A 'No Reservations,' 'Parts Unknown' viewing guide from an Anthony Bourdain devotee

Cara Kelly | USA TODAY

Show Caption Hide Caption Anthony Bourdain served us the world Anthony Bourdain's passion for food and travel inspired us to taste and see the world. The iconic chef, author and TV host was found dead of an apparent suicide in Strasbourg, France, where he’d been filming segments for his CNN show ‘Parts Unknown.'

Editor's note: The final episode of Anthony Bourdain's "Parts Unknown" airs Sunday, November 11, at 9 p.m. ET. In honor of the series finale on CNN, we have republished the story below, originally published in the days after Bourdain's death.

Good news for Anthony Bourdain fans who have been mourning his death last week by watching Parts Unknown: His culinary travelogue series, which was due to be removed from Netflix on Saturday, is sticking around a while longer.

Netflix confirmed the news Tuesday.

"Some fans have noticed that Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown was scheduled to come off Netflix US on June 16," the streaming network said. "As of today, we’ve extended our agreement that will keep Parts Unknown on the service for months to come."

Bourdain, who died Friday at 61, was about as atypical a travel show host as one could imagine: a former heroin user with an unrelenting sarcastic streak and an almost unpalatably cutting sense of humor.

And I loved him for it.

His candor and deadpan jokes were real in a way that no other travel show host has been able to pull off, a diametric opposite to the sweet all-Americanness typically required from TV personalities. (Sorry Samantha Brown, though I still watched all of your peppy shows.)

Bourdain was a unicorn: A cool and grizzled chef who was letting you in on a secret wrapped in the moral lesson that food is the great uniter, without an air of preachiness. I and so many other fans took intense satisfaction from experiencing the world through his point of view, ourselves unable to get to the remote corners of the globe he frequented but happy he was doing so and reporting back.

More: Chef-turned-TV host Anthony Bourdain dies at 61

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And it was reporting. CNN was brilliant to recognize that the chef-turned-TV host was at his core a journalist, documenting cultures and history through food. Luckily for all of us, the network picked him up for Parts Unknown after the Travel Channel let go of No Reservations. So while his death has left us heartbroken, at least his legacy lives on in a massive catalog of 20 seasons.

Here are a few of my favorites, a love letter of sorts from a forever fan. (Seasons 1-8 of Parts Unknown are available on Netflix.)

"Beirut" (No Reservations S2:E12) (Parts Unknown S5:E8)

Bourdain’s first trip to Beirut in 2006 was a remarkable moment in television and a clear turning point for the host. Filming occurred as the Israel-Lebanon conflict broke out, and as Bourdain famously despaired, they had captured only a few scenes of nightclubs before being sequestered in a hotel with other expatriates and eventually evacuated by the Marine Corps. But the contrast of the early optimism by the young Lebanese interviewed with the lively nightlife as a backdrop, and the long days of fighting observed from the hotel, painted a compelling portrait of modern-day Beirut, a city not unlike Miami or New York but caught up in the conflicts of the region.

His return visit for Parts Unknown gave the experience satisfying closure. But the early episode was what marked the series as a special form of TV travel.

"Food Porn" (No Reservations S5:E6)

Before the term became ubiquitous on Instagram, Bourdain used an episode of the series to lay out all the ways that food shows have something in common with pornography. He shows, step by step, how food shows mimic the pacing of porn and the sensuous ways chefs talk about and cook the food. He riffed on the cultural phenomenon, and in a line that could only come from Bourdain, he noted that there are so many "fat slabs of oozing, unctuous flesh, dripping chocolate and so many close-ups of moaning, eye-rolling, lip-smacking and oohing and aahing on basic cable right now that if you listened from another room you'd think it was a dirty shag carpet in Encino."

"Iran" (Parts Unknown S4:E6)

Reverberations of the Beirut episodes can be felt watching Bourdain visit Iran in 2014.

The episode had similarly huge socio-political implications. A long portion of the episode was spent with The Washington Post correspondent Jason Rezaian and his wife, Yeganeh Salehi, at a restaurant in the mountains on the outskirts of Tehran. They discussed the deep and complex history of the country, its relationship with the U.S. and lasting impact of the Persian Empire. It was an enlightening conversation, particularly from the viewpoint of two people who had lived in the States and could translate their love for Iran to American viewers.

A few weeks later, they were arrested and detained. Salehi was soon let go, but Rezaian spent 544 days imprisoned by Iranian authorities. Bourdain became an advocate for Rezaian, and wrote an op-ed for the Post eloquently summarizing the situation and calling for his release.

"Massachusetts" (Parts Unknown S4:E7)

Perhaps even more so than Bourdain’s homecoming in his New Jersey episode, "Massachusetts," provides illuminating background details on the host, who spent summers in Provincetown in early adulthood. The show opened with the place he bought his first bag of heroin, and dealt with the opioid epidemic ravaging the country.

More: Our review: Anthony Bourdain's 'Kitchen Confidential' captured restaurants' demented glory

"Saudi Arabia," "Philippines," "Buffalo/Baltimore/Detroit," "Thailand" (No Reservations S4:E13, S5:E7, 13, 16)

Never a fan of cheesy gimmicks, Bourdain was reluctantly cajoled by Travel Channel producers to stage a contest for viewers, who made submissions vying to travel with the host to a location of their choosing. Despite Bourdain’s constant snickering, the contest yielded four deserving finalists and memorable episodes.

The winner, Danya, challenged Bourdain to visit Saudi Arabia, a country she argued was misunderstood by the West and proved has much to offer.

Another finalist, Augusto, won over Bourdain and earned a trip to the Philippines with promises of lechon (roasted pork, a Bourdain weakness). The episode gave a genuine look at an American trying to connect with his cultural heritage after never living in his country of origin.

Eric, a Muay Thai and mixed martial arts fighter, didn’t have a hard sell on Thailand. The episode provided an interesting look at an American trying to break into the traditional sport.

The Buffalo/Baltimore/Detroit episode, with finalist Nelson, a musician from Buffalo, was peak Bourdain. The host had a love for blue-collar cities, and a knack at showcasing their hidden beauty.