Hell's Kitchen/YMMV

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • Adaptation Displacement: Even in the UK, the American version of the show tends to be more renowned than its UK-based forerunner, which was basically just a standard-issue "celebrity cooking challenge" show, except with a slightly more abusive chef involved (Ramsay initially, and then Marco-Pierre White in later seasons).
  • Badass Decay: Debatably, Robert. In Season 5, he was one of the show's leading contenders, but pulled out due to health reasons. He returned the next season, but Ramsay realized that he is not as good as before (his health problems came back as well). He was eliminated in the seventh episode.
    • Krupa from Season 9. She was by far the best performing cook in the first two episodes, and considered the early front-runner. After the second service though, her performances started getting worse and worse, until she got booted out at the end of the seventh episode. It Got Worse when she came back for the finale, where she did such a horrible job that she had been relegated to doing the desserts by the end of the night.
    • Steve was comparatively good in the first few services, but went downhill soon after.
      • Took a Level in Badass: However, in his final service, he had a perfect service on meat and was the team's MVP. Which makes his Non-Gameplay Elimination even sadder.
    • Vinny was one of the strongest members of the Blue Team early on, but his skills declined sharply from the seventh service onwards.
  • Base Breaking Character: So many to pick from, but we'll list a few notable ones:
    • Tennille from Season 6. You either liked her for her determination, passion, and skill later on, or you disliked her for her sassy black woman persona and/or constantly screaming in her confessionals.
    • Raj from Season 8 was totally inept and clearly wasn't fit for an intense environment as Hell's Kitchen, but there are fans who enjoyed his presence because of his antics, and he did provide some splendid entertainment for many despite his craziness.
    • Also from Season 8, Jillian. She had fans for her consistency and determination, but her detractors think she lucked out in a less-talented cast, and felt she wouldn't have fared as well in better seasons like 12 or 14. Also, her voice alone is either cute or grating depending on who you talk to, while her friendship with that season's scrappy, Sabrina, also put fans off of her.
  • Big Beautiful Woman: Jennifer from Season 9, and Kimmie from Season 10.
    • On the male side, you also have Season 5's Robert and Season 10's Clemenza.
  • Crazy Awesome: At one point in Season 6, Dave was cooking four different dishes simultaneously due to Andy's incompetence, and all four were the best to come out of the kitchen. The most awesome part? He did it literally single-handed.
  • Creator's Pet: Ramsay has been accused of showing blatant favouritism towards certain contestants. Probably the most notable example was Virginia from Season 2, who looked certain to be eliminated after a horrendous performance in the third-last service, but was saved after Ramsay conveniently re-instated the immunity she had lost partway through the service and eliminated Sara, who had been less than stellar but not nearly as bad as Virginia. Then in the following service, Virginia's performance wasn't much better, but Ramsay eliminated Keith instead, which led Keith to openly accuse Ramsay of having "a hard-on for Virginia."
    • Also Nona from Season 8, toward whom Ramsay started showing very obvious favouritism after she aced the "palate test" challenge -- this was exemplified in the following service, where Nona insulted Ramsay to his face and he responded by taking her to one side and calmly explaining that she was being rude. It may actually have been justified somewhat in Nona's case, since she was without much doubt the best contestant from that season (the only real competition being from Jillian, who wasn't a very good leader, and Russell, who was a total douchebag).
    • Of course, he only took Nona to one side after having thrown her out of the kitchen, the only one on the red team to get thrown out that night.
  • Ear Worm: That stupid patriotic score whenever Season 7 Scott was talking in the Confession Cam. Kudos to the music department for making him look like an idiot with that.
  • Elimination Houdini: At least one per season, so much so that it has its own page right here.
    • It is believed that Executive Meddling keeps many of these undeserving people in the running, hopes of raising the drama and therefore ratings. Or that Gordon is contractually obligated to do a certain number of episodes, and can't eliminate every useless individual, lest he get the final four by episode six. Or a streak of good work on one team helps to insulate a shoddy player, especially in a target-rich environment (so if the person who was an Elimination Houdini was eliminated early on, there would be a different Elimination Houdini to take their place).
