Culture The Untold Truth Of YouTuber Adam Ragusea

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By Molly Clark
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YouTube chef Adam Ragusea is known for his quirky personality and to the point, simple recipes presented in fanfare-free videos. Ragusea rose to fame as a YouTube superstar in 2019 after posting a home video of him making a New York-style pizza, a video that quickly went viral and today has over eight million views. Soon after, he posted a video featuring his broiled chocolate chip cookie recipe, which was also a hit with 2.5 million views (via 13 WMAZ). Ragusea had found his niche, and he ran with it.

"I know that you don't let an opportunity like that go by," he said. "So, I made more [videos]."

Ragusea now has 1.65 million YouTube subscribers who tune in on Thursdays for cooking lessons and recipes and Mondays for videos with Q&As spotlighting chefs and other foodies. Even though Raguesea may be internet-famous now, many fans may wonder where he came from and how he rose to the top of YouTube's food community. Here is the untold truth of Adam Ragusea.


Adam Ragusea got his start as a musician
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Perhaps surprisingly, long before his days of YouTube glory, Adam Ragusea studied music in college and holds two bachelor's degrees and a master's degree in music theory and composition (via LinkedIn). One of Ragusea's compositions of chamber music won Columbia University's Joseph H. Bearns Prize in Music (via Ragusea's website). The quintet, written during his college career, was inspired when Ragusea came across an article about ancient flutes found at an archaeological site in China and is composed of flute, guitar, cello, marimba, and percussion parts (via Daily Collegian).

Ragusea still writes and performs music, much of which can be found on Soundcloud, but he has pulled away from music as a career for a major reason. "I'm intellectually scatterbrained," he said in an interview with Slate. "I was very into music and I was decent at it, but part of the reason I washed out of that scene was just that I was so interested in other things."


Adam Ragusea had a lengthy journalism career
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Adam Ragusea had an impressive run as a journalist and journalism professor. According to his LinkedIn, Adam Ragusea began his journalism career in 2006, working for WFIU Public Radio as a music host, and eventually as a news reporter. From there, he moved to WBUR in Boston where he served as a host and reporter for "Radio Boston." Eventually, Ragusea relocated to Georgia where he took on more responsibilities as a bureau chief with Georgia Public Broadcasting. He has also served as a print journalist, host of the podcast "The Pub," and as a journalism professor at Mercer University.

"I really felt like I had won the lottery," Ragusea said of obtaining his position as a professor. "Everything was going great, but it got greater," he continued, speaking of his career transition to YouTube celebrity with 13 WMAZ. Ragusea credited his experience as a journalist to his ability to keep his YouTube videos concise yet chock full of information.

"We know in journalism ... how to write a tight lede," Ragusea said. "How to get right into something."


Adam Ragusea doesn't do anything fancy when filming his videos
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In an interview with Slate, Adam Ragusea discussed why he very intentionally shies away from using professional lighting and filming techniques when shooting his videos, claiming as he is making simple food, such as his infamous pizza, it should be portrayed and displayed simply.

"I'm not trying to do super sexy food. I'm trying to do really functional, almost clinical food videos that just show you honestly what the food will look like at its various stages. I'm not trying to razzle-dazzle you or make you think the food is better than it actually is," he told Slate.

Therefore, instead of extensive professional equipment, Ragusea uses a ring light that he sets up in his very own, real-life home kitchen. He said the light gives him "a look that is unique. It puts this very unnatural glow on the food that I find very quirky and fun" (via Slate).


Adam Ragusea is the "Mariah Carey Christmas Chord Guy" and he doesn't like it
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Adam Ragusea probably shudders with chagrin at the mention of his reputation as the "Mariah Carey Christmas Chord Guy," saying he "hates" the title (via YouTube). It all started with a 2014 statement Ragusea made saying that Mariah Carey's "All I Want For Christmas Is You" is one of the best recent Christmas songs.

This claim was followed by a 2015 article in Slate in which he compared the chords of the Christmas hit to those of other Christmas classics, thus pointing out why we feel such a connection and familiarity with the Christmas spirit when we hear the song. In 2016, Vox hosted an interview with Ragusea, which he seems to say in his YouTube video was edited in a way that may have skewed what he truly meant and that the headline, "The secret chord that makes Christmas music sound so Christmassy," may have been a bit of an overgeneralization.

