Richie finding purpose in taking care of other people (stereotypically a female task) in direct opposition of what he THOUGHT he should do, maintenance (more of a manly task) felt so subtle and so rewarding
@dustincornwell2913 Жыл бұрын
He wanted to make someone’s day everyday!
@babylej Жыл бұрын
SO rewarding. I’ve been rewatching specifically his arcs and the moments where you see he rounds that corner (forks and the scene where he decides to run expo)
@theblueguy0889 Жыл бұрын
Idk maybe it’s because I have very little meaning in my life but that build up to his success and understanding of what his life can be made me cry for the first time in a while when he was singing that stupid Taylor swift song ( I hate Taylor swift) because I can relate so much to someone like Richie because his character is so real just like everyone else in the show. What an amazing season I almost wish they didn’t release it all at once so I could still have more episodes to look forward to
@nondescriptbeing5944 Жыл бұрын
I adore his character, the acting and writing, and can’t wait to see his further growth S3
@itchycroe411 Жыл бұрын
Richie is by far my least favorite character,but his episode I think is my favorite one.
@nerolemon Жыл бұрын
In the finale, the contrast from Richie telling Claire "I love him too, but don't tell him" in the beginning to Richie shouting through Carmy's cursing at him at the other side of the fridge "I fucking love you, man" over and over again broke my heart. Richie grew so much
@kritiskblick Жыл бұрын
He might also be scared of losing him like it already happens with Mickey, I think, that's why he decided to shout it out before it's too late.
@mosquitopyjamas904810 ай бұрын
Oh jesus, I didn’t even put that together, but that makes so much sense too.
@vmaria01 Жыл бұрын
It's interesting that Richie starts off polishing forks when Mickey was throwing them. Richie was able to handle life difficulties and grow while maybe Mikey was unable to do so.
@hellajanice Жыл бұрын
brb crying over this great observation
@leannabad3839 Жыл бұрын
WOWWWW this is such a great observation
@leannabad3839 Жыл бұрын
perfect because “fork in the road” and when Mikey lost purpose he took one path while when Richie did he took a different one
@honeymorante Жыл бұрын
DANGG awesome analysis here
@SgtPowell Жыл бұрын
Yes, I was confused when I was looking back at the episodes and realized that "Forks" isn't the Christmas flashback.
@mari98_ Жыл бұрын
season 3 NEEDS a Tina episode, something maybe around her having to hold her own as sous chef. I love her leaning into her softness this season and peaks of her confidence coming through in culinary school. Literally the karaoke scene made my heart grow 3 x bigger. I know so many women like Tina who deserve to find a dream and selfhood outside of motherhood and the hardness the world forces on them.
@victoriastanton576 Жыл бұрын
I agree!!! I was so so so so thrilled for Tina that she had a beautiful moment at karaoke - she deserves too a beautiful episode.
@rubydown3329 Жыл бұрын
Yes!! I almost cried when Syd asked her to be the Sous, and when Carmy gave her his knife 🥺🥺🥺 She's my favorite character, because I can relate to both how she is bitter and upset about how things are changing in the first part of season 1, and how she grows when is given praise and the opportunity for growth 🥰🥰🥰
@L_O27 Жыл бұрын
Right?? But, if you're her--a hardworking, perhaps under-educated single, brown mom, working as a short-order cook--who wouldn't jump at the chance to learn a real skill when someone offers to pay for your cooking school, and feel good about your accomplishments, for a change? She shines. Her arc is beautiful to watch... partially because so many people aren't given these breaks.
@AnABSOLUTEBarbarian Жыл бұрын
Yeeeessss!
@parisolivarious Жыл бұрын
Tina’s moment where she was calling out orders and everyone calling back “Chef!” was outstanding for me. I love her arc
@davidmedina2068 Жыл бұрын
"what is social media but watching a thousand trains leave without you" what a line
@jacobmaness7244 Жыл бұрын
This one made me stop in my tracks.
@idanlewenhoff2295 Жыл бұрын
it fits very well
@katrinaboehmer9732 Жыл бұрын
I caught my breath in my throat at that line. Holy smokes 😮
@LouieRides11 ай бұрын
💯🔥
@ericp4u Жыл бұрын
Another scene I liked was when Pete returns to the table after seeing Donna outside
@lyndanevin2880 Жыл бұрын
omg that broke me!!
@showme2540 Жыл бұрын
I was in tears
@MoonEnvoy7 ай бұрын
That had me tearing up. Pete is such an underrated character. Unflinching positivity and compassion in the face of all this intensity is so hard to find.
@francescafrancesca35545 ай бұрын
@@MoonEnvoy YES and yes and yes my boy Peter is so important.
@AdaDmn Жыл бұрын
I agree, Claire was a bit too perfect, but I think it’s because we see her from Carmy’s perspective: she’s the girl he had a crush on since school, and now she’s with him - so, she seems perfect to him. So perfect it scares him, and he falls into kind of self-sabotage, i think, starting with giving her the wrong number, and then just living in this anxious state of mind: it is too good to be true, so it’s easier not to have it than wait for it to end. But, while also wanting him to focus on work, I also really wanted him to find true balance between work and simple life. And I think it should be Carmy’s main character arc: finding balance, which he clearly does not have and thinks he’s not even able to maintain. He forgets about work, when he’s with Claire, and as soon as work gets out of control, decides that Claire should be forgotten (a bit dramatic, but sounds nice😅 you get what I mean). Should it take form of him stepping away and giving Syd most of the control in the restaurant, while trying to focus on himself and his own happiness - I don’t know, but to me “finding balance” seems like the healthiest path this character could take.
@animeasmey2 Жыл бұрын
And he hasn’t healed from any of his past to be in a healthy relationship at the moment. Not saying she couldn’t help him but that also shouldn’t be her responsibility because that’s a lot of pressure to put onto a partner. She understands his past is fucked but that doesn’t make it easy to accept all the flaws without him trying to change. What he said in the walk-in was really hurtful for her to hear because it sounded like he gave up and no one wants to be with someone who lacks any motivation to improve
@Wray62 Жыл бұрын
The fact that she knows most of his history already, his friends, family and all the gossip makes it feel like a true romantic tragedy. It felt like they could really work together and perhaps they will.
@kurtwagner350 Жыл бұрын
She weirded me out, she acted like a spy
@hello7032 Жыл бұрын
I think also that a person can seem perfect and honestly pretty great all around like Claire is and does. However she’s still not the one for Carmy or what he needs. And that’s ok! I loved that aspect. A very mature depiction of relationships just not working out without there being a villain or morality involved. It just didn’t work!
