“My family has suffered Enough – NOW it’s their Turn” – Gregg Wallace drops a B0mbshell, Directly NAMING the BBC and leaving top bosses Red-Faced. FULL INTERVIEW stuns viewers with sh0cking contradictions between both sides.

SHAMED Gregg Wallace last night vowed never to watch MasterChef again following his sacking.

Asked if he will tune in to the show which he co-presented, he said: “No, no, no, no, never.”

Gregg Wallace in an interview at home.
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Former TV star Gregg Wallace vowed never to watch MasterChef again following his sackingCredit: Dan Charity

Gregg Wallace and his wife Anne-Marie Sterpini at home.
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Wallace with his wife Anne-Marie SterpiniCredit: Dan Charity
The 60-year-old — fired this month after an investigation into his behaviour — added: “I’m hurt. I don’t want anything to do with telly. I don’t want anything to do with the BBC.”

The BBC has confirmed it will broadcast the new series which was filmed last year with Wallace and co-host John Torode, who has also been axed.

Defiant Wallace has hit back at the damning legal investigation into his behaviour — claiming HE was groped during his time on MasterChef.

The furious 60-year-old ex-presenter, fired this month, also believes he was accused of wrongdoing by women with an “agenda” against him.

In a hard-hitting interview, he acknowledges he will never appear on TV again — and says he will not watch the show in which he features alongside his axed co-host John Torode.

He says: “The whole complaints procedure needs to be readdressed — there are huge problems with it as things stand.


 


“Being on MasterChef was brilliant but I had so many bad experiences.

“Had I wanted to raise any complaints, I’d have had the decency to speak to that person directly. Privately, not publicly.

“My God, can you imagine the complaints I could have made?

Shamed Gregg Wallace says ‘I’m no groper, sex pest or flasher,’ as tearful star refuses to accept blame for BBC sacking
“Have you got any idea of the sexual references made to me on a daily basis?

“How many times I’ve been touched by women wanting a selfie? How many times I’ve been groped? How many times suggestive comments have been made to me? How many female contestants have said inappropriate things on MasterChef?

“It wouldn’t even cross my mind though. Now, I’m not suggesting that groping is right, but it was happening to me on a regular basis. It was just extraordinary.

“This is what I mean about the idea that presenters are godlike and they’re just throwing their weight around and bullying people.

“The amount of times when I was desperately trying to build a career in television that I’ve been shouted at and bullied. I don’t know what the answer is, and I understand the need for anonymity, but I wouldn’t wish anyone to be dragged through what I have.”

While he recognises that genuine whistle-blowers must be protected, he firmly believes some women were “weaponising” their dislike of him.

He is, it is clear, a very angry man — and certainly a bruised one.

He told The Sun yesterday that he was not a “groper, a sex pest or a flasher”. He also backed Torode, who had an allegation of racism upheld against him during the probe into Wallace’s behaviour.

Wallace told The Sun: “He is not a racist.”

He confirms he is contemplating suing the BBC — after hiring attack-dog lawyer Dan Morrison — for what he believes is their “unfair” treatment of him.

Under the 2010 Equalities Act, employers are duty-bound to protect those with disabilities – which includes autism, a condition he was formally diagnosed with in January.

He sighs: “Honestly, I don’t know if I will go through with it right now though. I feel utterly battered and bruised, and right now just want to hide behind my sofa drinking Horlicks.

“Perhaps when the dust has settled but it’s too early to say what I will do next.”

Last week the BBC and MasterChef production company Banijay confirmed they will be broadcasting the series which he and Torode filmed last year.

Will Wallace watch MasterChef again?

Gregg Wallace in a blue shirt sitting on a light-colored couch.
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Wallace said: ‘Wokeism and cancel culture is terrifying – I just hope no one else ever has to go through anything like this’Credit: Dan Charity

John Torode and Gregg Wallace holding the MasterChef trophy.
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Wallace’s co-host John Torode was also sacked from the showCredit: BBC

Screenshot of a Twitter exchange about a cycling fundraiser for Macmillan Cancer Support.
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Wallace was ridiculed for an exchange he had with Nick Holder on X/Twitter which went viralCredit: Twitter
He rages: “No, no, no, no, never. I’m hurt. I don’t want anything to do with telly. I don’t want anything to do with the BBC. I really don’t care. I’m just really pleased for the contestants because MasterChef, really, is all about them — it was never about John and I.

“Whoever hosts it next, and I really don’t care who it is, the show will be absolutely fine.” Speaking from his sprawling country home in rural Kent, Wallace admits he is worried about his financial future.

He adds: “But, for a long time, I earned a lot of money and I was careful with it.

“I am not expecting sympathy from anyone but obviously I have a family, and of course I do worry.”

He accepts his TV career is over, and has just qualified as a personal trainer helping men over 50 get fit.

He charges £50 a week for his 20 clients, giving them a one-hour, online session plus a full nutrition and exercise plan.

What will my legacy be now? I don’t want it to be telly, I want nothing to do with it all

Gregg Wallace

It is a far cry from his reported £400,000-a-year salary on MasterChef. But, he insists, it brings him happiness. Today, the gym is a respite for him.