    • Also, watch out for chefs with great palates. Chef Ramsay has stated that a great palate is one of the most important things a chef can possess, noting that while he can teach nearly anyone to be a great cook, a good palate is something you're born with and an indicator of a chef's true potential. Chefs who have been noted to have great palates and who do well in the inevitable "blind taste test" challenge, which usually takes place just before or just after the teams merge, have almost always done far better than they would've been expected otherwise. Cases in point: Virginia in Season Two and Bonnie in Season Three. There's also Nona in season eight, who made it into the final six and eventually won the season even after messing up several dinner services in a row (though Gail and Vinny's collapses just before the merge may have also helped Nona along).
    • There's actually a pretty consistent pattern in how Ramsay eliminates contestants. Chefs who are outright incompetent are the first to go; they might last a bit longer if they show some passion and enthusiasm, but not beyond the first few episodes. The next contestants to be eliminated are the ones who are consistently average, and never put in a truly good performance. After that, we get to the traditional Elimination Houdinis -- chefs who put in a lot of unremarkable or outright bad performances, but also one or two good performances along the way, which gives Ramsay more of a reason to keep them in than the ones who are okay but never excel. Once they're gone, we're finally left with the genuinely good contestants. Ultimately, there are usually two major Elimination Houdinis per season, the absolutely awful chef who somehow stumbles through the first few episodes before being eliminated somewhere between episodes 3-5, and the chef who either has a bad attitude throughout the season and/or dramatically improves throughout the season (they might also have a good palette). This chef usually gets to at least the final six, and sometimes (as was the case with Virginia and Bonnie) even the final two.
  • Ensemble Darkhorse: So many to list that that it has its own page.
  • Epic Fail: So many to count that it now has its own page.
  • Faux Symbolism: Jason's penis-shaped lobster dish in Season 7.
  • Funny Aneurysm Moment: Arguably the entirety of Season 7, since the winner, Holli, was unable to take the job at the Savoy in London due to visa problems.
  • Hilarious in Hindsight: Although it first aired in June 2006, Season 2 contains a contestant named Sara who looks very similar to Sarah Palin. Sarah Palin was elected governor in December 2006, but it's hard not to view it as a No Celebrities Were Harmed parody.
    • In Season 8, Trev's pan catches fire, prompting Chef Ramsay to pull out a fire extinguisher and quip: "Watch your hair!" to everyone's amusement, including Trev himself. When he comes back for a second run in Season 18, he's completely bald.
    • In Season 14, the women managed to score two 5's, a 3, three 4's and three 1's in the Signature Dish challenge. This becomes amusing looking back when you notice that the elimination order of the women aligns almost perfectly with their Signature Dish performances (with only Alison (3) surviving longer than Sarah and Christine (4 apiece)).
  • Ho Yay: Averted so far. While there's actually been at least half a dozen gay male chefs on the show (so far as is known), there's never been more than one per season, yet, and at least two of them are openly gay (Season 5's Wil, and Season 14/17's Nick).
  • Jerkass Has a Point: For some bizarre reason, the contestants in Season 8 all seemed to believe that Melissa was by far one of the best chefs in that season's line-up, even in the face of her constant, massive screw-ups. The only person who actually called her out on her mistakes? Sabrina, who was continually ignored since the others just thought she being a bitch whenever she did so.
  • Jerkass Woobie: It's easy to assume that Ramsay's just a bitter, foul-tempered asshole. When you see what he has to put up with from some of the contestants, he becomes a lot more sympathetic. Also, watching his other shows (such as Master Chef Junior) shows that he can be not just nice, but warm, compassionate, and a generally wonderful human being. He screams out the contestants on Hell's Kitchen because they're supposed to be professionals and they constantly make amateur mistakes.
    • This is pretty much Andrea from Season 5's reaction after she has a turn running the pass.
  • Les Yay: Implied to have occurred with Heather and Rachel in Season 2, although Heather subsequently clarified that there was only ever a bit of good-natured flirting between the two, and that Rachel had a long-term girlfriend anyway, meaning that nothing would have happened anyway. Many fans suspected this was also the case with Bonnie and Jen in Season 3, although it ended up being disproved in the season finale when Bonnie pretty much confirmed that she was heterosexual.
  • Magnificent Bastard: Michael Wray from Season 1. Testing the final chefs with deliberate screw-ups? He did it first. Hiding ingredients to make the other chefs look bad? He magically found them. Deliberately nominating your strongest competitor to get them thrown out? He's the only person ever to successfully pull it off on this show (though this was before Ramsay could just kick out anyone he wanted). No one since has been so cutthroat.
