This year’s Scandal-Hit Series, BBC News Can Revil has edited another MasterShef contest.
A spokesperson of the show’s production company, Banijay said: “Another contributor decided that they would not join in view of recent events. We have certainly accepted their wishes and excluded them from the show.”
Another contestant, Sara Shafi, was also removed from the series, after which it was not broadcast A report that retained the claims Against host Greg Wallace and John Torod.
The BBC still decided to show this year’s Amateur series, which was filmed before the pair was filmed before dismissing, saying that it was “to do the right thing” for the participating chef.
But this faced a backlash from some women, while the broadcast union beach said bad behavior said “should not be rewarded with prime-time coverage”.
Former Celebrity MasterShef contestant and BBC journalist Kirsty Wark also suggested that the BBC could recreate the series without two co-heads.
In the event, both the valless and the Torode remain in the series, which began last week on the BBC One and iPlayer.
But the episode is edited to include lesser jokes than normal, with a low chat between them and chefs.
The episode in which the second contestant was depicted was aired on the BBC One on Wednesday night, but there were only five chefs instead of six.
BBC News understands that the person has asked not to identify and they will not provide facilities in the show.
It is believed that Shafi’s episode has not been aired yet.
BBC said earlier It was not a “easy decision” to run the series, saying that there was a “extensive support” between the chefs to move forward.
“In showing the series, which was filmed last year, it in any way does not reduce our vision about the severity of intact conclusions against the two presenters,” it said.
“However, we believe that it is right to broadcast this series for these cooks who have given a lot to the process. We want them to be identified properly and the audience should be given the option to watch the series.”
Keep the complaints upheld
Controversy over MasterShef began last year, when BBC News revealed first Claims of misconduct against Wallace.
Last month, a report by the show’s production company Banijay revealed that 83 complaints against Wallace were retained by more than 40, one of which and one in unwanted physical contact and one and three were included in the event of an undergraduate.
He has insisted that he has been approved by “the most serious and sensational allegations”.
In a recent interview With Suraj, he said that he was hurt by anyone, but he insisted that he was “a group, a sex insect or not a flasher”.
In 2018, a complaint against Torodes related to a serious aggressive racist word allegedly on the set of MasterShef.
The presenter stated that he had “no remembrance” and any racist language is “completely unacceptable”.
Wallace will be replaced by Irish Chef Anna Hug in the final episode of the new series, as is when the charges against him first appeared during the filming in November.