In 2022 the former greengrocer was awarded an MBE for services to food and charity.

But in the wake of the report against him — undertaken by law firm Lewis Silkin with 45 out of 83 allegations upheld — he fears being stripped of the title.

He muses: “What will my legacy be now? I don’t want it to be telly, I want nothing to do with it all. I have worried about losing my MBE but there’s not a lot I can do about it. But I haven’t done anything illegal and hopefully now more and more people will realise that I haven’t been exposing myself, and I haven’t been groping people either.

“So now I want to start campaigning — raising more awareness of neurodiversity in the workplace.

“I think perceptions may slowly change and all I want is people to ask questions of people whose behaviour they find odd — even people that might look like a football hooligan to you.

“You can’t decide which groups of people or which disabilities you will support or won’t support in the workplace. You either embrace it all or you don’t.

“For example, the BBC should have spotted my autism sooner and sent me off to Occupational Health rather than letting all these complaints build up against me, with nobody saying anything until the floodgates opened and it all came out. I feel very angry about that.”

Wallace is so angry with the BBC that when they asked him repeatedly for an interview he declined.

Anger, of course, is something many, many women felt towards Wallace in the wake of his arrogantly foolish comments on Instagram last year in which he said he was accused by “middle-class women of a certain age”.

It is, he acknowledges ruefully, a phrase that will haunt him forever.

No, no, no, why did I look like an a**hole? He was asking me to do something, and he got my name wrong. Did I say anywhere that I wouldn’t help him?

Gregg Wallace

After spending two hours with Wallace, it seems evident he is on the spectrum. Frankly, how it took until the age of 60 for him to be diagnosed is baffling.

One incident that has unquestionably marked him came in 2012 when a fan tweeted the presenter to ask for help raising awareness of a charity bike ride.

Nick Holder posted: “Hi Greg, I am cycling just over 180 miles in 2 days for Macmillan Cancer Support. Any chance of an RT (retweet)?”
Instead of supporting Nick’s endeavours, Gregg, with two Gs, simply responded “Gregg?”

Cuttingly — and quite rightly — Nick replied: “No worries mate, it’s only people with cancer. You worry about your extra G. Mastertwat.”

The exchange quickly went viral, with Wallace mercilessly ridiculed.

Does he not realise, I ask, that he came across as, well, an utter a**hole? (A question not many people would take well.)

Nope, Gregg is still bemused and frustrated by the incident.

He asks: “No, no, no, why did I look like an a**hole? He was asking me to do something, and he got my name wrong. Did I say anywhere that I wouldn’t help him?

“So why didn’t he just go, ‘Oh, OK mate, sorry I got that wrong. Would you help me?’

“And if that would have been the narrative, then fine, but instead he said, ‘Oh, don’t worry, it’s only people dying of cancer, you get your name right, w***er’.

Wokeism and cancel culture is terrifying – I just hope no one else ever has to go through anything like this

Gregg Wallace

“If only he’d just said, ‘Oh, sorry, mate, G-R-E-G-G, could you help me?’ Then of course I would have done so, that’s what I wanted to do, but people don’t know that. I have done so much for charities over the years, I have always done so.”

When I ask him if such pedantry is his autism at play, he bizarrely doubles down and insists I would not understand because people have not been spelling my name wrong for years.

I point out that, as a “Clemmie”, I spent my childhood years regularly being called “Clammy”, and joyfully, “Chlamydia”. And that, no, it would not have irked me one iota.

He snaps back: “Congratulations, well done you — you’re obviously not autistic.”

Had I not spent the morning with the man — and, crucially, his lovely family — I might have been pretty horrified by that.

As it is, I realise he genuinely sees things incredibly black and white.

Quite literally there is no filter with Wallace. When he feels an injustice, he says it.

Certainly you see a different side to the man — who can only go out in a disguise now, he is so afraid of public perception — when you see him interacting with his family.

His incredibly loyal wife Anna, who makes me a coffee, is lovely and his six-year-old non-verbal autistic son Sid is an utter delight.

Anna has been my rock – we had some really tough conversations when it was all kicking off but I promised her I have never, ever cheated

Gregg Wallace

Two French bulldogs, Wally and Bella, tear around the house, while his delightful mother-in-law Rina potters around in the kitchen.

Indeed, such is his autism, he makes diary reminders in his phone nudging him to be romantic.

He says: “Anna told me once she wanted spontaneous hugs from me so that’s what I do now . . . so the hugs might not be spontaneous for me, but they are for her.”

He credits his family for keeping him around. Without them, he admits tearfully, he might have taken his own life during a particularly bleak spell last Christmas.

He reflects: “But then I realised that would be selfish on them, and totally unfair. Anna has been my rock — we had some really tough conversations when it was all kicking off but I promised her I have never, ever cheated.

“She knows I have not looked at another woman since the moment I laid eyes on her.

 

“But seeing how tough this been on them — my mum, who died earlier this year, called me one day to ask why the Prime Minister was talking about me on telly — has been heartbreaking.

“Wokeism and cancel culture is terrifying — I just hope no one else ever has to go through anything like this.”