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Gary Olsen, Creator and Producer of
Archival Copies of the Above Episodes. You can download these to your hard drive and keep them. They play best in Adobe MediaPlayer (it's free from Adobe.com). | Welcome to Season 4 of Kids in the Kitchen! | |||||||||||
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| The entire cast assembles for Episode 13, the Season 4 Finale Show. Join producer and host of this show, Gary Olsen, for a very funny episode. | ||||||||||||
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| Above, Jim makes Fruit Smoothies in Episode 6. Links to this season's accumulating episodes are in the left column. Scroll down. Below is Douglas, an Irving Elementary student, carefully measuring cream for Episode7's segment on making ice cream. Right: These mini-meat loafs made of locally raised bison, and were they fabulous. Learn how to make them in Episode 8. | ||||||||||||
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| Above, Jim helps two students from Irving Elementary, Isabelle and Sophie, create a caramel sauce. | ||||||||||||
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| Meet the Casts of Season 4 | ||||||||||||
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| Here's the Washington Middle School Team, and they include Jacob Shearer, Isabelle Barefoot (Irving School), Mitch Steinhauser, Shelby Stecklein, Douglas Olson (Irving), back row with Jim Barefoot, Tyler Breitbach, Gary Olsen and Jim Terry, Morgan Donath, Jane Bradley, and Madison Davis. | ||||||||||||
| This is the Roosevelt Middle School Cast in this photo just taken at their taping of their first show. With Jim Terry (left), Gary Olsen (with camera), Cindy Baumgartner (Iowa State University Extension Office), and Jim Barefoot (our sound engineer) is A.J. Reinert, Nick Kringle, Sarah Hallahan, Morgan Drish, Abby Ahlrichs, Isabelle Barefoot (Irving Elementary) and Douglas Olson (Irving Elementary). Okay, since Kayla Brown wasn't available for the photo above, we took a shot two weeks later, and she's in the photo below. That's why we have two Roosevelt photos on this page. | ||||||||||||
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| This is the Producer's Website designed to keep everyone in the cast and their parents informed of developerments. Fans are invited to peer under the hood of this successful series. | ||||||||||||
I can't speak for our chef, Jim Terry, but I know he brings to every episode a lifetime of cooking expertise, and he always comes to the set with nutritious fare that emphasizes healthful, natural, and particularly organically grown and prepared ingredients. But Jim loves to impart his knowledge of knife handling, proper use of appliances and above all safety and sanitation. Students are not only learning the science and math of food preparation, but the geography, history and literature of cuisine world wide. We also enjoy the serendipity and happy accidents that occur on set that make for interesting television. When I was dreaming up Kids in the Kitchen, I recalled my own upbringing. In my family, the culinary arts were the domain of my mother. We were a very traditional American household. Looking back on my own youth, I believe my mother considered cooking as the last essential service she could provide us kids, and I think she wanted to prolong this dependence upon her as long as possible. And God forbid I would question any aspect of food preparation or the ingredients she used. I can only imagine what would have happened if I came home and announced I was thinking of becoming a vegetarian or if I made suggestions about more healthful menu alternatives (if I knew of any at the time). She actually wasn't too keen on me experimenting in the kitchen. She was perhaps correct that I would most likely make a mess, and there were the dangers of hot surfaces, sharp knives and the specter of food-borne illness looming. I recall an old gas oven in which my mother singed her hair and eyebrows while igniting a pilot light. Thankfully it was a small explosion but an explosion nonetheless because she had left the gas turned on. She could have blown the entire house to kingdom come! Very dangerous! Needless to say I didn't touch anything in the kitchen except what was put on a plate and shoved in front of my face for all the years I was growing up. I don't think my lack of experience in the kitchen is unique, and so I endeavored to do something about it and help kids develop an appreciation for cooking and healthful ingredients. I just love the collaborative process of television production. I believe that television is the most perfect medium around which to rally talent and build collaborative relationships. The results speak for themselves in many ways. Our shows are now seen state-wide on Mediacom and our fan base is growing among their 400,000 subscribers. Two years ago we won the Beacon Award, cable TV's highest honor for public service series programming beating out such entities as National Geographic Channel, Time Warner, and Cox Cable. I couldn't be more happy for the continued success of our show. I'm particularly proud of our student cast members. They are what's important to us in this enterprise. I hope you'll stay tuned to this website because it will change frequently in the next several weeks. Photos and episodes will be posted as well as recipes and other information. Perhaps you can come out to Hy-Vee and join our audience and watch a show being taped live. Check the schedule. Filming starts at 9 AM on production days. --Gary Olsen, Media Developer for the Dubuque Community Schools Kids in the Kitchen
Here's what we were looking for in a student: Decent grades, an engaging personality, and comfort interacting with adults. We are not looking for perceptible talent for television, nor do we require students know anything about cooking. We prefer they just want to learn and are enthusiastic about the possibilities of being on a television show. Students with performing experience are always good choices, obviously, and some of these students have been in school productions, perform in school music ensembles, and even participate in their school's televised announcements that are broadcast each morning at the start of school. Kids in the Kitchen is now seen state-wide throughout Iowa on Mediacom Cable's statewide subscriber network. We have all sorts of fans, and our in-store audience has become quite large on production days. With our state-of-the-art studio kitchen, thanks to Hy-Vee, we have capacity for 70 people, and we hope that's sufficient. Who knew so many people would take the opportunity to come to Hy-Vee to watch a television show being filmed so early in the morning? You are certainly welcome to join our audience, but you may have to get there early to guarantee a seat. Production Days: We start production at Hy-Vee Asbury at 8:30 AM usually on Wednesdays (see the schedule at right). Since we now have a permanent set, shooting will stay within a strict-two and-a-half hour period. Students will be ready to return to school by 11 AM. The Schedule: Our master schedule is above, and it consists of 11 shows taped from January 8 through March. There will likely be changes due to school cancellations caused by weather. In which case, we add shooting days on the end of the schedule. You are advised to mark this page as a favorite and continually check to make sure we are on schedule and you'll want to look for additional shooting days. Casts from our three middle schools take turns serving as on-camera cast and crewmembers, and a master schedule lists who performs when. It's important that students check the shooting schedule weekly. Shows air on Mediacom Cable 19 within a few weeks of their production. Episodes will also be available for download from this website. Transportation: Each school is responsible for transporting their kids to and from the set, and proper permission forms must be completed and signed by parents allowing students to participate and permission granted to the school district for the use of each student's image and performance. |
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