@drewdrewson1384 Жыл бұрын
the show has a tendency to make everything too perfect. Carmy is a good example. Why not just have it that he was at a really good restaurant in NYC on the come up? Having him at the best restaurant in the world makes it so he has nowhere to go but down at his new spot. That plus if he really was good enough to be at the best in the world, he would be able to get outside investors and wouldn't need to bootstrap everything. Still a great show though
@snazzyshoes6409 Жыл бұрын
We see in episode seven a photo of Carmen and Luca, when Luca said he wasn’t the best he was talking about carmy!
@orcasin112 Жыл бұрын
Noticed that too
@thru_and_thru Жыл бұрын
Yep this was a very cool touch
@showme2540 Жыл бұрын
I saw the photo but did not make that connection. Thank you for pointing that out because i already loved that episode but this made it so much better.
@Typw11 ай бұрын
Carmy also talked about his past in the kitchen as a competition, that a new stage was coming in and he was "gonna smoke that guy", which completely aligns with Luca's prodigy story he shared with Marcus
@mohawkan423023 Жыл бұрын
Richie’s episode was so good I rewatched it immediately after finishing it. It feels so relatable, and it works so well, you could watch it out of context and still get who Richie was before, and who he becomes after finding out his purpose. Mastercrafted TV
@hello7032 Жыл бұрын
It feels so real and so human
@mari98_ Жыл бұрын
it feels like media/art that I can come back to for a long time to give me hope and find peace with life without getting tired on it
@j.o.g.j Жыл бұрын
It genuinely plays like a short movie
@fennec2395 Жыл бұрын
That episode could be a short film by itself
@gretaghiringhelli927511 ай бұрын
the back-to-back fishes and forks combo is literally the best two hours in television history imo
@goatlib2338 Жыл бұрын
It’s simple: I’ve never watched a series that feels so real and… human. I loved it.
@canadianguy7291 Жыл бұрын
I love so much the amount of meanings Carmie locking himself in the freezer has. He didn't answer the fridge guy due to his trauma of his old boss and thinking he saw the man who put him through so much pain sent him to the freezer in the first place. Every character in the show this season including Sydney grew and evolved but Carmie was the only one who didn't. He still carried his trauma of his past and his brother dying, he started dating his childhood crush and he's still in the kitchen working. I love how in both season 1 with the episode Review and The Bear the show is setting the standard that everytime Carmie explodes and pushes away those he needs (shown when his panic attack is stopped by him thinking of Sydney) he's immediately punished for it. In Review Sydney and Marcus leave him and in The Bear he becomes literally locked away from his success. He becomes the person Richie feared becoming left to watch the world go by him while being stuck where he is. I think for season 3 we'll focus mainly on Carmie and him hopefully processing his trauma of his family, his brother and his boss that still looms over him and prevents him from being "the guy." The way Carmie also acts while locked in the fridge, continuing to bang and scream throughout the service, he comes across as someone who's suffering from addiction and needs a fix. He's desperate, angry and sad all at once. For Carmie, being in the kitchen is his addiciton, and when he loses his escape from all the outside noise, all the mental pressure he puts on himself, he's trying everything to get it back.
@beatrice-sama343310 ай бұрын
Actually cooking being his addiction is such a nice reading of the story. Addiction runs through his family, and if his brother got the substance abuse, he gets the “addiction” of cooking. As we see in the Christmas episode, his mum cooks a wonderful meal, but it’s done through so much pain and toxicity, which I think Carmy is trying to fix.
@enochli_ Жыл бұрын
The bear is prove you cant have AI writing scripts. This show is art. Inspired by the human experiences, expressed in writing, and brought to life by creators and actors who understands what it means to live.
@Samwell-L Жыл бұрын
I always thought Marcus helping the cyclist represented the fact that it was right for him to be in Copenhagen. He was worried about leaving his mum but him being there meant he was able to help the cyclist. I thought it represented that Marcus was needed somewhere else away from his mother's side
@strawberrycatastrofy257 Жыл бұрын
Also want to point out the motif of FORKS! Which forks to buy. Mike throwing forks. Ritchie polishing forks. Running out of forks. It's this looked down upon item because it's so ubiquitous, yet it's used as the basic tool for eating, as a weapon, as a meditative practice, and something so easily overlooked at within the same season.
@emiluontube-you Жыл бұрын
I feel like Natalie's character being logical and the character to bounce off of actually, I think, fits her character as because she grew up with such a volatile household, she became immensely attuned to people's shifts in mannerisms and mood, and because she so viscerally has to make sure her mother is okay, she also does the same in her daily life, just on a subtler level because the triggers are much more manageable than her home life for most of her life
@mackenziegoodwin4597 ай бұрын
This is why Pete is actually perfect for her. He's calm and easygoing even if he's a doofus. He's an emotional refuge for Natalie.
@gigphoong9059 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact from my psycho bread making phase during the pandemic. The steam tray isn't to keep the bread softer per se. It's to make sure the surface doesn't set too early and basically start toasting. If it starts toasting then it starts cracking. Cracks let out the steam that is inside the bread when you're letting it cool. The steam let's the bread expand as much as it can without over setting and browning and cracking. And with the surface as intact as possible, it allows the steam to promote rising in the oven and keeps moisture in while cooling.
@nerolemon Жыл бұрын
The opening night started out as a one take, just like episode seven of the first season, then when things start going wrong, at the most pivotal and chaotic moment, it cuts to the clock. This immediately lets you know that its not going to go like it did last time. Marcus, Sydney and Richie have all grown enough to make this time different, and the subversion of expectations by ending that one take shows how this time, they can handle it, even with Carmy shouting from the walk-in
@19Jetta10 ай бұрын
Carmie teaching Sydney the ASL "I'm sorry" sign was a key part of this whole season for me. I've actually taught it to my grand daughter as something you can use when tempers are high but you want to say "Let's talk later."
@rentristandelacruz Жыл бұрын
"I wear suits now." - Richie
@SarvasvKulpatiYT Жыл бұрын
This is the first time I've sat through a 40 minute youtube show analysis in one go. The line "what is social media but watching a thousand trains leave without you" is just art, and somehow it was just comforting to sit and listen to someone articulate so much about a show that absolutely blew me away. Really hoping they land season 3
@recantedforger5850 Жыл бұрын
Watching this review, it hit me. Pete bringing the fish was a joke sure, but thinking back to what their mom said about nobody making anything beautiful for her and he was the ONLY one who actually brought something that showed he thought and cared about her....and then remembering the scene with both of them outside of the restaurant and her validating how good he is was a perfect way to tie it together, but in turn it wrecks him. He gets acknowledged and IS apart of the family in a way that the mother had to damage him fully for it be complete. Dude the writing in this show is something else. Hard agree on the episode highlights as well. 4, 6, & 7 we're just amazing.
