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I’m a middle-class woman of a certain age – and I have something to say to Gregg Wallace

There’s a good reason why the disgraced former MasterChef host is angry with women like me, writes Alice Smellie – we’re mad as hell and we’re not going to take this anymore

Monday 02 December 2024 10:20 GMT
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Gregg Wallace denounces Masterchef complaints from 'middle-class women'

There were four teenage boys slumped in my kitchen when I watched MasterChef presenter Gregg Wallace’s defiant Instagram riposte to allegations about him making lurid and inappropriate sexual comments over a 17-year period.

In a video posted on his profile, Wallace said: “I can see the complaints coming from a handful of middle-class women of a certain age […]. This isn’t right.”

To which my two sons and their friends gave a collective intake of breath and muffled sniggers, before this damningly accurate summary: “He’s just dug himself into an even deeper hole, there,” said my 18-year-old.

Hasn’t he just?

Wallace “stepped away” as host of the BBC cookery series on Thursday, amid more than a dozen allegations about inappropriate comments he is said to have made to several stars who had appeared with him on the celebrity spin-off, including former Newsnight host Kirsty Wark, comedian Katy Brand and Geordie Shore’s Charlotte Crosby.

Kirstie Allsopp has since claimed that Wallace, with whom she once filmed a pilot for a TV show, also made “unprofessional” comments about a sex act to her.

Wallace denies the allegations, but he hasn’t done himself any favours in attacking “middle-class women of a certain age” – and that’s putting it lightly. It was this unguarded put-down that sparked an enraged response on social media – and a flood of personal messages to my WhatsApp.

Now, this could be just another middle-class woman of a certain age talking, but resorting to everyday misogyny is possibly not the ideal way to react to allegations of historical misconduct.

Wallace’s ill-timed and ill-thought-out remark against a large cohort of people who, for the past two decades, have helped make his cookery show a ratings success – for who is watching MasterChef if not middle-class women of a certain age, thank you very much – has created a tidal wave of rage.

In fact, our collective ire against Wallace’s comments completely took over what would otherwise have been the start of the festive season – an even greater injustice. That’s right: women getting organised for Christmas had to move away from untangling the fairy lights and the mincemeat to disseminate and dissect a world-beatingly sexist, ageist and classist aside. Making a different sort of mincemeat, if you will.

At whom was Wallace aiming this post, and why? Instagram is not historically a medium on which to release vitriol; for that, there’s X, formerly Twitter. And I can’t think of any who would find it amusing.

Unfortunately for Wallace, the majority of responses have been variations on calling his post a “binfire” and others suggesting that he take a long look in the mirror before insulting his fellow midlifers.

His wounded, “poor-me” fightback, with its dinosaur-like tone, hails from the pre-#MeToo era – a prehistoric world in which women who objected to sexual comments or bottom-pinching were humourless and “couldn’t take a joke”.

What can’t be overlooked is that 2017’s #MeToo movement happened for a reason, and sadly it is still vital in many unreconstructed seams of employment and entertainment.

I can’t think of one female friend who hasn’t endured some form of bullying or sexual harassment in the workplace – yet I can only think of one who has dared speak its name. (As it happens, she ended up leaving her job as it became untenably toxic.)

Let’s not forget that women who raise their voices above a ladylike murmur are still frequently labelled hysterical, aggressive or difficult. Put up and shut up has been the acceptable reaction for centuries. Back in your box, ladies (middle-class or otherwise).

Not that #MeToo sorted things out – far from it. Middle-aged women who stand up for themselves can now be simply dismissed as “Karens”. I’m surprised Wallace didn’t reach for the word himself.

But women in midlife have put up with an inordinate amount over the years, and our rage has often been slow-burning since our twenties. It is only in the last few years that we’ve been able to call out poor behaviour, though still very much with the fear of reprisal – sacking or ostracising – and we are a very long way from achieving equity in most areas of life.

Now we have reached our forties, fifties and beyond – and the subtext of Wallace’s comment sadly suggests that middle-aged women are whiny and irrelevant – we’d prefer that young women in subsequent generations weren’t subjected to the same behaviour. Or dismissive ripostes when there’s a suggestion that it might have occurred.

Age may not necessarily bring wisdom but it does bring the confidence to stand up to bad behaviour. I am seeing those of us objecting to Wallace’s comments being called “bitter” and “invisible”. Personally, I take these words as a compliment and simply think that it proves my point. As the old Network saying goes: “We’re mad as hell and we’re not gonna take this anymore...”

Alice Smellie co-wrote Cracking the Menopause with Mariella Frostrup, which investigates attitudes to older women throughout the millennia

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