Guest guest Posted December 31, 2003 Report Share Posted December 31, 2003 I am interested in starting a letter writing campaign to the TV Food Network asking for a gluten free show... a series would be nice, but I think if we asked for an episode of " The Best Of... " or " Unwrapped " we'd be more likely to receive a positive response. Unfortunately their web site FAQ page <http://www.foodtv.com/food/faq/0,1904,FOOD_9882,00.html> says that they only accept show ideas from production companies: " 3. I have an idea for a new Food Network show. Where should I send it? We accept show ideas only from production companies, and those pitches must be completed, signed and mailed to us using the form found at www.foodnetwork.com/pitch . " So, do I abandon this chance to get the word out about celiac and delicious GF cooking or does anyone have contacts with a production company of some sort? I just signed up for the chat boards at the web site and am browsing these, but the forum categories are extremely limited. Should I give up? julie --- IM/Yahoo/LJ: Maguire708 ICQ: 54035938 NCSSM '91 Antioch '95 IWG #708 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2004 Report Share Posted January 1, 2004 That would be an excellent show to focus a campaign on... is anyone else interested in writing to Good Eats or posting on the GE message board? I've started a new topic on the Good Eats chat board entitled: Gluten Free Baking. I'd love to see this thread take off with a hundred posts to get the moderator's attention. If you can spare 2 minutes please go to <http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/home> and join the forums... the thread is under the Good Eats Fan Board. Thanks! Here's my letter (posted by Maguire708): " As one of the millions of Americans with Celiac Disease (recent studies indicate that 1 in 133 Americans has this disease) I would love to see Alton tackle the science of baking... without using wheat, rye, barley, or oats! As anyone with Celiac can explain, flours such as rice, sorghum, bean, quinoa, and potato just don't have the same balance of proiteins and fats as what flour does, so baking a nice loaf of bread or a moist and springy cake takes some finegaling! I'd love to see FoodTV and Alton Brown investigate and illuminate the mysteries of gluten free baking! " julie > > > I already wrote in asking if Good Eats could do a show on GF baking > (thinking it'd be right up their scientific alley) but I haven't > heard back. :-( > > > --- IM/Yahoo/LJ: Maguire708 ICQ: 54035938 NCSSM '91 Antioch '95 IWG #708 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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