Anonymous wrote:I don't dislike her, but the show gets old fast since many of the recipes are similar, as are the silly "plots" (oh, the menfolk and kids are out on the ranch putting up a fence, gotta rustle up a hearty casserole).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here's the thing: as a businesswoman, I respect the hell out of Ree. She NEVER breaks character. People can write shit about her, leave crappy comments, and she never ever does that thing many bloggers do where they get defensive and then write posts that basically only respond to criticisms. She has about 10 topics she writes about and she ONLY writes about those topics but somehow, the site keeps chugging along year after year on stories of Charlie, the calves, her kids getting bigger, Ree's pants not fitting, and MM's butt. She never discusses her real life or anything of substance yet she's built an empire. So good for her!
That being said, she's a millionaire who poses as a folksy down home gal. She was rich before the site took off and is even richer now. (Again, I don't begrudge her that, and I think she's a great role model for her daughters in that she built something of her own even though her husband's family is loaded and she didn't need the money/work.) Her recipes are gross and almost all are cribbed from church cookbooks from the 80s. She is not a personality who translates well to tv so she comes off as stiff and awkward. She seems to have a strict script that she has to stick to no matter what because she can't deviate and go with the flow and riff and joke easily.
Her schtick is dated and corny, which is also why it's not going to appeal to many of us, but to the large chunk of the country who uses Pinterest for dinner ideas and thinks casseroles/Crock Pot meals using 4 cans of soup and cheese is a reasonable dinner, she's very appealing and relatable.
Her stuff at Walmart is absolutely hideous IMO, but it's a rip-off Anthropologie aesthetic at Walmart prices which is what her target audience can afford and access. So again, smart lady with the way she chooses to diversify her businesses.
Which recipes are casseroles or crock pot meals using canned soup?
Honey almost all of her recipes require a canned soup. She had one recipe that was literally called 8 Can Soup and it was 8 cans of soup, canned chili and canned veggies. And cheese. Her apple dumplings use Mountain Dew for the sauce. I'm not saying she doesn't have some recipes that use fresh stuff but it's her thing. Her "best lasagna ever" uses Kraft Parmesan in a green can.
Anonymous wrote:Laughing after everything she says. Very annoying!,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her food is just so gross. Basic and unhealthy and literally everyone has those recipes at home. I agree with OP - cooking shows should teach something new in prep or presentation. Not how to make a freaking sheet cake.
Google Maps her famous Pioneer Woman Mercantile store in Pawhuska, OK. Looking at photos of the bakery case, the food appears to be just be Sysco slop, and the merch appears to be cheap Chinese knick-knacks. She's a grifter.
There, do you feel better now?![]()
If you present yourself as a great hometown cook the least you could do is operate a real bakery making fresh items with real butter in your mercantile shop — instead of serving unthawed or heated crap that came in the back door frozen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read her blog when it first started, but I don't follow her now. She definitely appeals to a certain demographic and is wildly popular.
I have family in Oklahoma and I actually met her at a Barnes and Noble in Oklahoma many years ago. Her story was that she was a city girl in LA who became an accidental country girl after she met her husband. She always talked about how out of place she felt living in the middle of "nowhere" but the reality is she grew up only about 30 minutes away from where she lives now.
I read her blog regularly in the early days and she was always upfront about being from Oklahoma and there was a bio section on the blog that described it neatly. She was a town girl who married a rancher. And she spent some years in LA and she did talk about visions of being a glamorous urbanite only to end up living in the middle of nowhere, aka ranch country. It's her humor, including the name of the blog.
I am not a "fan" but some of you are trying to turn her into a a different persona that isn't quite justified.
Ree is very smart, but this persona is definitely her shtick. It's why so many people, even on this thread, think she's "urban" and not from Oklahoma. She's a fantastic business woman and married to one of the wealthiest ranchers in the US, but she'd like you to believe she's just a busy rancher's wife tasked with the job of wrestling up food for hungry cowboys. It's good marketing, but all those little half truths also rub people the wrong way when it is portrayed as being the reality of her life. Being a "city girl" turned pioneer woman is a much more interesting story than being a woman from small town Oklahoma who marries a rancher from another nearby small town. She is a city girl in the same way that Hilaria Baldwin is from Spain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read her blog when it first started, but I don't follow her now. She definitely appeals to a certain demographic and is wildly popular.
I have family in Oklahoma and I actually met her at a Barnes and Noble in Oklahoma many years ago. Her story was that she was a city girl in LA who became an accidental country girl after she met her husband. She always talked about how out of place she felt living in the middle of "nowhere" but the reality is she grew up only about 30 minutes away from where she lives now.
I read her blog regularly in the early days and she was always upfront about being from Oklahoma and there was a bio section on the blog that described it neatly. She was a town girl who married a rancher. And she spent some years in LA and she did talk about visions of being a glamorous urbanite only to end up living in the middle of nowhere, aka ranch country. It's her humor, including the name of the blog.
I am not a "fan" but some of you are trying to turn her into a a different persona that isn't quite justified.