@joshbrown22176 ай бұрын
Damn I didn't even pick up on that, that's a really good point.
@jules3770 Жыл бұрын
Richie had the best character arc this season, and it really surprised me. I found him hard to love in season 1 and it was so great to see him come into his own and find new purpose. Loved the video! Glad I stumbled across your channel and will be checking out more of your videos.
@ninaagnant9083 Жыл бұрын
The show on its own is fantastic, but the flavor you put into this review is outstanding. Your comparisons are otherworldly. I would have never thought about how Mikey’s death was made to be a Christ-like death for the sake of collective rebirth. To come to such a conclusion is absolutely mind blowing. I hope to write and sound like you one day. I will now watch every video you have ever made.
@lightuponlight6727 Жыл бұрын
Truly. A brilliant mind and beautiful writing.
@isaiahgarcia8881 Жыл бұрын
The episode with the whole family is so heart wrenching, but relatable in so many ways. It’s the perfect microcosm of Carmen’s learned behavior & the way he acts and feels throughout the whole series.
@atomsizedbacon53587 ай бұрын
“When you put something on the backburner, it should still be cooking” goes inexplicably crazy
@SgtPowell Жыл бұрын
I thought Syd had an interesting and unexpected trajectory in the final episode of Season 2. It felt like a lot of the side characters had major, carthartic break throughs while she and Carmy struggled this season, especially in this last episode. Syd was struggling to keep up with the rush, timidly calling out orders, and froze when Carmy locked himself in the walk-in. Richie swoops in and saves the day. When she goes back to start calling orders and realizes the machine printing tickets is broken / out of paper, I think she has a few realizations in that moment that result in her throwing up: 1) Carmy is not a reliable partner. Yet. He could still get there but, despite putting in a ton of work, he consistently let her down this season. And failing to call the fridge guy was the ultimate self sabotage that led to a distaerous first night. 2) This kitchen seems to be cursed. Even though she pivoted to a new position and the team really came through, within moments, the ticket machine stopped working and a whole new stressful problem presented itself. No matter how many proverbial fires she puts out, a new one is inevitable. She never gets to enjoy a win because a new disaster is always right around the corner. 3) Despite a very tumultuous first night, they made it through. They successfully opened the new restataunt and the diners were pleased. This was the thing she has been working SO hard for all this time. Was it worth it? Does she really want this incredibly stressful life? I think her smile at the end is her answer of 'yes' to that question, but I think she had a stress induced existential crisis that forced her to come to terms with all of this and her body couldn't handle it. Season 2 ended on a very low note with Carmy listening to Claire's voicemail and feeling completely defeated. I hope season three will be when Carmy and Syd have their hero's journeys completed in a satisfying way. As an aside, I hope they don't get romantically involved. I can't see that ending well. A complex and deep platonic relationship between a man and woman is something we don't see enough of on TV. I'm here for it.
@mars06_ Жыл бұрын
Beautiful analysis, I just had to ask was the ticket machine broken? Because I saw it as her mind replaying the noise like it was haunting her. It also was the end of the day, so I thought all the ordering was done.
@SgtPowell Жыл бұрын
@mars06_ that's an interesting idea! I hadn't thought about it that way but I just went back and watched that scene again and I think you're right. It's kind of ambiguous I guess but yeah, it's like the ticket machine was a representation of her anxiety, self-doubt, etc. Like it was mocking her for failing to do something that Richie could, after hating and discounting him for so long. I think if it was really broken and more orders were coming in, she'd be trying to fix it.
@SafiaAlkh. Жыл бұрын
FACTS!!!!!! I see a lot of people shipping the two and i really dont think that would work out well, even Ayo Edibiri who plays Syd said herself she doesn't think theyd go well together
@ZzzZ-sb9ju11 ай бұрын
@@SafiaAlkh.you do realize they’re forced to say that so they don’t spoil things.
@SafiaAlkh.11 ай бұрын
@@ZzzZ-sb9ju Whether scripted or not it would be a shitty romance lmao
@CassReidIsSomeone Жыл бұрын
My favorite element of the biker in Honeydew being a representation of letting go is the big hug between them. Showing there's no love lost with the act of letting go.
@Devvijing Жыл бұрын
There's just something about redemption stories that I absolutely love, and ep. 7 "Forks" for Richie is just... PERFECT man. Like damn, That dude literally just flipped his switch and became my favorite character with just how he acted with all of that and the factors leading up to it. Love that guy
@thedylangirl Жыл бұрын
My husband and both of my sons are professional chefs in fine dining, baking, and private catering respectively. It is challenging to see this career so often glorified on television. It’s easy to romanticize, but can wreak havoc on the personal lives of those who answer this calling. It IS a calling for some and I’m grateful for this show’s more realistic approach. It should have been noted that the Copenhagen episode was directed by Ramy Youssef. His work is so apparent throughout and responsible for so much of the subtle, but deep emotion. He has a real gift for bringing out the beautiful complications of modern men. I’m the happiest for Richie this season, but Copenhagen was my favorite episode. I felt so much from even just the hug from the cyclist. Absolute masterpiece.
@theinternetaunty5325 Жыл бұрын
It just didn't feel that Claire had any real dimension to her. She was the girl next door, the perfect girlfriend, the scholar - just archetypes - but who is she as a human? I think she was written in such an empty way to illustrate how Carmy is looking for a perfect escape away from the chaos of his life. Yes , Claire is perfect on paper, but in no way does this perfection help Carmy be his perfect self... the creative chef genius we know he is.
@L_O27 Жыл бұрын
That may be true, but arguably isn't the point. She was brought in to illustrate Carmy's inability to balance work and life, and to illustrate that no matter who the girl is, he's got so much trauma and self-loathing to work through, he can't really have a romantic relationship with anybody, right now.
@taylorgayhart9497 Жыл бұрын
That’s because she isn’t a main character, and getting to know her as a person independent from Carmy isn’t necessary to the story they’re talking about the restaurant. If they had wasted time on her over Tina, or Ebra, or anyone who works at the restaurant, it wouldn’t have added anything to the story excerpt length.
