Andre Rush (born September 7, 1974)[1] is an American celebrity chef and military veteran. He worked in the White House as a Chef for four administrations. Rush, a retired Master Sergeant of the U.S. Army, gained additional attention for his large biceps and muscular physique.[2][3]
Rush enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1993. He has been deployed overseas several times, and served as a trainer in hand-to-hand combat and food service. In 1997, Rush began to work as a chef at the White House. He has served the presidential administrations of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump.[7][8] He worked at the White House part-time while simultaneously working at The Pentagon.[9] He was in the gym of the Pentagon when it was hit during the September 11, 2001 attacks, and chose to volunteer for combat duties afterwards.[4] Rush was a member of the U.S. Army Culinary Arts Team.[3]
In June 2018, Rush received fame when he was photographed by CNN reporter Kate Bennett and Wall Street Journal reporter Vivian Salama preparing a Ramadan meal for a White House dinner.[5] The photo of him cooking on the White House lawn during the annual White House Iftar dinner circulated on Twitter, and subsequently went viral.[10][5] Later that year, he signed a deal to produce a television show entitled Chef in the City.[11] He has since left his job as a White House chef.[12]
In 2023, Rush starred in Kitchen Commando, a show about helping struggling restaurants in the DMV Area. It was produced by Gordon Ramsay and premiered on Tubi.[13] In 2024, he was featured in Culinary Class Wars, a South Korean cooking challenge show broadcast by Netflix. In his episode, he participated in a restaurant challenge amongst mukbang YouTubers.[14]
Fitness
Rush is known for his physique and large 24 inch arms that gave him notoriety on social media.[3] As a high school senior he reportedly could bench press 350 pounds (160 kg) while weighing just 150 pounds (68 kg).[5] In 2010, he was reported to be able to bench press 605 pounds (274 kg).[15] Rush states he does 2,222 pushups daily as part of the 22 pushup challenge, with the goal to raise awareness for the roughly 22 veterans who die by suicide every day.[16][17]
In 2021, Men's Health published an article featuring Rush's daily routine, which included him eating eight meals a day and up to 10,000 calories.[18] Some of his claims were received with skepticism by the professional bodybuilding community.[19]
Personal life
Rush's older brother, Ricky, died of lung cancer in 2016. Rush has been outspoken about the necessity of cancer screening.[20]