Wallace’s ‘unacceptable’ behaviour in 2017, report claims

BBC executive Kate Phillips raised concerns in 2017 that Gregg Wallace’s behaviour was “unacceptable and cannot continue” after former Celebrity MasterChef contestant Aasmah Mir complained about inappropriate comments during filming, the Sunday Times has reported.

In an email forwarded to Ms Phillips in November 2017, Ms Mir wrote: “Should anything happen in the future, I don’t want to feel guilty when people say, ‘Why wasn’t anything said before?’, or for producers or editors to claim they didn’t know.”

The newspaper claimed Wallace then received another warning the following year after a complaint was raised about his behaviour on the quiz show Impossible Celebrities.

Alex Croft2 December 2024 18:54

Comment | Gregg Wallace is just the latest example of a much bigger problem with men

When I woke up to MasterChef’s Gregg Wallace blaming midlife, middle-class women and their lack of a sense of humour for his troubles, I confess to swearing at my phone. The levels of denial here are off the scale; how can he think it is our collective lack of a sense of humour which is the villain here, not his own over-sexualised, aggressive, Neanderthal-style banter?

Did Wallace – who has been accused of making inappropriate sexual comments over a period of 17 years – not stop for a second to consider that it might be these women who are calling him out because they are the ones with the confidence to do so?

Read the full Voices piece by journalist Eleanor Mills:

Gregg Wallace is just the latest example of a much bigger problem with men

The allegations against the ‘MasterChef’ presenter show that if you are important enough and powerful enough your transgressions will often be overlooked. It’s time for that to change, writes Eleanor Mills

Alex Croft2 December 2024 18:27

Watch: Ex MasterChef star Aggie Mackenzie claims Gregg Wallace told ‘smutty’ jokes

Ex MasterChef star Aggie Mackenzie claims Gregg Wallace told 'smutty' jokes
Alex Croft2 December 2024 18:01

ICYMI: Gregg not contracted for future series, production company confirms

The company that produces MasterChef, has confirmed Gregg Wallace is not contracted for future series as an investigation into alleged inappropriate behaviour is carried out.

Production company Banijay UK told The Independent that Wallace is contracted on a series by series basis and is not set to be a part of future series while the investigation is ongoing.

Alex Croft2 December 2024 17:36

Wallace is ‘full of jokes’, says TV chef Tom Kerridge

TV chef Tom Kerridge said he has always known Gregg Wallace to be “full of jokes”.

“And he’s always full of charisma. And that front of camera charisma is always something that continues into off-screen as well”, Mr Kerridge told Sky News’ Politics hub.

Alex Croft2 December 2024 17:10

Kirstie Allsopp ‘so embarrassed’ by Gregg Wallace sex remark

TV presenter Kirstie Allsopp has said she was “so embarrassed” she thought she “might cry” after Gregg Wallace allegedly made a comment to her about his sex life.

Allsopp, 53, said the encounter took place several years ago in a performers’ lounge while she was filming a pilot for a TV quiz show alongside Wallace and his partner.

She told BBC Radio 4’s The World This Weekend: “I’d been chatting to her, she left the room and he (Wallace) made a reference to something they did in bed.

“You know that feeling when you’re so embarrassed that you think you might cry. You just feel kind of internally scarlet. I had that feeling and I always remembered it.”

Alex Croft2 December 2024 16:43

Gregg Wallace tells Strictly partner he does not wear underwear

Gregg Wallace tells Strictly partner he does not wear underwear
Alex Croft2 December 2024 16:25

Comment | The BBC has a Gregg Wallace problem that goes beyond MasterChef

In a comment piece for Independent Voices, former head of BBC news Roger Mosey writes:

Is the fate of a television cookery presenter more important than Syrian insurgents seizing Aleppo and the turmoil on the streets in Georgia? The BBC thinks so, based on its news judgements in recent days, which have seen exhaustive coverage of the accusations against Gregg Wallace take precedence over matters of life and death around the world.

Once again, the “independence” of BBC News has been trumpeted in its ability to report on the corporation’s own business – but for many it reflects a self-obsession and lack of perspective which questions the judgement of the news division. Senior BBC executives share this view, I know, but they feel powerless to intervene without the risk of being accused of corporate cover-ups.

And yes, of course, the Wallace affair should be reported on – proportionately. It is both a genuine story, with obvious upset caused to those who’ve had a nasty experience with the former MasterChef host, and it is a further blow to the BBC which has been battling against misbehaviour by its presenters for decades.

What makes this case particularly damaging – and we should note that investigations are continuing and no conclusions have yet emerged – is that it seems that managers in the BBC and in the production company Banijay must have known that there was a Wallace Problem.

Read the full article with Independent Premium:

The BBC has a Gregg Wallace problem that goes beyond MasterChef

Rather than demonstrating transparency and accountability, recent news coverage shows how self-obsessed the organisation is, writes former head of BBC news Roger Mosey. But there’s no masking the stink coming from the kitchen...

Andy Gregory2 December 2024 15:51

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