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

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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, co-founder of Copenhagen's Noma, faces renewed scrutiny over historical allegations of abuse at the restaurant ahead of a high-profile 16-week residency at Los Angeles' Silver Lake Paramour Estate (March 11 to late June), which sold out in 60 seconds.

A New York Times investigation published March 7-8, 2026, compiled accounts from dozens of former employees describing physical abuse—including punching, pushing, and jabbing with tools—alongside verbal humiliation, psychological harm, deportation threats, and public shaming. One former employee, Alessia, told the Times, "Going to work felt like going to war. You had to force yourself to be strong, to show no fear." Mehmet Çekirge, a 2018 intern, recounted supervisors mocking his accent with animal sounds in a bullying culture. The report highlighted inadequate HR (one person, Redzepi's mother-in-law), unpaid interns, and collective punishments affecting all staff for individual errors.

Former fermentation lab head Jason Ignacio White has amplified claims since February 8 via Instagram and noma-abuse.com, which compiles stories from 56 staff and drew over 9 million views in two weeks. He called Noma "a story of a maniac that would breed culture of fear, abuse & exploitation," creating "a generation of broken dreams and future abusers." White, backed by One Fair Wage, is organizing a March 11 protest at the pop-up.

Redzepi responded on Instagram: "Although I don't recognize all details in these stories, I can see enough of my past behavior reflected in them to understand that my actions were harmful to people who worked with me. To those who have suffered under my leadership, my bad judgment, or my anger, I am deeply sorry and I have worked to change." He attributed early influences to toxic kitchen cultures, detailed therapy and anger management, and noted delegating leadership. Redzepi has stepped back from daily service.

Noma stated: "These claims do not reflect the workplace Noma is today... we take them seriously and are looking into them carefully." Improvements include paid interns, expanded benefits, dedicated HR, leadership training, and an independent safety audit.

Noma, opened in 2003 and multiple times named the world's best restaurant, ended regular operations in late 2024, shifting to pop-ups and a food lab, with plans to reopen in Copenhagen in 2027.

Cosa dice la gente

Reactions on X to the resurfaced abuse allegations against Noma chef René Redzepi are largely negative, with users and journalists expressing shock at reports of physical violence and emotional abuse from 2009-2017, questioning why it surfaced now, and criticizing tolerance in the culinary industry ahead of the expensive LA pop-up. Some highlight the planned protest and call for accountability, while others mock defenders.

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René Redzepi resigns from Noma on LA pop-up opening day amid abuse scandal

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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.

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.

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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.

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