    • Chef Ramsay himself proved to be this in the first episode of the seventh season and again at the first episode of the ninth season. Just look and you'll see.
  • Memetic Badass: Chef Ramsay.
  • Memetic Mutation: Now has its own page.
    • GET OUT! SHUT IT DOWN! YOU BLOODY DONKEY! Now fuck (or sometimes piss) off, will ya?
    • Ramsay's tendency to call the chefs a bloody donkey caught on with a little girl who was waiting to be served in Season 7. She drew a picture of Ramsay screaming "YOU DONKEY!"
    • In Season 8, when Jillian's family came into Hell's Kitchen, her son asked "Did he call you a donkey?".
    • THAT'S WHY IT'S CALLED FUCKING NON-STIIICK!
    • I ain't no (bleep) bitch chef! I don't give a (bleep). I ain't no bitch!
      • I'm not no bitch!

Chef Ramsay: I'm nobody's bitch!

    • The ultimate Hell's Kitchen meme.
    • YOU'LL KILL SOMEOOOOOOOOONE!!!
    • IT'S RAAAAAAAAAAAWWWW!
  • Most Annoying Sound: Every time Sara in Season 2 began talking. Not only was she horribly rude and nasty, her voice is very grating.
  • Replacement Scrappy: Gloria, the red team's sous chef in Seasons 4 and 5, was nowhere near as popular as her predecessor Maryann, mostly because Maryann had shown she could kick ass as well as Chef Ramsay and Scott, whereas Gloria seemed to spend most of her time on the show standing by the pass and looking as if she'd rather be elsewhere. The red team's following sous chefs, Heather and Andi have mostly averted this; Heather already had a lot of fans from her original appearance on the show, and Andi gained a lot of respect when she helped Chef Ramsay and Scott rescue a service that the red team had screwed up royally (it also helps that Andi is perhaps the best looking of the red team sous chefs thus far).
  • Narm Charm: The narration and sound effects are just hilarious. This troper likes to think it's intentional.
  • The Problem with Licensed Games: The show received a PC game adaptation which is considerably milder than the show. Ramsay looks very odd (Spoony's description was that he looks like he's made of Play-Doh) and doesn't swear or even really raise his voice unless you deliberately screw up repeatedly. There is no competition factor, and seating people is one of the challenges. The game isn't really bad per se -- as Spoony pointed out, it would be pretty decent for an iOS app or a free flash game -- but it isn't worth the $30 asking price.
  • Rescued from the Scrappy Heap: Bobby from Season 4. In the first service of that season, he was assigned to be the Blue Team's captain, and screwed up royally, to the extent that Ramsay took the captain's badge off him and gave it to Louross halfway through the service. The only real reason he survived elimination that week was because he was put up against Dominic, who was probably the worst chef ever to have appeared on the show until that point. In the following weeks he improved, though, and was named the Best of the Worst in the fourth service. After that he became one of the more liked chefs from that season's bunch, to the point where many fans were genuinely upset when he got kicked off the show in favor of Jen.
    • Benjamin became this when he returned in All Stars; he still had his bad moments, and his constant "Oui chef" gradually annoying everyone, but other than that, he was far less pompous and abrasive, improved his leader qualities since Season 7, and treated his comrades with a lot more respect without being a condescending jerkass.
  • The Scrappy: Now has its own page here.
  • Shocking Elimination: Brad from Season 3; he had been the only consistently decent performer out of the men (apart from eventual winner Rock), but after two below-par services, Chef Ramsay surprisingly chose to eliminate him over the consistently terrible Josh.
    • In fairness, when Brad was bad, he was really bad. (i.e. trying to scrape the bottom of a burnt wellington only to be caught by Ramsay and giving Ramsay an extra risotto when it wasn't ordered).
      • Plus, Brad's elimination was partly due to the fact that he had deliberately tried to screw Josh over during that service, by refusing to help him when he was screwing up on the meat station. If Brad hadn't done that, then chances are it would have been Bonnie or Josh who was eliminated.
    • Wil from Season 5. His performance in the service was decidedly less than stellar, but he was still far better than Seth. Moreover, Wil admitted he had been a bad performer, whereas Seth seemed totally unaware of what he'd done wrong. However, Chef Ramsay decided that Wil's decision to nominate himself proved that his heart wasn't really in the competition and eliminated him, an act which shocked even the other chefs.
