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    What does 'The Bear' restaurant review say? We take our best guess

    By Linda Holmes,

    2 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2HCKCL_0u7IAd1u00
    Jeremy Allen White as Carmy Berzatto. (FX)

    Haven’t watched the season finale of The Bear yet? Then you probably don’t want to read this. Don’t blame us for spoilers.

    So what does that review say?

    At the end of the third season of The Bear , Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) looks at his phone late one night and sees a review of his new restaurant, The Bear, in the Chicago Tribune . All we see are flashes of words and phrases, some seemingly good and some seemingly bad, and then Carmy says, "mother------," and that's the season.

    And look: The idea is to leave you uncertain about what the review says, and to be clear, the review could say a lot of things. Trying to decode the words we can see and come up with an idea of whether this is a good or a bad review is rank speculation. Rank, I say! So let's speculate.

    I'm really not excited to reveal how long I spent doing this, but what I am about to show you is the best rendering I can manage of the words (and parts of words) that they show in this little sequence. I present them in the form of a poem, since I can't offer you screenshots. (These groups of words, of course, are undoubtedly not in this order in the actual review. And yes, I think this is a show that's probably playing fair; I think these probably are all consistent with the actual review that we will eventually learn much more about.)

    of flavors both d
    the confusing mis
    any apprehension

    an almost sloppy fas
    f innovative d
    nu was a testa
    complex array
    , as each dish arrived, there
    were excellent, sho
    rt, leaving me fee

    focus on pushing
    true culinary gem
    my experience at

    tto, offering a
    palpable dissonance b
    ng the chef’s brilliant cr
    disappointed and craving
    Feeling disapp

    and downs, t
    inconsistent
    as resting on

    undeniable inco
    of delicious pe
    tchen couldn’t

    e. However,
    was simple an
    s the potential

    Berzatto p

    s not subtract f

    felt overdone

    incredible
    Carmen Berzatto

    re tired a

    t stale a
    talent

    Clear as day, right?

    For my money, the most interesting phrase comes from the screen that highlights the word "delicious." Below that, you can see "tchen couldn't." My guess is that the full review uses the words "kitchen couldn't." And I'm going to further guess that "undeniable inco" is part of something like "undeniable inconsistency" or "undeniable incompleteness" — in other words, something negative. And in the middle, the word "delicious."

    So: what if the review is basically saying that there is an inconsistency in the operation because the kitchen isn't doing a solid enough job?

    That would also fit with this bit right here:

    tto, offering a
    palpable dissonance b
    ng the chef’s brilliant cr
    disappointed and craving
    Feeling disapp

    Now, the "tto" is probably the end of Carmy's name (although I suppose a word like "risotto" is possible). But right in the middle, you have "the chef's brilliant cr," which might be "the chef's brilliant creations" or "the chef's brilliant creativity" or something like that. And before that, you have "dissonance." And after it, "disappointed." Again, what if this is saying Carmy is a brilliant genius, but something is amiss in the staffing and the execution?

    Could this also be what "an almost sloppy fas" is about? What if that says the dining room — Richie's beloved dining room — operates in an almost sloppy fashion? It also occurred to me that it could be a reference to The Beef, that The Beef was "almost sloppy fast food" or something. Or perhaps Neil Fak is a little too sloppy for this reviewer's refined tastes.

    Here's another interesting part:

    f innovative d
    nu was a testa
    complex array

    That middle line should be "menu was a testament," right? The menu is a testament to something? Probably Carmy's brilliance? The changing menu he's been obsessed with? And that would fit with "f innovative d," which could be, say, "of innovative dishes."

    A prediction

    Go back and read it all, like a poem, all together, and let it wash over you. Here's what I think the review might say: Carmy is an amazing chef, full of potential, creative and amazing. But the rest of the team is not living up to his great ideas. In other words, I think the review says everybody else at The Bear needs to get on Carmy's level.

    If it says that, then that would explain why, after reading a review that (probably) calls him "brilliant," he swears angrily. It would also complicate his obsession with his own standards to see the system he insisted on (the changing menu especially) wind up making him look good, but interfering so much with how the place runs that other people look bad.

    I want to stress that if this is all completely and totally wrong, it will be no surprise. The whole thing could be a misdirect, every word could be misleading — "the chef" might not be Carmy, "nu" could be "Keanu" instead of "menu," you get the idea.

    But to me, it would be consistent with this season if Carmy had the most pyrrhic of pyrrhic victories, and this review gave him what he wanted at the expense of the people he works with.

    Copyright 2024 NPR

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