Almost five years ago I was interviewed for three segments of six part TV series called ‘The Way of the Wok,” focusing on
Chinese food, and specifically focusing on the five major cuisines of
China, and how they have manifested in Canada in the United States. Canadian celebrity chef Christine Cushing interviewed me on a
variety of topics, though the interview really
wasn’t a perfect fit because they were looking for a Chinese food
expert, which I am not. Anyway I hadn’t heard a peep from them after
the interview, and my presumption was that they ran out of money before
being able to package the series, or couldn’t find anybody to buy it.
A couple of years later, I was cleaning my desk and I found the card of the
show’s producer, Theresa Kowall Shipp. Curious about what might have
happened to the show, I did a Google search to find that the show had just made
its TV debut in Hong Kong a little over a week previously under the moniker
“Confucius Was A Foodie.” I also found detailed information about the
six episodes, and it didn’t look like any of my interviews made the
final cut.
Then, early this year the show finally showed up on PBS, expanded to eight episodes, certainly a long time from production time to showing up on US television. In watching the first couple of shows it was clear that my scenes were definitely not included because the focus of the show had shifted from Chinese food in North America to Chinese food in general, with the majority of the scenes being shot in Asia and other foreign locales, with scenes shot in Canada, San Francisco and Los Angeles being really incidental.
For the most part I didn't watch the episodes, but I did fast forward through to parts that were clearly shot in North America to see if there were interesting tidbits about the Chinese food here. In the episode on Sichuan cuisine, I noticed that they took a bit of artistic license by including some scenes of Los Angeles Chinatown in the show, despite the fact that there is no Sichuan food in Los Angeles Chinatown. I presume they did this because while they were talking about Sichuan food in the San Gabriel Valley in that segment, the SGV doesn't have the stylized Chinese architecture that you find in Los Angeles Chinatown, and they wanted that visual Chinese atmosphere in the show.
The other interesting visual find in watching the Sichuan episode was that there were very brief (one to two seconds) shots of the interior and the exterior of the restaurant, Chua Ren Bai Wei in Temple City, where I shot my scenes. I was very happy to see those snippets, because it shows that they didn't destroy the tape they took that day. And in just now checking the Confucius Was A Foodie website again, they now refer to the shows as the first season, so maybe there will be a second season and maybe they'll use some more old tape!