      • Also in that season, Charlie, again when he was put up for elimination against Seth. Despite Seth having been involved in the aforementioned filet butchering incident that week, Charlie was seemingly eliminated for being a bad waiter rather than having made any fatal mistakes in the kitchen.
      • Basically any time in season five when the elimination came down between Seth or Lacey and someone else and the person that wasn't Seth or Lacey stayed. Both contestants were useless; Seth consistently messed everything up and set the blue team back in multiple instances. Lacey was lazy, skipped her team's punishment on at least one instance, and was generally irresponsible and a terrible cook. She inexplicably started doing a lot better for a couple episodes after she was switched from the red team to the blue team and the blue team actually started winning with her, but then went back to being terrible shortly thereafter.
      • Seth was probably kept on as a Ratings Hook via Executive Meddling. People would continue to watch to see just how low Seth would sink and how much of a kiss-ass he would act toward Ramsay.
      • Also from Season 5, when Carol, Andrea and LA were called up for elimination, LA was eliminated, even though Carol and Andrea had far worse performances than her.
      • Finally, Carol in the next episode. Nobody was shocked that she'd be eliminated at some point; what made her elimination shocking however, is that she became the first contestant in the show's history to be eliminated from the winning team.
    • Arguably Jim from Season 6. He had never been an especially impressive performer, but he generally wasn't too bad either, so it came as something of a shock when Ramsay suddenly eliminated him for being too laid-back, even though he hadn't been nominated that week.
    • Also, Shayna from Season 4. That very episode, Rosann sent raw steak to the birthday girl while Matt sent dried fish to the birthday girl's mom and gets his station replaced by Bobby. During elimination, all three were nominated. After a heated exchange with Ramsay, Matt concludes that he would rather work with the red team because the whole blue team hates him. Shayna was eventually eliminated for just being slow. And then Ramsay agreed with Matt and put him on the red team, much to the surprise of Corey.
      • This was probably Executive Meddling. The producers probably wanted to milk the Matt vs. Ben conflict for all it was worth. Shayna was pretty much invisible during the season.
      • And from that very season, Bobby, who was in the chopping block only once, was eliminated instead of Jen, who was in the chopping block more times than Bobby and had a much worse service than him. Strangely enough, this is the second time someone is eliminated through Ramsay asking the person nominating the two on who should be eliminated. Christina preferred Jen to go home, but Ramsay disagrees.
      • Similarly, the first time this happened, Petrozza was asked whether he wants Louross or Jen to be out. Petrozza chose fan-favorite Louross to be out because he screwed up on meat that night (this is only Louross's second bad service, by the way). Ramsay agrees, meaning that Jen, again, was safe.
    • Raj from Season Eight. Eliminated out of the blue despite his team winning. In fairness, he was a complete lunatic who got on with no one, couldn't follow simple instructions and almost provoked a brawl during prep.
    • Arguably Mary-Ellen's elimination over Andrew in Season 1. Granted, Mary-Ellen's performance in her final service ranks as one of the worst in the entire history of the show, but prior to that she had actually been the blue team's most consistently good performer after Michael and Ralph, the two professional chefs. Moreover, she was put up against Andrew, who had been both consistently bad in the services and repeatedly disrespectful towards Chef Ramsay.
    • Jamie being eliminated over Carrie and Elise in Season 9. Jamie had some early struggle during service, burning a garnish and having a hair in the food, but was able to fight back. Carrie and Elise had both been bad enough to be sent up to the dorms, Carrie even having the gall to talk back to Ramsay before leaving. The rest of the team were clear on the nomination, pointing out to Ramsay how Carrie and Elise were bad for the team in general. Elise could at least truthfully claim being a better cook than Carrie, who had been consistently terrible for several challenges and services... only for Ramsay to send them both back in line, and to the shock of everyone throw out Jamie, claiming she was in over her head despite that being far more applicable to Carrie. Executive Meddling, the producers wanting to milk Carrie and Elise fighting for all its worth, is the only way to explain this one.
    • One must always take into account that Chef Ramsey despises people that don't fight back. One of the worst things to be seen doing is remaining mute in the face of adversity. Both Carrie and Elise vehemently defend themselves versus Jamie who sulked and hung her head in shame. See also Elizabeth's elimination when both Jennifer and Elise argue with one another. Ramsey despises quiet people.