@Jen-de9sp Жыл бұрын
I thought so too, and while I still think that holds validity I think it’s also true to some degree that Claire’s character maybe wasn’t truly meant to be fleshed out in the way Richie’s or Marcus’ has, at least in this season. Claire was more meant to represent an idea rather than a person; Carmy’s struggle to maintain a healthy lifestyle outside of the kitchen. But more than that I think that Claire was made or showcased to be perfect to highlight Carmy’s inability to think of anyone outside of himself. In Carmy’s eyes Claire was this perfect person who was always witty, smart, kind, etc., something that he struggled with on a daily basis. Claire was his savior, devoid of all the negativities that plagued his everyday life. It’s only in the finale when he completely shatters her heart with his selfishness does he realize that she’s an entire person with flaws and insecurities and worries and most of all a full life outside of his own. Only then does he realize the repercussions of his actions. Despite this it still leaves me unsatisfied knowing that her character essentially served as a vehicle for Carmy’s development and hopefully we get to explore more of her character in a third season.
@ccccc1332 Жыл бұрын
She’s past incarnate. Nothing more, nothing less. There’s no oxygen in Carmy’s life for Claire.
@JohnnyKelly Жыл бұрын
@@Jen-de9spI feel like the gloves will be coming off in terms of Claire Bear's approach to our broken down Carmy next season. She's gonna hit him with some hard truths about how he gets on with people. What he does with that though, will be very interesting to see. She had a lot of time and sympathy for him this season because it is evident she knew what his home life was like growing up. But now that he's gone full monologue about how he shouldn't have her in his life because she's just a distraction from the life he *should* be living... she's gonna have to get real with him about how skewed his perceptions of reality are. **He's** the one responsible for the fridge fuck up, and **only** him, not her being with him.
@guzzy620 Жыл бұрын
I think you highlighted why this show is superior to Ted Lasso. This show has characters that EARN their feel good moments. Episode 7 of this season is legitimately one of my favorite episodes of TV ever because we’ve invested in Richie despite his flaws and finally seeing him realize his potential is so fucking wholesome. Ted Lasso’s wholesome moments more or less come out of nowhere just to make the audience feel good. The characters that we root for in Ted Lasso seemingly have no flaws that are completely their fault. They don’t feel like real people. Richie on the other hand has some massive flaws. I’ve met hundreds of Richie’s in my life. but he works on his flaws. He doesn’t let them define him. He earns his success. Every second truly counts in The Bear.
@hello7032 Жыл бұрын
I loved that episode so much
@GoBuddieGo Жыл бұрын
The best part is Richie’s flaws still shine through after he’s more or less “redeemed” himself. He still cusses and in the finale he has a full blown out argument with Carmy while he was trapped inside the walk-in fridge, after the dinner rush he yells and had to compose himself when he realized that guests were still in the dining room.
@AKPolo-bm7vt Жыл бұрын
Ted Lasso Season 3 is the biggest downfall I have ever seen on TV
@shmoopdoop1409 Жыл бұрын
@@AKPolo-bm7vt There were some great moments, but yeah, compared to season 1 it didn't feel the same
@_abracadabra Жыл бұрын
@@AKPolo-bm7vt*Game of Thrones Season 8 has entered the chat*
@davezdude320010 ай бұрын
Thanks for the commentary, which made me realize that "Every Second Counts" is a motto that the writers, actors, and showrunners take seriously too...they show us, the audience, respect by making sure every second of our time devoted to their creation...counts.
@aleclynch6186 Жыл бұрын
Yoooo mikey as christ figure fantastic analysis. IDK how that hadn't occurred to me before given all the redemption in the show is predicated on him dying first. Wild
@TheGabriute Жыл бұрын
one of my favorite things about the bear is their use of needle drops. there's this scene where in the background (!) of the main conversation you can hear fak talking about the replacements album to hold up the engineer. i think he says something along the lines of 'one of my favorite albums, _pleased to meet me_ which has _can't hardly wait_ in it, which is one of the best high school songs of all time'. and then later on we see claire take carmy to a party, where carmy kind of mentions missing out on this sort of house party experience because of being laser-focused on becoming a chef. it's a very cutesy moment where they put these characters in their thirties (i assume) into this very youthful and carefree environment. and guess what song is playing in the background !!
@dariyes_ Жыл бұрын
Something I don’t hear enough people talking about is the symbolism from every episode leading up to the finale of S2. The episode opens with the dreadful sound of the printer that we first heard in the Review episode, almost as a call to chaos. Another callback to Review, we get a 12 minute one-shot take that perfectly describes the chaotic nature of the restaurant. Something to take notice is that the one-take ends when Carmy is stuck in the walk-in. While the team is thinking “we’re fucked”, Syd and Richie (completing his Hero story) take control and complete the task at hand. Something peculiar I noticed is how they left Carmy in the walk-in, with no one to try and help or even keep him company. It may be a callback to the trains, and how the world moves on. Carmy being stuck in the freezer is a metaphor to him being stuck in his ways of digging deeper into the lonely hole he dug for himself. Sorry for the long explanation, let me know if I was just rambling lol
@khunsainam Жыл бұрын
I scrolled through the comments, of course everyone's talking about this "masterpiece" of a series. I'm sure there are some, but none that I saw talk about how you shared your thoughts on what you watched and admired. I will, your talk so poetically detailed was just wonderful, from Aristotle references to making connections to Christlike death and rebirth for the sake of the common good. brilliant thank you for your keen eye.
@may.k_me Жыл бұрын
I also just wanted Carmy to get back in the kitchen and do what he does best. But I also understand why the insertion of Claire was necessary. I personally disliked all the close up face shots of Carmy and Claire, but I get that we're so up close because it's sort of the way they feel- they have tunnel vision for each other. So their surroundings melt away. In turn it can sort of feel suffocating too, which I suppose Carmy also felt at times- the overwhelming feelings of finally being with someone you were sort of in love with forever.
@HourCoolChannl Жыл бұрын
I like that tunnel-vision contrast to the way the Beef used to feel, especially in Episode 7 last season. When Carmy is with Claire, his world becomes even smaller than that cramped little kitchen that he desperately loves. I think that absolutely terrifies him; he loses sight of the kitchen and Mikey both when he's with Claire.
