Advertisement

Jamie Oliver lands a visit at an L.A. high school

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

Jamie Oliver has been unhappy that L.A. Unified hasn’t allowed him into its schools to film his reality television show, but he’s had plenty of offers from parents and officials who’d like to work with him. And on Thursday he is planning to visit West Adams Prep, a high school near downtown.

Oliver’s production officials provided few details but said he would meet with administrators and students. The British chef has been trying to get the OK to shoot the second season of “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution” in an L.A. school.

Advertisement

West Adams Prep, which opened in 2007, is one of two MLA Partner high schools (Manual Arts is the other) serving students in South Los Angeles. It has a partnership with Los Angeles Unified School District but makes some decisions independently. Its students eat LAUSD lunches.

That partnership made Oliver’s visit possible, said Mike McGalliard, the president and CEO of MLA, or Mentor L.A.

“Having Jamie Oliver work with our students and parents … underscores the MLA philosophy that our students’ health and nutrition is critical to their success,” McGalliard said in a statement. “We hope that as Jamie continues to inspire all of us to focus on good food choices and healthy eating, that our partnership will be the first of many productive and successful dialogues he has throughout the district.’

The chairwoman of the MLA schools’ board, Megan Chernin, said Tuesday in a piece on the Huffington Post that nearly half the children who live in the neighborhoods served by the schools are obese “or close to it.”

She said Oliver’s show “might actually have something important to contribute to the way we approach school nutrition.”

A spokesman for LAUSD said he didn’t know much about the Oliver visit. But Robert Alaniz said the chef had been spotted this week outside a Southgate school dressed as a tomato and handing out food and fliers to get people to lobby the district on his behalf.

Advertisement

-- Mary MacVean

Related:

Oliver speaks to school nutrition association

Jamie Oliver shows off L.A. kitchen

Advertisement