      • Natalie being eliminated over Elise, especially after it was proven that Elise has a terrible attitude that makes her unsuitable for any leadership position, much less a head chef. True, Natalie was clearly struggling under the pressure at that point in the competition, but Elise outright lied to Ramsay's face and he called her on it. This was an offense that got Brendan kicked off the very same episode in which he tried it. Instead, Elise gets to stay to compete for another day. For many fans complaining about the show being plagued with Executive Meddling, this episode was the final nail in the coffin.
    • Dana's elimination in All Stars: she had a disastrous performance on the meat station that night, as Elise did on garnish. Both were put up for elimination, with Elise on her third straight nomination (5th that season, 12th overall), and Dana was on her first in two seasons. Dana was eliminated in 8th place that night for sinking her team entirely, while Elise barely hung on to avoid elimination.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: Roughly a quarter to half of the competitors on any given season. Despite the fact that the highest most of them have ever climbed to is a position as line chef, many have no problems ranting about how wrong Chef Ramsay is, how he doesn't know anything, and he'd best just give them their restaurant now and forget about the rest of the competition.
    • Joseph from Season 6, full stop. Not only did he mouth off in episode 1, he spent episode 2's reward challenge being a total Jerkass for no other reason than he felt like it. He then lost it when Gordon asked him for the nominees, culminating in him asking Gordon "Do you want to take this outside?", told the other contestants to fuck off when they told him to chill out, and he was eliminated for a total lack of respect.
    • Ben from Season 5, despite putting an amazing number of dishes in the bin for being inedible and constantly getting a deer in headlights look when it picked up, took offense to Danny calling himself the best chef on the Blue team and ranted how Danny 'couldn't even cook his cock.' Point of reference, Danny was the winner of that season. Also a master of the Long Speech Tea Time.
    • Louie from Season 6, a diner owner who served Gordon sausage gravy with biscuits and was so utterly clueless that Gordon kicked him off the show part way through the first dinner service.
    • Andrea from Season 5, despite being a consistently terrible performer constantly belittled other people for the tiniest mistakes and acted like her shit didn't stink despite being a constant bane of sending food out. Her egotism ran wild and she often yelled the loudest for no better reason than to do it.
    • Jen from Season 4, who was basically a combination of Season 5's Andrea and Ben, but louder. She actually had the audacity to ask Ramsay for a letter of recommendation when she was brought back in the finale to help the finalists, and honestly believed that if she performed well enough Gordon would change his mind and name her the winner.
      • She also liked to proclaim that Chef Ramsay is wrong whenever he disapproved of her cooking and that he didn't know what he was talking about, or who he was talking to.
    • Seth from Season 5. He came across as a stalker for Chef Ramsay (knowing all of his personal information), and thought that if he read his books and visited his restaurants, he could cook just like him. In fact, he served Chef Ramsay ratatouille with honey in it, and was a consistently terrible performer in services, eventually being eliminated quite early on.
    • Tennille from Season 6. Though she started strong being one of only two women whose signature dish Gordon liked (though Tek had been chucked, so it isn't quite the badge of honor), she went on to fall straight through the floor. She screamed in her confessionals like it made up for not saying it to the person, and underperformed on a consistent basis. When confronted about her mistakes and shortcomings, she flipped out like someone dropped a racial slur on her, even going so far to cuss out Gordon despite her miscues messing everything. Needless to say, if she cooked as well as she gabbed, she'd be the best chef in the universe.
      • In the same season, Suzanne also shaped up to be an egomaniac, though more oblivious and/or in denial and not claiming to be the best chef. Despite her being yelled at the most in her team when it comes to screwing up in dinner service and despite her team openly telling Ramsay (several times) in front of Suzanne that she sucked and was not a team player, Suzanne just acted like they didn't know what they were talking about or insisted that she could cook well, despite her screwing up the most. On one occasion, she even openly challenged Ramsay's decision to name the Blue Team the winners, despite the fact that they had fewer chefs and still finished well over a minute ahead of the Red Team.
    • Keith from Season 2. In a slight subversion he was actually a very good chef, easily as good as that season's winner, Heather. Unfortunately his terrible attitude killed off any chance he had of winning, as he constantly mouthed off to Ramsay during services, and when Ramsay chose to put Virginia through to the final instead of him, Keith exploded, accused Ramsay of having a hard-on for Virginia and told him to go fuck himself. To be fair, most of the viewing audience were thinking the same thing as Keith, but he was a real dick about it, even considering the circumstances.