@Msvalexvalex Жыл бұрын
That love scene (if I can call it that) between Claire and Carmy felt so off, specifically at the end where Carm looks like he's being smothered, I can't even understand if he's in sheets or Claire's arms... That whole scene was off and claustrophobic. Anyways with the Nine Inch Nails music playing, I knew that relationship was doomed.😅
@Liu484 Жыл бұрын
Everywhere Carmy is gets too close, claustrophobic, cramped, and everyone that is there with him will get sucked in too, even Claire. It's why it hits so hard when Richie calls him Donna in the end of the last episode. He does the same as she. He's just still in progress to eventually become as destructive as her, or to own it up and solve it. It's so good
@ZzzZ-sb9ju11 ай бұрын
@@Liu484he calms down at the thought of Sydney.
@gretchenfitzgibbons5703 Жыл бұрын
I love everything about this, thoughtful, articulate and engaging. Bravo!
@jrrtalkin Жыл бұрын
thank you so very much!
@NaxipTV. Жыл бұрын
this is a great video analysis of the show, appreciate you making this. As for my favorite part of the season i feel it's almost impossible to watch the taylor swift scene without a big dumb smile on my face and happy tears. Finally seeing some direction and clarity in Richie's life after all the instability and strife that he goes through with everything up until that point is great to see. Also I think that's the best use of a pop song in a tv scene ever, up there with the "run away with me" scene in Mr Robot.
@skwibblez9239 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU for pointing out the Murakami reference! When I saw that I got so excited and I haven’t seen anyone else catch that. Great analysis video!
@hellajanice Жыл бұрын
Is it Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki??
@skwibblez9239 Жыл бұрын
@@hellajanice yup!
@hellajanice Жыл бұрын
@@skwibblez9239 yes!! i love that and also love that richie reading murakami is now canon. i wonder if they had the book somewhere in the background of his apartment in episode 7
@skwibblez9239 Жыл бұрын
@@hellajanice Richie being both a Murakami and Taylor Swift fan definitely blew my mind :)
@K8KProductions11 ай бұрын
Really great breakdown! Really enjoyed the video.
@jrrtalkin11 ай бұрын
hey thank you !!
@jakethompsett260411 ай бұрын
Your channel needs more attention. This was some of the most thoughtful and intelligent analysis of a piece of art that I've seen in a very long time. Your dedication to the craft and consumption of storytelling is abundantly apparent throughout this video. You gave me tons of insights into things I barely noticed before, and I tend to be a super observant viewer! Well done, I will be binging all your videos for sure
@TheBerlinEdit Жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis. I don't want to see Claire again. I really just want to see Carmy and Syd be able to manage this dream of theirs w/o distraction
@datura_preworkout Жыл бұрын
did you just not like claire as a character? or do u just see her as a distraction from the main story?
@TheBerlinEdit Жыл бұрын
@@datura_preworkout I understand that we may have been seeing Claire through carmys POV but I think her character was very rushed. We don't really know who she is, carmy doesn't even remember that she sat behind him in class or her name when they met in ep 2, so we kinda had to just remember that she was maybe important a long time ago. Also, I kind of just wish we could've seen what would happen if carmy never picked up that phone call from Claire and flaked on Syd in ep 3(?)
@nikekid009 Жыл бұрын
I think if they would’ve showed Claire during the Christmas episode it could of possibly given her and her relationship with Carmy a bit more depth. I too, hope we don’t see Claire again…she seemed like a distraction for Carmy and the restaurant.
@TheBerlinEdit Жыл бұрын
@@nikekid009 yes! I think it would've given us more insight on how she interacts with his family. But her name is brought up by Mikey and Richie while Carmy is getting cornered and panicking so we don't really see how he genuinely feels in that moment
@JohnnyKelly Жыл бұрын
@TheBerlinEdit Wait. Didn't he *claim* he didn't remember her, but then it was revealed he was actually drawing pictures of her in the Christmas episode that he lied about to her when she asked what the drawings he used to do were of? Or did I just hallucinate that part? I thought it was an attempt to show how self-conscious he was about just *how much* he remembered her. So much as to make him nervous about admitting it in case she thought he was a creep. So he pretended he remembered her less, to over compensate for his fears.
@cokepickle Жыл бұрын
Cant stop introducing people to this show. And when they tell me that they've finished the first season I cant help but get even more excited because truthfully, the first season is all setup and S2 is a lot more payoff. Especially with the episodes you highlighted. Brilliant television
@benjamin3044 Жыл бұрын
Season 1 Richie references Philip K. Dick was one of the super odd one-off lines that really stuck with me. The man is clearly smart, well read but just dealt kind of a shit hand. Forks had me sobbing and jumping up and down.
@haileyo450 Жыл бұрын
this is a really great analysis! as for sydney’s arc i felt like it was an arc of frustration and slight growth on purpose. watching her doubt carmy and hers partnership was needed as it clearly wasn’t equal at all this season and it felt like she was doing pretty much everything. it was so frustrating to watch the first turn into this when she is excited to go try foods with carmy and he’s not answering her and just straight up ghosts her, that frustration with him carried through the rest of the season and i think without carmy she couldn’t grow as much as she has the potential for because he wasn’t picking up the slack he was SUPPOSED TO. so she had to compensate for all he wasn’t doing instead of completely focusing on how to be a better leader and chef. i also think that syd and camrys relationship will progress slow but surely into something romantic. if not for the little things then for two big things 1. the thought of sydney calming down carmy during a panic attack about claire and his family and 2. the table scene and gift scene. especially when she talks about melting and he says he won’t let her then she looks up at him and they stare a eachother for a couple seconds while he shakes his head. really excited for the next season!!!! a perfect show.
@MissAngie25 Жыл бұрын
If Carmy’s going to have a romantic relationship in the show it only makes sense to me that it should be with someone within the business, someone with the same level of focus required to make the restaurant a success, to me, the only person that meets that standard is Syd.
@Tony2dH Жыл бұрын
I actually really hope that doesn't happen as I think there are too few shows that show deep platonic, non-romantic friendships/partnerships between men and women. Also I don't think mixing business with romantic partnership is necessarily a smart decision.
@mars06_ Жыл бұрын
@@Tony2dH I agree with you. I think people are so used to the main characters falling in love that they start shipping Syd and Carmy, but I don’t see them fitting together romantically. I also would like to see a show where a man and woman can grow together in platonic relationship.
