I'm late coming to the dance as this program (known as The Last Restaurant Standing) in the U.S. finished last week.
Believe me, our sentiments are almost exactly the same as those noted above.
I'm laid up with a knee replacement so have had plenty of time to Internet search on varous related forums. In one, one of the contestants, and the best guesses were Rebecca, occasionally commented.
They went through several interview processes, with the competition being reduced for each one. The only cooking they had to demonstrate was an omelet. Of their group the only one to do one successfully was their partner. However, four other teams from that group made the preliminary 15, of which nine were chosen to participate. They noted the six who weren't were quite bad, apparently selected more for their oddness than abilities. They noted many strong teams were simply passed over. They had too much talent/experience.
The teams were apparently selected 100% by the producers. Pretty well the first time the judges met them was at the opening episode. Apparently the producers were far, far more interested in a cross-representation of the British society as cooking and FOH skills. If you look at the now 27 teams in the first three seasons you will see a lot of commonality among them.
Although much loved by some, apparently the overall viewing numbers for Season 1 and 2 weren't that high. BBC cut the funding for Season 3. Why Bristol? Perhaps in a city of 460,000 there were amply available restaurant spaces to be had reasonably. Why the toned down challenges? They were cheap to produce.
Looks like the producers format is three early throw-away teams, three to last to mid-season and three to vie for the finals. This season three went in the first two episodes. Only six actually got restaurants. The final three were within a ten-minute walk of each other.
The above noted contestant said they were allowed to select the key to their restaurant. However, they were directed to stand in very specific spots which made it much more likely they would select a certain one. They noted it was funny how all six got locations which best seems to represent their theme, such as the Nigerian one being in the only mixed-neighborhood of the six of them.
I get the strong impression Barney and Badger were slated to be among the final three. When they dropped out early, it completely changed the dynamics of the season. They were left with only two who could cook traditional British cruisine, Chris and Steven. I further get the impression the judges really didn't want to go into a new, from the ground up, venture with either of those teams, which is why JJ and James were kept in the mix. Drama and all that.
One has to wonder what might have happened if Steven hadn't had his severe stage fright for the demonstation at the cooking fair. He did, in my opinion, the best cooking class and, once they did take the stage, seems to do quite well. It gave the judges an opportunity to cite concern about handing the pressure of a professional kitchen to close them.
And, remember, Raymond has been burned now probably one and one-half times. Jeremy and Jane simply walked away from Eight at the Thatch after a couple of months. The Cheerful Soul at the Hare and HounRAB is on-going, but Internet restaurant reviews have rated it either a 3 out of 5 or 3.5 out of 5. When your average, poor and terrible ratings nearly equal your good and excellent ratings, you are looking at future problems. Yes, one would expect opening clitches, but the ratings don't seem to be improving over time.
The end result was a decision based solely on financial considerations. Their investments would be less at risk with JJ and James (who already have an going enterprise) than a new start with Chris and Nathan. The programming/results were scripted to that end. What do you say to Chris? Ditch Nathan and we'll consider you.
And I think it will come back to bit them in the end (pun intended). You put JJ in the kitchen and the bar no longer turns out those 'fabulous' cocktails. Put him behind the bar and the kitchen suffers. Give JJ enough training to where he has a newly found appreciation for fine food, but hire in a competent chef to produce it. Move their London Cocktail Club to a more 'high street' location to go after the 'young professionals' there. Ah, heck, make it into a high-end gay bar.
I don't know if it is the same in England, but in the U.S. in a restaurant which also serves liquor, while the liquor sales may represent only 20-30 percent of the gross, it can produce about 50 percent of the net profit due to the high mark up on it. Rather like out supermarkets. The meat department may only take up 10% of the store space, but produces about half of the over the counter sales.
If you want to Google Internet reviews of Russell and Michele's restaurant, search on Hare and HounRAB rather than The Cheerful Soul with Marlow, England as location.
And I understand Season 2 has two spin-oRAB on BBC2. One is Raymond Blanc in something like Kitchen Secrets in which he turns the ordinary in the superb. The other is Plate Expectations, which follows James and Ali catering to events.