Former contestant exposes the secrets that they donโt want you to know as he reveals that all is not as it seems on the hugely popular reality cooking show.

Pre-planned eliminations
โAs far as Iโm concerned, at least six of the couples in my series were simply there for entertainment and knew they wouldnโt go the distance,โ says Mick.
โWhen my daughter was getting married, they told me Iโd be able to go home for a week but I wasnโt allowed to tell the contestants. It just so happened that we got ousted a week before the wedding, went home for the wedding, and a week later we were rung up to go back on Comeback Kitchen! It just seemed very convenient.โ

Scripted judging?
Mick says the judges are often served stone-cold meals due to lengthy takes. But that wonโt stop them giving a high score.
Claiming the judging is scripted, Mick says: โEach judge is spoken to from the control room through an earpiece and at times theyโd get their words wrong and have to re-do it.โ

They stop the clock
The high-pressure sudden-death cook-offs between teams always result in a frantic race against the clock to plate up their dishes on time. But Mick tells us in TV land time can be frozen โ and it often is.
โThe clock stopped on quite a few occasions when the cameras werenโt rolling,โ says 52-year-old Mick, who left the show feeling bitter.
โI was very upset because I think itโs unfair when youโre playing for $250,000 and one team has more time to finish than the other.โ
The understanding was that โif the clock wasnโt stopped and one team didnโt finish, there would be no show. But I said, โA team doesnโt deserve to win if thatโs the caseโ.โ

Plating up fakes
This is one cooking show where kitchen know-how isnโt a prerequisite!
โSome contestants canโt even heat baked beans without spoiling them. Iโd say 90 per cent of the recipes you see are from books,โ says Mick, claiming personality comes before culinary skills when it comes to selecting teams.