@jamesbat09 Жыл бұрын
This might be one of the smartest videos I’ve seen on the internet, especially the breakdown of the Forks episode, truly spectacular, I had some inclinations about the scenes between mentor/mentee but your inclusion of the meaning of Pequod and Murakami's character about the trains is something that hit me really hard, kinda why I went back to those scenes over and over again, you put into words what I couldn't articulate, thank you so much for this 👏👏👏
@NicksFitnessYT11 ай бұрын
Great review! In my opinion, the Bear is the most captivating and thoughtful show of all time. “Every second counts” perfectly encapsulates how the show is created, the amount of subtle references and meticulous detail put into every little shot is unparalleled. There might be shows that are more enjoyable to watch, but I’m not sure that there are any objectively better made. From the writing, to the camera work, to the top-tier acting and perfect casting choices, the show really has no fat on it. “Every second counts”
@hellfish2309 Жыл бұрын
Efficiency and density; there’s so much nuance
@sm810011 ай бұрын
I have seen "Forks" 4 times already. And I started watching the show only 2 weeks ago. If I ever need inspiration, I used to watch the first episode "Curahee" of Band of Brothers. Now I also have "Forks".
@Water_is_Sacred777 Жыл бұрын
Claire was more Carmy's fantasy of a woman rather than the actual woman. Often times people like Carmy with childhood trauma carry over the childhood disassociating, the fantasy in the imaginary world they relied on, into their adult lives. This shows itself in the individuals they tend to choose as partners. Then when patterns are established in that person's life, it's very difficult to break the patterns without lots of processing and therapy. Claire happened to be his crush at a stage in his life that was formative, so when she presented herself it felt familiar to him. Where Claire went wrong was to not take note of why he gave her a false number. Either she was very astute and realized he was just being being flaky Carmy, whom she knew in school, or she lacked enough emotional maturity to say oh hell no and let him go- from the jump. Her continuing to contact him even after he gave her a dog ate my homework type of excuse shows something in *her makeup. Two unhealed people together rarely work. She seems together because she's a doctor but in that one choice she made, she set herself up for the hurt. The question becomes: Is it love or co-dependency? (I have this posted on my bathroom mirror). Claire was a way to show the viewer that Carmy is emotionally confused and dysregulated and needs a lot of emotional healing before he can get into a healthy relationship. His focus is on the restaurant and the viewer's should also be; the love angle is always necessary to spice up a script. It adds to the addictive roller coaster of drama that fuels the series, much like life.
@Wray62 Жыл бұрын
This season was so, so, so great. Some of the episodes were downright inspiring.
@randymcleod6147 Жыл бұрын
This has been one of the best seasons of TV ever. Thanks for highlighting these three episodes, really great analysis
@L_O27 Жыл бұрын
This is a very insightful view of the show, particularly eps 6 and 7. Nice catch with the "Last Supper"/13 people & Christ-like references. Very interesting and had not thought of those before. Generational trauma for sure. The ep with Richie finding his purpose and getting inspired again after so much loss was beautiful. Would like to know how Donna got that anxious (or mentally ill--driving a car through a house goes beyond garden-variety anxiety). And the big mystery of the show--WHERE is Carmy's, Mike's and Nat's DAD?? It's implied that he's still alive and that his flippant choice to become a "restauranteur" may have caused the stress for the mother and therefore, for Mikey and the Beef.
@felipegonzalez8100 Жыл бұрын
This analysis is fire, chef.
@may.k_me Жыл бұрын
I too wanted more food scenes like the omelette one, which I suppose we did get from Marcus in Amsterdam and also at Chef Terry's restaurant, but I think I wanted more.
@lonnie6954 Жыл бұрын
I get that this season was about setting up the restaurant but I did really miss the cooking focused scenes from the first season.
@jacintofernandes2907 Жыл бұрын
Copenhagen not Amsterdam
@NiamhSinclair10 ай бұрын
Speaking of great writing, this essay is beautifully composed and done so well. Love it, and am happily going to subscribe :D
@mrkz8864 Жыл бұрын
This is my new favorite KZbin channel - I love that you did Station 11 too, along with The Bear we're talking about the best TV show of 2021 (Station 11), best TV show of 2022 and 2023 again (The Bear) edit: actually on 2nd thought probably in 2022 season 2 of Reservation Dogs is higher in my list than season 1 of The Bear... that's a show you should totally explore in its third and final season, coming up in a few days...
@Orchid_1026 Жыл бұрын
Any amazing analysis! Episode 4,6,7 were some of the best episodes of TV I've seen in quite some time.
@LobsterMack Жыл бұрын
This video was absolutely fantastic. The attention to detail and clarity with which you broke down this show’s narrative was just amazing. I’ve never seen one of your videos before, but I will 100% be hitting that subscribe button after watching this. Stupendous job. 10/10.
@JustinWanless Жыл бұрын
Great video! Agreed with pretty much every single one of your points. As much as I liked season 1 of the bear, season 2 caused me to absolutely love this show, and I can’t say enough about how what initially seems like a simple comedy show about the stresses of working in a restaurant has become a show that has made me laugh, cry, and root for everyone’s success, even when they do things that make you want to pull your hair out. What an amazing show, I can’t say enough about it! And your videos, which are amazing as well! Great job
@niles2150 Жыл бұрын
This is the in depth longform video essay on The Bear that I was waiting for. Excellent job.
@StraeterBenderStreberg10 ай бұрын
This is a brilliant breakdown of the genius, behind this series. I watched the two seasons so many times and on every run, I noticed small and not so small details, that I haven’t noticed before. And I guess, after watching this video, I have to do it again. 😊 thanks. And, although I love every single episode, FORKS is my favourite as well. Gerry
@kkfvjk Жыл бұрын
Wonderful analysis! I want to expand on the murakami reference that Richie makes in episode 1. You described Richie's interpretation of the book that he didnt finish reading. For most of the novel, the main character doesnt actually know why his friends abandoned him. His identity after that incident is shaped by loss and by a lack of self identity. On a journey to reveal the truth of what happened back then, the main character is also finding meaning, or "color", for himself. Similarly, Richie's character in S1 is suspended in a state of reacting to major losses in his life. The relationships that he thought defined him have fallen away and he becomes colorless. He has no purpose and no momentum. At the start of S2 when Richie is recounting The Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki, he has projected his own experience onto the character. From his own perspective, Richie is worthless and everyone leaves because he'll never be enough. But Richie didnt finish the book! And what we see unfolding with his character in episodes 6 and 7 mirrors the journey of Tsukuru. Richie slowly learns to accept and move on from the loss of his friends and family, and finds a quiet strength inside himself that was always there.
