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The Chew (2011)
The Chew is an American talk show/cooking show that airs in the United States on ABC as part of the network's weekday daytime lineup. The name and format was inspired by the talk show The View, though centering on food-related and lifestyle topics. Each episode has its own title based upon the episode's theme. The program also airs in Canada on the stations of the Citytv television system. The show is recorded at ABC Studio 40 West 66th Street, New York City. Evette Rios, Marc Summers, former Food Network personality Danny Boome and Jason Roberts serve as correspondents for taped segments. Guest co-hosts have included Emeril Lagasse, Ming Tsai, Scott Conant, Sunny Anderson and Evette Rios. A scenic designer with the show, Ivan Giovanettina, a native of Switzerland, was shot dead in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn on January 10, 2013.
The Chew is an American talk show/cooking show that airs in the United States on ABC as part of the network's weekday daytime lineup. The name and format was inspired by the talk show The View, though centering on food-related and lifestyle topics. Each episode has its own title based upon the episode's theme. The program also airs in Canada on the stations of the Citytv television system. The show is recorded at ABC Studio 40 West 66th Street, New York City. Evette Rios, Marc Summers, former Food Network personality Danny Boome and Jason Roberts serve as correspondents for taped segments. Guest co-hosts have included Emeril Lagasse, Ming Tsai, Scott Conant, Sunny Anderson and Evette Rios. A scenic designer with the show, Ivan Giovanettina, a native of Switzerland, was shot dead in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn on January 10, 2013.
The Chew was a daytime talk show primarily focused on food, cooking, and lifestyle. Its content was overwhelmingly apolitical, offering entertainment and practical advice without engaging in ideological discourse or promoting specific political viewpoints, leading to a neutral rating.
The show featured a visibly diverse panel of hosts, reflecting a range of backgrounds. Its content, focused on food and lifestyle, maintained a neutral and positive framing of identities without engaging in critical portrayals of traditional identities or explicit DEI-driven narratives.
The Chew, a daytime lifestyle and cooking show, maintained a generally inclusive environment. Any portrayal of LGBTQ+ individuals or themes was incidental, presenting them as part of the diverse guest pool without making their identity a central narrative or source of conflict. The show avoided both strong positive advocacy and negative stereotypes, resulting in a neutral overall impact.
The Chew was a daytime talk show primarily focused on culinary topics and lifestyle. There is no available information or record indicating the presence of identifiable transsexual characters or themes within its programming, thus rendering an evaluation of portrayal inapplicable.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
As a daytime talk and cooking show, "The Chew" features real hosts and guests rather than fictional characters adapted from source material or historical figures. Therefore, the concept of a gender swap, as defined, does not apply.
The Chew is an original talk show featuring real hosts, not an adaptation of pre-existing characters from source material or history. Therefore, there are no instances of characters whose race was canonically established being portrayed by a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources





















