A cooking competition that tasks chefs with making brunch — the No. 1 most dreaded meal in most professional kitchens — at first sounds like a recipe for Sisyphean pain. In the hands of “Schitt’s Creek” co-creator Dan Levy, however, “The Big Brunch” immediately establishes itself as the total opposite of that bleak picture, with its emphasis on congeniality and warmth above all else. Leaning on the latter-day “Schitt’s” ideals of staying true to oneself, this gentle twist on a “Top Chef” formula doesn’t exactly bring the drama — but for those craving something with less bite, “The Big Brunch” should prove harder to resist than that one last mimosa.
The eight-episode series (premiering Nov. 10 on HBO Max) opens with Levy introducing 10 contestants who are “each making a big difference in their community,” though only one will win the final (and impressively large) prize of $300,000. Here, “The Big Brunch” establishes altruism as its ultimate goal. Over time, though, its definition of what “making a difference” means varies wildly from person to person, making it hard not to judge one chef’s dream against another. Opening a pop-up bakery during the early days of COVID is impressive, but does that person “deserve” the money more than, say, the chef hoping to buy the impoverished church that hosts his neighborhood garden and meals for the needy? It’s not the fault of either contestant that their stories end up pitted against each other, but should the show see a second season, it’d do well to make sure its casting and mission statement are better aligned.
Related Stories
VIP+Why SAG-AFTRA Is Smart to Threaten Holiday Gaming Boycott
Hulu Gives Pilot Order to Nick Paley Comedy 'Phony,' Connie Britton Set to Star
Confusing though its broader aims can be, “The Big Brunch” finds a groove as a cooking competition show much more quickly. Given his years of hosting experience (including the tonally similar “Great Canadian Baking Show”), Levy’s charm comes as no surprise as he assumes the driver’s seat. Joining him as judges are restaurateur Will Guidara (formerly of Eleven Madison Park) and prolific recipe developer Sohla El-Waylly, with El-Waylly in particular showing just how comfortable and knowledgeable she is both as a chef and as an on-screen authority. Just as important in the balance of things is David Korins’ glittering set design, which features a kitchen decked out in sky-blue tile, a Parisian bistro-esque dining room and bar to host the judges (and their brunch cocktails), and a sliding partition separating the two when it’s time for deliberations. Even knowing it had to be a set and not a real kitchen, I still felt a shock midway through the season when the cast walked off it and into the parking lot for an impromptu farmers market.
Popular on Variety
As for the brunch of it all, the brief thankfully proves more versatile than not. What could have just been a parade of egg preparations is instead a celebration of family-style meals and the different traditions that can make the midday meal so important. There may be only so many ways to serve up brunch, so a second season would have to find yet more innovative ideas to stretch the premise. Given how it handled these first eight episodes, though, “The Big Brunch” has earned its place at the next table.
“The Big Brunch” premieres with three episodes on Thursday, Nov. 10.
Read More About:
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety
‘Lanterns’ HBO Series Casts Kelly Macdonald
One Year Later, ‘Call of Duty: Black Ops 6’ Legitimizes Microsoft-Activision Deal
Warner Bros. Discovery Adds 7 Million Streaming Subs in Q3 to Hit 110 Million as Box Office Dives 40% in ‘Barbie’-Less Summer
Who Invented Bitcoin? HBO Documentary ‘Money Electric’ Tries to Solve an Enduring Crypto Mystery
AI in Animation Is Not an All-or-Nothing Proposition
HBO Among Buyers of Beta Film’s Hot Central Eastern European Slate Led by ‘Soviet Jeans,’ ‘Operation Sabre’ (EXCLUSIVE)
Most Popular
Anna Kendrick Was Terrified to Act With George Clooney on ‘Up in the Air’ Until He Told Her on Set: ‘I Get Insecure. Did They Even Hire the Right…
Grammy Nominations 2025: Beyonce Leads With 11 Nods as Taylor Swift, Chappell Roan, Sabrina Carpenter and Charli XCX Are Among Top Nominees
Ray Romano’s Identical Twin Sons Confront Their Quarter-Life Crisis, Codependency and Growing Up With a Famous Dad in Their New Documentary
Ridley Scott Says Joaquin Phoenix Got Cold Feet on ‘Gladiator’ and Said ‘I Can’t Do It’; Then Russell Crowe Called It ‘Terribly Unprofessional…
Jimmy Kimmel Responds to Elon Musk Calling Him a ‘Propaganda Puppet’: ‘Listen Kermit, You Bought Twitter’
Tony Todd, ‘Candyman’ and ‘Final Destination’ Star, Dies at 69
16-Year-Old Josh Brolin Tried to Make His ‘Goonies’ Character Super Deep; Then Steven Spielberg Told Him: ‘Just Act. Just Say What’s on the Page…
Denis Villeneuve Says ‘I Don’t Care’ If Quentin Tarantino Refuses to Watch ‘Dune,’ but ‘What I Did Was Not a Remake … I See This as an Original…
Nicholas Hoult Heard on the Radio That Robert Pattinson Was Batman and ‘I Was Auditioning Next Weekend’; Losing Role Was an ‘Emotional Blow…
Taylor Sheridan’s ‘1923’ to Air on Paramount Network Beginning in December (TV News Roundup)
Must Read
- Film
COVER | ‘Is the Sperm Still in There?’: Daniel Craig and Drew Starkey on Making ‘Queer’
By Andrew Wallenstein 5 days
- Film
The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time
- Biz
Hollywood's New Leaders of 2024
- Music
15 Best Samples of Quincy Jones' Music, From Kanye West to the Weeknd to Harry Styles
- TV
Marvel's 2025 TV Slate Revealed, Including First Looks at ‘Wonder Man,’ Animated 'Spider-Man' and 'Wakanda' Shows
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXN%2Bjq2taKqVq7amw9Joq6GdXZe2qHnBq6ynm5hiv6bCyJ6uZpyRo3qtsdWyZGpqY2qBc32PaWdo