@maggierappa41711 ай бұрын
This is one of those shows that I started because I knew people talked about it. And when I started it I couldn’t tell why I wanted to keep watching. And by the time I got to season 2 I realized that it was mainly because of the characters. It’s similar to how I felt about watching the show Lost, I was more invested in the characters and their growth rather than the overall plot line. Although The Bear definitely has an engaging plot line. The other thing that caught my eye was how amazing the pacing and overall vibe of the show it. Shows often leave a lot of open space for lines to land with audiences, but I love when dialogue doesn’t let you breathe, it makes you pay attention. I also love how impressive the one shot takes are. I don’t know how many in total there are in the show, but it feels like there was more than 3 (someone pls let me know if you know the answer). When I was watching the haunting of hill house there was like a 15 minute one shot scene or something and it was very impressive. But it was very advertised with a lot of behind the scenes and it was really the only big one of the show. Which is fine and absolutely still worth praise and admiration because any one shot is not easy. But the easy flowing nature of The Bears one shot scenes really amazed me. It was like you didn’t notice it was a one shot because it just felt like you were watching real life chaos
@KamilaShakur Жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis. Thanks for taking the time to make this, it helps me appreciate the show more (which I didn't even think was possible lol)
@rottensquid Жыл бұрын
I feel like the issue with Sydney and Carmy in this season is that it's their middle chapter, and they're both stuck, unable to grow. That's often hard to watch. The show countered it nicely with this incredibly moving, almost fairy-tale episodes of Richie and Marcus transforming. And meanwhile, Sugar, Tina, and Ebra all grow, or get second chances. That all served to balance how stuck the two main characters are. People came away with the idea that Carmy's relationship with Clair is a dangerous distraction from his "real" work on the restaurant, but that seems like a toxic notion. Carmy isn't distracted because of the relationship, he's distracted because he doesn't know how to balance work and life, because he's never had a life. So he doesn't know what to make of actually enjoying his time with someone he adores, and how it makes the restaurant feel like even less of a joy, even more of a burden. And more importantly, he sees love as a constant state of emergency. He can't see his time with Claire as restorative and rewarding, even though that's exactly what it is. When he thinks about it, all he feels is a sense of impending disaster, because that's all love has ever been for him. Love means waiting for a car to drive through the wall. Love means waiting for bad news. Love is the feeling you have before catastrophe strikes. So of course, even though catastrophe wasn't going to strike his relationship with Claire, his fears bring about the thing he dreads. Meanwhile, Sydney is so desperate to succeed, and succeed right now, she sabotages herself too, taking on more than she can handle, and then freezing, unable to endure the stress. Luckily, she's not alone. She had the whole team to back her up, which is what a good leader always wants. But she's greedy for success, and for the success to be hers. She's desperate to prove to her father that she can do it. So she's always trying to run before she can walk. And when Carmy, or anyone, tell her she's not ready, or her effort isn't perfect, or she's made a mistake, she gets angry with them, or she gets angry with herself. The problem with being unable to take criticism is that you get stuck, unable to improve. And that seems to be where Sydney is now, stuck in a pattern of wanting to prove she's ready to lead, showing that she's not, and then getting angry at everyone, including herself, for letting her down, rather than simply working on improving. There's been some chatter about a romantic connection between Carmy and Sydney. I suspect there's something to that, and we'll see the two try dating next season. But I don't see it going well. Once again, in the Swiss-watch craft of the show, each character represents to the other their most toxic desires. In Carmy, Sydney sees the ideal she wants to achieve, ignoring what a mess he is. And in Sydney, Carmy will see a way to get his love needs met by the restaurant industry. I suspect that may be the source of the next season's core drama.
@cailoleaf553211 ай бұрын
I feel like not many people see Carmy and Sydney together, and i understand why, but when I think of it, of their mutal efforts to comunicate greatly, their dreams and their aspiration to not be alone ("you're not alone Carm" "Neither are you Syd."), i feel like they would be great together. because they both have this way of understanding things, while still keeping space for themselves, without getting drowned in this universe of the other person, and it hink that it could be the balance that they both need. Sydney trust Carmen, because she knows he wants, and has been the best, and that's what she wants, and in my mind, that's why she wants a michelin stars; when Carmy wants to feel like he belongs, i feel like he is so tired of feeling this fracture between him and the others, and for me, this season, showed that this need to belong, driving him away from what he does, felt like he will need to be more careful with who he decides to belong with, because he cannot belong with someone "perfect" like Claire. She cannot understand, nor manage the chaos nor the anxiety: "sometimes there's no other shoe". Anxiety isn't rationnal, it's an unreasonnable fear that you have to manage, but it's not going away. I feel like she wouldn't have been able to help him, because of the fracture of their two worlds. But, when he freaks out, before the opening nights, and rethink about the intimacy he had the previous night, with her, the thing that comes to his mind, that seems to soothe the panic, is Sydney. At that moment, the music calms down, everything fades, and he just sees her, when she arrived at the restaurant, when they talked, and talked and talked. And i think that it tells us more than we need to know about what she brings him. Anyway, thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.
@exleymaintainencedepartmen1785 Жыл бұрын
OK, so I am always happy to see a JRR Talkin’ video. Getting into this one and the analysis is terrific. Please keep these coming!
@joselocalau123 Жыл бұрын
you’re quickly becoming my favorite video essayist. i honestly eat up everything you say! please keep making videos, i enjoy them so so much. lovely work❤
@jrrtalkin Жыл бұрын
Thank you so so much for this lovely comment !
@AnikiChad Жыл бұрын
As a chef, it was a surreal moment for you to describe the field as sometimes violent. I always thought that but could never quite put a name to it, the way your body reacts after each shift is very much akin to having just been in an intense fight. Anyway, rest of the video was great, thoroughly enjoy your analysis.
@ak41572 ай бұрын
Episode 7 where Richie finds his purpose is the greatest episode of television I've EVER WATCHED. Beautiful, heartfelt, powerful, uplifting, and cathartic. And I'll never hear "Love Story" the same way again 😭♥️🙌
@juliabalinsky6457 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your eloquent breakdown of this mind-blowing show. Excellent story-telling. Excellence by You too. YES!!
@catherinewwww Жыл бұрын
Loved your reviews, so well articulated, thank you. Another interesting thought I had regards to Carmy having his love interest and being gradually drifted away from his role in the kitchen. I see this contrast between us audience (at least I feel that many of us do) wants him to stay focus on restaurant opening, to devote as much as he would've as we were introduced and shown in season 1; that inside of The Bear world, Carmy's family- actual friends and family like Richie, Unc, Fak- they're all beyond thrilled to see him having an actual normal-people-like life outside of the kitchen. It's just funny to see this contrast.