    • Scott in Season 7. He had "experience" compared to the rest of the line and constantly used this as a crutch on why he should never be eliminated, despite his screw ups. Every time Scott botched something, either he stayed quiet or passed the blame to someone else, yet he was very eager to run his mouth whenever someone else on the team was messing up. The rest of the red team (which he was punted to) eventually snapped and let him know that all he did was talk about how good he was, but never actually showed it. Ramsay finally had enough of Scott's "my shit don't stink" attitude and eliminated him.
      • To a lesser extent, Fran from the same season. While she wasn't as egotistical as Scott, she constantly complained about her teammates not performing up to scratch, yet refused to ever accept any responsibility for her failings as a cook, constantly blaming either the fact that she's a kosher chef, or her team-mates for not telling her what to do properly (even when we're talking simple stuff like carving chicken). Even after she was nominated for elimination more times than anyone else in the history of the show, she refused to take the hint.
      • Benjamin as well in Season 7. He loved to act like as if his experience automatically made him the better cook, but when it came to working with the others, he pretty much shuts down and focuses only on himself, pissing off everyone else. Averted come Season 17, though.
    • Raj acted this way in Season 8, partly because he was older than the other contestants (nearly 50), but he was up for elimination in both of the first two episodes and never really did contribute meaningfully, so his posturing about being "THE BEST!" was ridiculous. Upping the Narm factor, while doing said posturing at the end of the second episode, he actually fell and hit the Confession Cam. It wasn't very surprising when he was axed the following week.
      • Also in Season 8 was Sabrina, who was the youngest contestant (only 22) and frequently the most clueless. She also managed to alienate pretty nearly everyone around her with her attitude and ego; she constantly told the Confession Cam how she was so much better than everyone else and they were just jealous and out to get her. She also claimed on numerous occasions that the pre-service prep work was beneath her... despite the fact that her day-to-day job is as a prep chef. Adding together the numerous mistakes (she was nominated for elimination more times than anyone else in the whole season), her poisonous attitude, and her constant attempts to manipulate Ramsay and the other chefs in her favor, it was quite astonishing that she made it to the final six, with her lack of maturity contributing to her elimination.
      • Russell managed a late claim to this status in Season 8, in the final episode. Despite turning in probably the worst performance of any finalist in the show's history and completely destroying the morale of his team during the service, he actually had the gall to blame his team-members after Nona was unsurprisingly named the winner over him, and actually vowed to "destroy their careers" in retribution.
    • Season 9's Brendan was a short-lived version of this. After the blue team was taken to Palm Springs for winning a challenge, Ramsay invited each of them to tell him about their long-term ambitions. Brendan talked at length about how much his family loved his cooking and how he had a hereditary 'tradition of greatness' to live up to. He then screwed himself over royally in the ensuing dinner service by trying to send out a bass that Ramsay had deemed unfit, then lying to Ramsay's face and claiming it was a new one. When Ramsay eliminated him, he even said that the only thing bigger than Brendan's ego was his lies.
      • Ramsay's comment: "The only thing bigger than Brendan's ego, was the lies he tells. I simply can't have that in Hell's Kitchen."
    • Also from season 9: Elise, so very much. Slightly downplayed though, since Elise is at least a competent cook when she wanted to be.
  • They Changed It, Now It Sucks: Jean-Philippe not returning to the show for Season 8 for some mysterious reason (being replaced with another guy with a similar accent) had several fans spouting this trope.
    • Unofficial word was that Jean-Philippe may eventually be back - he was called away to deal with a situation in one of Ramsay's restaurants in Africa. However, as of Season 9, James is still the maitre'd.
      • Ramsay soon stated via his Twitter that JP will be back for Season 10.
        • Subverted, it would seem, as James is still Maitre'd as of Season 10.
          • Played straight afterwards, as JP was confirmed to return for Season 11.
  • Too Cool to Live: In a non-fatal example, Cha Ji-Hyun, due to her twisted ankle.
    • Averted with Dave, who went on despite his injuries, and won.
      • Also averted with Kevin, also from Season 6, who went on despite his injuries and made runner-up.
    • Antonia was eliminated in the first episode of Season 8 when she collapsed in the kitchen due to a severe migraine. Her exact fate was never explained on-camera, but when Ramsay arrived for the elimination round, he announced that he had just gotten off the phone with the hospital and she would not be returning (he also announced that he still intended to eliminate someone else).
