Photorealistic illustration depicting the controversial Noma LA pop-up at Paramour Estate, with glamorous guests arriving amid One Fair Wage protests over abuse allegations and sponsor withdrawals.
Photorealistic illustration depicting the controversial Noma LA pop-up at Paramour Estate, with glamorous guests arriving amid One Fair Wage protests over abuse allegations and sponsor withdrawals.
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Noma LA pop-up opens amid abuse allegations, sponsor pullouts, and protests

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Noma's highly anticipated, sold-out Los Angeles pop-up at Silver Lake's Paramour Estate launches March 11, 2026, despite a New York Times investigation into founder René Redzepi's past abuse allegations, sponsor withdrawals by American Express and Blackbird, and planned protests by One Fair Wage outside the venue.

Noma, the three-Michelin-star Copenhagen restaurant founded by René Redzepi in 2003 and ranked the world's best five times (2010-2021), has shifted from regular operations (ended 2024) to pop-ups like this 16-week LA event following Sydney, Kyoto, and Tulum. Featuring 42 seats per night at $1,500 per person (nonrefundable, nontransferable), it sold out in 60 seconds on January 26 via American Express-owned Tock, potentially generating $63,000 nightly and $4 million total.

A New York Times report (March 7-8, 2026) detailed allegations from dozens of former employees (2009-2017), including physical assaults (punching, shoving, jabbing/stabbing with tools like barbecue forks, choking, wall-slamming), verbal abuse, body shaming, accent mockery, deportation threats, and public ridicule. Former fermentation director Jason Ignacio White shared specifics on Instagram (since February 8) and noma-abuse.com (56 stories, 9 million views), such as Redzepi choking a team member over a strawberry. A 2014 documentary, "Noma: At Boiling Point," showed Redzepi berating staff with expletives, shoving a female chef, and thrusting a middle finger.

Redzepi apologized on Instagram, acknowledging some past harmful behavior (including a 2015 self-admission of being 'a bully'), undergoing anger management therapy, and stepping back from daily service. Noma stated the claims do not reflect its current culture, highlighting improvements like paid interns, expanded HR, benefits, leadership training, and an independent safety audit; it is investigating.

Corporate sponsors American Express and Blackbird withdrew support. American Express plans to reinvest proceeds into LA hospitality workers. One Fair Wage, led by Saru Jayaraman, is organizing protests starting opening night and continuing at least the first month. Jayaraman said, "Who wants to eat in an environment of abuse? Who wants to eat food that comes from the tears and sweat of people who are suffering?" Jason White is also involved.

The scandal revives debates on toxic 'kitchen culture' glorified in past eras by chefs like Marco Pierre White and Gordon Ramsay, amid shifting norms rejecting the 'angry chef' archetype.

Cosa dice la gente

X users and media accounts discuss the Noma LA pop-up's launch amid René Redzepi's abuse allegations detailed in a New York Times investigation, sponsor withdrawals by American Express and Blackbird, and planned protests by One Fair Wage outside the Paramour Estate. Food journalists report the sold-out event proceeding despite the controversies, while some regular users voice boycott sentiments.

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Chef René Redzepi apologizes at podium for Noma abuse allegations, protesters visible outside sold-out LA pop-up venue.
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René Redzepi apologizes as Noma abuse allegations resurface before sold-out LA pop-up

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

René Redzepi, head chef of Noma, has apologized for past workplace abuse detailed in a New York Times investigation covering 2009-2017, just days before the restaurant's 16-week, $1,500-per-seat Los Angeles pop-up begins on March 11. Former employees allege physical and emotional harm, with a protest planned outside the venue.

René Redzepi resigned from daily operations at Noma on March 11, 2026—the opening day of its 16-week Los Angeles pop-up—following a New York Times report on abuse allegations detailed in prior coverage. Protests by former employees disrupted the event, and sponsors American Express and Blackbird withdrew support. Redzepi also left the board of his non-profit MAD.

Riportato dall'IA

Former employees of Noma, a three-Michelin-star restaurant in Copenhagen, have accused its founder René Redzepi of verbal and physical abuse spanning several years. A New York Times investigation details instances of punching, kicking, and public humiliation. The allegations come as Noma prepares for a pop-up event in Los Angeles.

Acclaimed Phoenix chef Kevin Binkley has launched a new venture hosting multicourse dinners for six guests in his home. After closing his last restaurant in 2024, he seeks a more personal approach to cooking. The events sold out quickly after announcement in January.

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Katie Moss and Cody MacFadyen are set to transform a former restaurant space into Moss Culinary Studio, a new cafe emphasizing farm-fresh baked goods. The couple, who shifted from corporate jobs after a life-altering car accident, aims to open at 992 Willamette Street in spring 2026. Their venture builds on success at local farmers markets with savory pastries.

New Orleans chef Susan Spicer, at 73, is gradually stepping back from her Rosedale restaurant through a collaborative handover to executive chef Allison Birdsall. Birdsall, who became a partner last fall, is blending her style with Spicer's renowned approach. The transition reflects Spicer's methodical navigation of her career's later chapter.

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Daniel Sahagoff, proprietario dei ristoranti Cantaloup e Loup a São Paulo, condivide i segreti per mantenere un marchio rilevante per quasi tre decenni e gli ostacoli dell’espansione in Portogallo. In un’intervista a Veja, evidenzia il momento positivo per gli chef brasiliani nelle guide e nei festival internazionali, ma avverte sulle sfide aziendali come licenze e investimenti in valuta estera. L’espansione include una nuova unità in un ospedale di São Paulo e un’altra in Portogallo, attratta dal turismo in crescita.

 

 

 

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