@Laughingtoyourself Жыл бұрын
This is such a brilliant video essay about the second season. You've concisely put so many feelings i have about these wonderful characters
@davelynnpocАй бұрын
This was an exceptional review of the first 2 seasons and echos my thoughts on fantastic storytelling. I've watched all 3 seasos 3 times within the last 6 weeks and am still going down rabbitholes about this show.
@neelam2044 Жыл бұрын
literally 10 mins into this video i liked and subscribed. i love your analysis!! you had so much insight that i haven't seen anywhere else, and i could really feel your passion for the show in your voiceover. "what is scrolling through social media but watching a thousand trains leave without you" is a line i'm not going to forget any time soon. i cannot wait to dive into your backlog (which looks like it has a lot of shows i really enjoy!) also just based on your comments throughout the video, i would love to hear more of what you have to say about ted lasso - especially season 3 lol
@samuelphanle Жыл бұрын
thanks for the great commentary and video
@tubular43567 ай бұрын
This was an illuminating analysis. Thank you, you helped deepen my understanding and thus my appreciation for the show!
@luisruiz4165 Жыл бұрын
Wow… I loved this break down. This is so amazing and spot on. I want more of this! Thank you so much
@udaythambimuthu3176 Жыл бұрын
So I rewatched Fishes, twice (I'm pretty twisted from a whole bunch of shit, don't ask). First time, I knew immediately that shit was going down, because I have had many a Christmas like that, pounding a beer and chain-smoking cigarettes out the front for a bit of peace and quiet, away from the impending chaos and looming eruption. Walking back into that house, is like being the person at the end of a zombie movie or horror movie, and having to go back into the madness. I felt that. I still felt like I was walking into the House of the Dead the second and third times, but it's like when you've played a game from start to finish, you know what to expect and roughly when to expect it. That's what it's like for them, having to be packed into that house with all that venom and Donna looming over you like the last boss who dips in and out over the course of the story. Kinda like Albert Wesker in resident evil, to be honest, LOL. They all gave insanely good performances, but that episode is pure emotional trauma.
@patrick2140 Жыл бұрын
This is my first video of yours I've seen, and I think its one of the best analysis videos of The Bear out there. So you've earned a sub!
@micheliapeterson9872 Жыл бұрын
I get what you are trying to accomplish with the comparisons between The Bear and Ted Lasso. I found value in both and greatly enjoyed both. I did derive very different things in the watching of the two shows so the comparison felt a little like apples and oranges. I did enjoy your deep dive into The Bear and help flesh out even more themes from great story telling so THANK YOU!!!
@robynwells3953 Жыл бұрын
fantastic show! fantastic breakdown and insight on your part! I finished season 2 last night and literally have found it hard to watch anything else since. Nothing matches the perfection of this show, writing, editing, acting, production design, directing, sound, musical score, lighting...on and on! Incredible casting, incredible show! Thank you HULU for offering such a quality show. Cried when I had to say goodbye to Ted Lasso, but then I found The Bear! ps...I subscribed, too.
@_taranjot8 ай бұрын
This is a phenomenal video!! I want to go rewatch the show for the hundredth time because of it
@yuvanmar42 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoy your work, like how you lean into technical aspects, please continue to analyse works you personally enjoy over mainstream since I feel like your passion really drives this type of content
@MRARINI11 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely beautiful thoughtpiece! I've seen many video essays on this show but I've never seen anyone articulate my thoughts about it quite as well as you!
@abriaangel Жыл бұрын
I've loved this show since it's first season and this season solidified that love. It's brilliant!
@SgtPowell Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the superb analysis. A show this good deserves a nuanced, meticulous, and well crafted essay that takes the time to get it right. Well done. You've got yourself a subscriber.
@usaejxf16 Жыл бұрын
"Sometimes the best way to understand the Forrest is to look closely at a few trees." Well said!
@LivinhItUp Жыл бұрын
Loved to see the diagram of "The Hero's Journey" ... I felt with the finale (and throughout season 2), they were definitely trying to keep the star chef (Carmy) with his hands tied behind his back through his rekindling with Claire & his trauma and panic attacks. He was always shown on screen with a lack of focus and needing to move from one issue to another (without resolving the former). For the purpose of the story, it helps elevate the characters around him, specifically Syd & Richie, to give them purpose to rise above their own issues to have a relatively successful opening night. I feel like next season, for The Bear to truly be profitable and (possibly) get a star - and if we're using sports analogies - they will need their star, Carmen, in MVP form. He has to also rise above his past, repair his relationship with a great stage-to-be in Richie, welcome something good in Claire, and truly be a better leader - the kind he wish he had in NYC - to Syd. There was great foreshadowings and dialogue of Carmy's brilliance in Marcus & Richie's training in Denmark & NYC and for the viewers, we haven't quite seen much of it in either seasons of The Bear. Looking forward to his moment soon, hopefully. But not every story is optimistic or sunshine and roses....We've seen Carmy's mother not have anything resolved since "Fishes" and continues to portray herself as an awful mother. Is Carmy the Kendall Roy to Dee's Logan?
@Pwnage9191 Жыл бұрын
The writing in this video essay was phenomenal, its my first time watching one of your vids. Blown away, lovely thanks
@victoriastanton576 Жыл бұрын
Great essay - as well put together as the show itself!
@patriciablack2324 Жыл бұрын
Your critique is utterly brilliant.
@alfdjones Жыл бұрын
My favorite video so far on dissecting The Bear S02. Thank you.
@mavisfernandes1462 Жыл бұрын
Hi. I just came across your video essay (and your channel). I just wanted to say how much I enjoyed your video and, like The Bear, I know rewatching after I have had time to digest it is necessary. Thank you so much for your work.
@yourfavoriteSOB11 ай бұрын
It's always a pleasure to see Gillian Jacobs in things. Britta for the win! On a more serious note, these episodes were easily the most striking in a very impactful series.
@SystemFailing Жыл бұрын
Fabulously written essay. Instant subscribe. I fell in love with this show a week ago, binged it, already starting a rewatch. Been itching for some Good Takes
@neon_haze66 Жыл бұрын
This video is the most detailed and brilliant review video, overall review of a show I have ever had the pleasure to watch. I agree, ‘The Bear’ is a masterpiece, and so grateful to have experienced it. Thank you for your video!