    • Jason in Season 9, who managed to impress Ramsay with tacos, appeared to be an all-around great chef and had a beard worthy of a Viking; unfortunately, he suffered the same fate as Antonia. After starting to have trouble breathing in the prep for the first service, he was rushed to the hospital and never came back.
  • Unfortunate Implications: In Season Six, when Joseph stormed out during blue team eliminations, Chef Ramsay still went ahead and eliminated a male chef. After the next dinner service, which the red team failed, when it was time for him to eliminate someone he eliminated... nobody. Because of Joseph storming out, he claimed that would count as the night's elimination, even though Joseph left from the men's team when the men were up for elimination. To some it came off as proof of Ramsay's Positive Discrimination towards female chefs.
    • Both sides were up for elimination, and he eliminated Tony for episode 2 and Joseph for episode 3. The next two eliminations were women too.
      • Inverted in Season 8, first episode: one of the women leaves because she had to go to the hospital, another female chef gets eliminated.
    • Some viewers considered Chef Ramsay's "she should stick to changing diapers" comment after eliminating Shayna to have more than a touch of this, especially considering she had been nowhere near the worst cook that week.
    • Some fans have noticed that the women on the show seem to get punished less severely compared to the men, particularly glaring when a man and a woman make the same mistake. Like when Brendan and Elise both lied to Ramsay in Season 9, yet Brendan was booted for it, and Elise wasn't.
      • In fact, there seems to a lot of favouritism towards female contestants over the past decade; to elaborate, there have only been 5 male finalists, and 1 male winner since Season 10. Three seasons since then have also had some of the worst men's teams the show has ever had, those been seasons 11, 16, and 18. All three seasons are guilty of being so grossly one-sided that one has to wonder if the show is rigged for the women to win.
    • There were more than a few accusations of racism after the second service of Season 7, when two black chefs (Autumn and Jason) were nominated despite being not the worst on their teams. In reality this probably wasn't the case, since Autumn had severely pissed off her team-members during the challenge and the service (not that she deserved to be nominated, having said that), and Jason was the second worst cook on the blue team (the worst being Mikey, who eventually got eliminated despite not being nominated). Oddly enough, there wasn't any kind of reaction like this after the second service of Season 6, where the red team nominated both of the black women that were on the team, while one of the men's nominees happened to be the only gay man there that season.
  • Wangst: Lacey from Season 5, who had a tendency to start whining and crying after performing poorly, and would frequently complain about how her teammates hated her (in reality, it was this that was the cause of most of it).
    • Elise from Season 9 would immediately start to cry if her team lost a challenge, or if it looked like she might be eliminated. Because of this, you'd usually see her tear up at least once an episode. Same thing with Sabrina in Season 8.
  • What an Idiot!: So many examples to list that it now has its own page.
  • The Woobie: In Season 7, Salvatore was tasked with taking orders from the diners. His orders came in written incomprehensibly. Ramsay screamed at him: "Didn't you go to school?!" and Salvatore replied: "No, Chef." He explained after he arrived in America, he only worked to help his family and never went to school. Ramsay was so stunned he stopped scolding him, thanked him for his honesty, and told him: "Just take your time."
    • Season 10's Barbie is this in the eyes of some fans, and only two episodes in, no less. At least one third of the red team (ESPECIALLY Tiffany) absolutely explodes anytime she does something. Barbie is not the best chef by any means, but her mistakes aren't any worse than the rest of the red team's mistakes.
      • Though many would argue the rest of the team has good reason to dislike Barbie, as her I'm Not Here to Make Friends attitude was counter-productive to the rest of the team and certainly didn't help them much during service, and Ramsey has repeatedly stressed that working as a team is VERY important if you want to do well and that trying to be a lone wolf won't get you very far, so it's not at all surprising she was put up for elimination.
    • Scott in Season 12 became this mid-season when he became an easy target for elimination for reasons that don't make a lot of sense, and on multiple occasions was because Joy refused to nominate her friend Kashia, whom many felt should have gone sooner than she did, and the former just being a total bitch to him overall. Scott got so frustrated with being picked on all the time that he unwisely took out his baggage on Chef Ramsay. The only reason he wasn't eliminated on the spot for this was because he was apologetic about it.