In the grit, grunge, and greatness of Chicago, this hauntingly beautiful, luminous married couple stand and glow like, well, "FIRE." But I have to say, that Carmy is something of a handful, to say the least. But he is staggeringly talented. And, hey, his wife, Sydney? She's a genius-level artist, too. But she's far more, how might we put it, "centered" than her husband. Perhaps that's what makes them work so well --that and their shared artistic passion...and passion for each other. Yeah. THAT is fairly obvious on all fronts. And she's so strikingly beautiful, too, although I'm not altogether certain that she really knows just how startlingly beautiful she really is . Her husband does. He couldn't keep his eyes of her when they were just getting to know each other. He still cannot seem to keep his eyes off of her now.... That "bear" does have excellent taste, I will give him that. It IS true that as much as I love him, I've always had my doubts about this Carmy Berzatto: his family is insane. And that impacted him; they don't call Carmy, "the bear" without a reason. Well, troubled family + tragedy = edgy, artistic son.... I mean, would you feel safe with a volatile bear wandering about your campsite, let alone your fave restaurant kitchen? HOWEVER...he did get Sydney to marry him. That's a Hell of a lot more impressive than even the Michelin stars they both have earned. The way Carmy and Sydney tell, there was always "SOMETHING" thrumming between them, albeit submerged, "under the table." That's a phrase that seems always to amuse these two: "under the table." I didn't get it. So, I asked them, " just what is so drôle about ';under the table?'" Both Carmy and Sydney responded by saying that the hidden "something" between them began to surface just before they opened their ab-fab restaurant: and it all started to surface during a moment Carmy and Sydney shared "under a table": under that wobbly table, so the story goes, Carmy finally started to come right by telling his future wife that "he wouldn't even want to do it without her." Woah. That IS pretty evocative, powerful stuff. But hey, he had already given her half his restaurant because, the way he had attempted to spin it, she was far too brilliant a chef to let go. Well, yes, she IS a bona fide artist. But half the restaurant? It seems to me that is a fairly definitive gesture, a pretty clear shout-out -- as in yelling your lungs out from the mountain top -- that he was already too deeply in love with her to just let things go as they had. But for Sydney, it was only "under that table" when she knew for certain about the true depth and passion of her future husband's "under-the-table" feelings for her. Because Carmy really couldn't ever acknowledge how deeply he really felt about Sydney -- unless they were in some funky alley behind the restaurant or... under a wobbly table. OHHHH-KAYYYE. That's their courtship story. ....Hey, married couples: they just have their own lexicon and language, amiright?
loved this season so much, Carmy's arc was so beautifully devastating, check out my breakdown of Richie's episode:th-cam.com/video/_Ih-aRW1Fms/w-d-xo.html
Yeah this is so good. I love the square ratio. It makes it soooooo intimate
i love this song and it's so perfect for them :"))) great job
This is such a touching edit. Thank you.
great edit, internet stranger, was looking for the "you're not alone" clip from the bear. Was not disappointed
In the grit, grunge, and greatness of Chicago, this hauntingly beautiful, luminous married couple stand and glow like, well, "FIRE." But I have to say, that Carmy is something of a handful, to say the least. But he is staggeringly talented. And, hey, his wife, Sydney? She's a genius-level artist, too. But she's far more, how might we put it, "centered" than her husband. Perhaps that's what makes them work so well --that and their shared artistic passion...and passion for each other. Yeah. THAT is fairly obvious on all fronts.
And she's so strikingly beautiful, too, although I'm not altogether certain that she really knows just how startlingly beautiful she really is . Her husband does. He couldn't keep his eyes of her when they were just getting to know each other. He still cannot seem to keep his eyes off of her now.... That "bear" does have excellent taste, I will give him that.
It IS true that as much as I love him, I've always had my doubts about this Carmy Berzatto: his family is insane. And that impacted him; they don't call Carmy, "the bear" without a reason. Well, troubled family + tragedy = edgy, artistic son.... I mean, would you feel safe with a volatile bear wandering about your campsite, let alone your fave restaurant kitchen?
HOWEVER...he did get Sydney to marry him. That's a Hell of a lot more impressive than even the Michelin stars they both have earned.
The way Carmy and Sydney tell, there was always "SOMETHING" thrumming between them, albeit submerged, "under the table." That's a phrase that seems always to amuse these two: "under the table."
I didn't get it. So, I asked them, " just what is so drôle about ';under the table?'" Both Carmy and Sydney responded by saying that the hidden "something" between them began to surface just before they opened their ab-fab restaurant: and it all started to surface during a moment Carmy and Sydney shared "under a table": under that wobbly table, so the story goes, Carmy finally started to come right by telling his future wife that "he wouldn't even want to do it without her."
Woah. That IS pretty evocative, powerful stuff.
But hey, he had already given her half his restaurant because, the way he had attempted to spin it, she was far too brilliant a chef to let go. Well, yes, she IS a bona fide artist.
But half the restaurant?
It seems to me that is a fairly definitive gesture, a pretty clear shout-out -- as in yelling your lungs out from the mountain top -- that he was already too deeply in love with her to just let things go as they had.
But for Sydney, it was only "under that table" when she knew for certain about the true depth and passion of her future husband's "under-the-table" feelings for her. Because Carmy really couldn't ever acknowledge how deeply he really felt about Sydney -- unless they were in some funky alley behind the restaurant or... under a wobbly table. OHHHH-KAYYYE. That's their courtship story.
....Hey, married couples: they just have their own lexicon and language, amiright?
❤❤❤
loved this season so much, Carmy's arc was so beautifully devastating, check out my breakdown of Richie's episode:th-cam.com/video/_Ih-aRW1Fms/w-d-xo.html