"Ain't nothing secret about the chord in general," Ragusea states as a response to the Vox piece and his reputation in the YouTube video. "...And indeed, I wasn't even saying that that one chord makes the song, or makes the genre of Christmas music. I was just offering it as one example among many."


Adam Ragusea is obsessed with Hershey's chocolate
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Adam Ragusea famously loves Hershey's chocolate, so much so he made a YouTube video about his affinity for the candy, defending its taste among comments on his TikTok made by non-Americans that argued Hershey's chocolate tastes quite literally like human vomit.

In the video, Ragusea explains the history behind chocolate production and how the process of making Hershey's chocolate differs from that of many international — especially European — chocolate production processes due to the methods used for milk preservation. He points out that Hershey's chocolate contains butyric acid, which is found in sour milk, as well as in our digestive systems.

By now you can see the link to vomit emerging, but then why does Ragusea, like millions of other Americans, love Hershey's chocolate and even prefers it to European chocolate?

"People who didn't grow up eating this stuff think it tastes like sick. For me, who did grow up eating this stuff, it's very different because I've eaten Hershey's chocolate way more often than I've thrown up, thankfully. Therefore, to me, butyric acid tastes like chocolate, not sick," he said. Makes perfect sense.

Additionally, Ragusea says he likes Hershey's chocolate so much, he often avoids other types of chocolate when grocery shopping, including Cadbury, claiming the chocolate tastes "dull" and "flat" to him.
 
That's Babish.

Also, Faggusea is about tied for that faggot retard Guga for my dislikes. Guga I hate because of all the retarded clikbait bullshit he does, Fagusea I hate because of the same, but also because he's completely fucking insufferable.
Oh yeah

Good God cooking YouTube is full of faggots
 
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I don't hate Adam Ragusea, unlike some of the people here, but he is undeniably high-strung and a bit of a tard which can both be off-putting. I'd definitely get a second opinion on any techniques I see him recommend. I'm also really amused to learn he's the Mariah Carey Christmas Chord Guy, as I had no idea at all he was the center of that drama back in the day.

That said, I'd never call him my first choice in YouTuber cookery, and can't off the top of my head think of any of his recipes I've made. It's probably zero honestly. I mostly just check him out when the algorithm serves him up and I'm in the mood to see whatever deranged thing he's been up to lately, so he's almost a benign lolcow in terms of how I view his content I suppose.

Also: John Kirkwood, he's an old englishman and retired cook.
Really, really love his cauliflower cheese recipe.

If we're posting recommendations, Chef Jean-Pierre is legitimately entertaining and I watch all of his videos just because of how fun they are (and how funny he is) even if I have zero interest in the recipe he's showing. Even Chef John of Food Wishes Dot Com doesn't have the raw entertainer energy that this silly French-Italian man has. It helps that everything he's posted that I've tried has turned out really well.

A fun one:

And a good, informative one. Highly recommended for people trying to eat healthier:

Also, Paula Deen is still around and has a good channel where she and her family film camcorder cooking videos. She's on a health food kick (by Southern cuisine standards), which isn't that surprising since she's pretty old and the butter thing was always a kind of uncharitable meme when she was still on TV. Still, everyone who's interested in watching other people cook knows who she is, but not a lot of people I've mentioned it to know she's got a very active YouTube channel so if you didn't and either want some nostalgia for when the Food Network still had cooking shows or want to see what she's up to these days (or just want to watch old episodes of her old shows), here you go.
 
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No one mentioned Ragusea preemptively apologizing for the "cultural appropriation" he perpetrated by making an enchiladas recipe video. As if someone forced him to publish an enchiladas recipe video.

And for anyone unaware: @Runescape Sperg's post telling Adam to go back to /ck/ was a reference to him spamming his channel on 4chan's cooking board for years, despite (very similarly to Babish) exuding "male feminist who will rape you" energy and not actually knowing fundamentals of cooking.
 
Who the fuck cares? This isn't news. It's barely even an article. It's the sort of clickbait puffpiece the Google news aggregator would push to bored millennials.
 
Adam is the embodiment of trusting the science uncritically.

He used a study of fat people saying that they have been shamed and have not lost weight from that shame to argue that shame does not reduce obesity. The study has obvious limitations. People who have lost weight from the shame of being fat and people who have never been fat would obviously not be included in such a study.

I like his channel because I do think he keeps it real, but he is a walking stereotype.
 
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