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Celebrity chef George Calombaris faces up to Leigh Sales on 7.30

Dumped MasterChef host George Calombaris has begged diners to return to his restaurants after opening up about underpaying his staff.

George Calombaris apologises for the underpayment of staff

George Calombaris was rarely lost for words when he was on MasterChef. But one question from Leigh Sales stopped the celebrity chef in his tracks as the 7.30 host grilled him on what’s been a horror fortnight in both his TV and restaurant career.

Calombaris’s head sank as he was asked what the wage underpayment scandal has done to his carefully curated reputation.

The teary Channel 10 star said the reason his restaurants underpaid staff by almost $8 million was due to problems in his firm’s “back end” — but there were “no excuses” for the crisis that has engulfed him and his company. He urged punters not to “punish his people” by boycotting his restaurants.

In the same interview, he also failed to deny that he and his fellow former MasterChef hosts asked for a 40 per cent pay rise on top of their already healthy wage.

Calombaris was, however, lashed online with some accusing him of “crocodile tears”. While a senior Labor politician said Sales’ interview was “not her finest moment” with questions left unasked.

George Calombaris has spoken on camera for the first time since the wages scandal broke. Picture: ABC/7.30
George Calombaris has spoken on camera for the first time since the wages scandal broke. Picture: ABC/7.30

Tonight’s interview was the first time Calombaris has spoken publicly since both the scale of the underpayments came to light and he was dumped from the television show that made him a household name and a very rich man.

Earlier this month, the Fair Work Ombudsman (FWO) found Calombaris’ MAdE Establishment company had underpaid 515 restaurant staff by $7.8 million in wages and superannuation. Calombaris has already apologised and the firm has said it repaid the money to staff.

Separately the firm agreed to make a $200,000 contrition payment and Calombaris committed to become effectively an ambassador for the FWO.

Then last Monday, Ten announced Calombaris and his co-hosts Matt Preston and George Mehigan would not return to MasterChef in 2020. Calombaris has also since lost a lucrative sponsorship deal with WA Tourism.

Leigh Sales asked the chef how it was possible to underpay people by $8 million.
Leigh Sales asked the chef how it was possible to underpay people by $8 million.

WE MADE A TERRIBLE MISTAKE

Calombaris told Sales he was first alerted something was wrong with the firm’s wages in 2015 but thought processes had then been put in place. However, an internal audit undertaken in 2017 discovered underpayments of more than $2 million. A subsequent investigation by the FWO saw that figure rise to $7.8m.

He said he was “gutted to the point where I’m like, ‘oh, my gosh’,” when he discovered his firm had failed to pay people the money they had earned.

“We found the problem, we self reported. We’re the ones that went, ‘Hang on, we made a mistake here, a terrible mistake’,” he said.

Asked by Sales how it was possible to underpay staff by $7.8 million, Calombaris said he was focused too much on the food and not enough on the finances.

“You’re running a million miles an hour, being creative, being someone who can inspire the team with the food that you’re cooking, with the way we’re serving and all that stuff and you assume that in the back end things are happening at the same speed, but they weren’t,” he said.

Sales paraphrased this as Calombaris saying he was “not paying enough attention to detail” and that could be interpreted as “a systematic effort to avoid paying people what they really deserve”.

Calombaris replied: “There’s a whole myriad of stuff that needs to be ticked and checked and checked and tripled-checked that weren’t being done.

“There is no excuse for what I did, no excuse. But I truly believe that we’ve owned up, we paid up and we did that two years ago.”

A question about his reputation floored George Calombaris. Picture: ABC/7.30
A question about his reputation floored George Calombaris. Picture: ABC/7.30
It took several seconds for him to recover. Picture: ABC/7.30
It took several seconds for him to recover. Picture: ABC/7.30

TEARED UP

But it was when the questions became more personal that Calombaris began to tear up.

“It takes a long time to build a reputation, in your case 25 years of work, and you can lose it in a week,” Sales said to the chef. “What has been the toll of that on you?”

Calombaris bowed his head and for a full five seconds could not speak. When he did his voice faltered.

“I love this industry, I really do, and I love every opportunity that it’s given me,” he said. “I love the people that have worked for me and I don’t want them to suffer right now.”

He alluded to observations in the past week that his Melbourne restaurants, that include Hellenic Republic, Jimmy Grants, Gazi and Press Club, have seen a steep drop in diners.

“Great restaurants are voted by bums on seats. Don’t punish my people,” he said. “Just know when you come into one of our restaurants, know when you pay the bill, that my people are getting paid and paid correctly.”

‘CROCODILE TEARS’

Many watching the interview at home were unimpressed with Calombaris. Several on Twitter said the performance was a PR stunt and he was shedding “crocodile tears”.

“I bet Calombaris would never have missed his own underpayment from Ten,” said one.

Sales came in for some criticism with the suggestion she could have gone harder on Calombaris, particularly asking how many staff had alerted the business to their light pay packets before action was taken.

Senior Labor politician Doug Cameron said it was “not Sales’ finest moment”.

But others came to the chef’s defence urging people to “put the knives back in the drawer and move on”.

Calombaris implored diners to return to his restaurants.
Calombaris implored diners to return to his restaurants.
Gary Mehigan, Matt Preston and George Calombaris will not return to MasterChef in 2020.
Gary Mehigan, Matt Preston and George Calombaris will not return to MasterChef in 2020.

MASTERCHEF DUMPING

Sales moved onto his departure from MasterChef along with Preston and Mehigan — the news dropping just days after the FWO handed down its findings.

Rumours had swirled that he and the other hosts wanted a steep pay rise to remain on one of Ten’s biggest franchises — a particularly bad look after the underpayments came to light. He didn’t deny it when asked by Sales if 40 per cent was the rise the trio demanded.

“The dollars were all signed off. That was all done and dusted,” he said.

“What I can say is that the sticking point that we got to with MasterChef and with Channel 10 was simply time. Time for Gary to do more of his own stuff, Matt to do more of his stuff and for me to be in my restaurants more. It takes up a long time. It takes, you know, six, seven months of our year and we just needed more time. And that’s all it came down to.”

What would he do now, asked Sales?

“For me right now it’s a real deep breath. It’s been tumultuous, I’m not going to lie. It’s been tumultuous for my team,” Calombaris said.

“Right now I need to be around them and also around my family. I’m not thinking about anything else but those two important things in my life that I adore.”

What did you think of the interview? Comment below

bendict.brook@news.com.au

Originally published as Celebrity chef George Calombaris faces up to Leigh Sales on 7.30

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Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/entertainment/television/celebrity-chef-george-calombaris-faces-up-to-leigh-sales-on-730/news-story/26a179fcc43d9210ac35eee8ab248e9c