My father is a Sous Chef and has been in the industry for around 20 years. He said he can't watch the show as it gives him anxiety. I asked him why. He said "it's too accurate."
My girlfriend has no clue who he is nor does she care lol but it's hilarious because she just calls him "the janitor" in my mind I'm like she has no clue 😂
Having Matty Matteson as a producer and actor on the show is what truly made it. Being able to have his first hand knowledge of being a chef in the real world made those moments in the show feel real and and actual kitchen. I can 100% say I have experienced everything they portrayed. And every aspect made me over the moon as a chef of 10 years
They nailed it, and I've been a chef for twelve years. The personal dynamics, the techniques, the skill exhibited by the actors, it's all perfect. And get this; No hand doubles or stunt doubles for the kitchen scenes. The lead actor went to culinary school and worked in a couple kitchens to get the real taste of the industry, and all the other actors kill it as well in the kitchen scenes. I love Matty and he killed it acting and producing, but the whole damn cast brought their A+ game.
Season 2 killed it. I love how all Carmys staff could get training from high end restaurants because he had such a good reputation. One of the most overlooked things in regards to High end dining. As a professional chef, its like a John Wick universe.
but all of them were already cooking for years in restaurants (aside from marcus afaik who was only a year in) and knew what to do. the trainings just refined everything they already knew and exposed them to a setting that bear (the restaurant) needed. they are good chefs, but they didn’t have the harmony and openness before sydney and carmy started venturing new things for months to improve the place and their relationships with one another.
As a chef who has worked in the grittiest and the most high end restaurants (now own my own)… I wholeheartedly AGREE that this show has captured it perfectly. I struggled to see them as actors, not real chefs. I absolutely love this show. It makes me feel sane about my life’s choices.
@@Joeysaladslover I’m in Australia.. so I’ve worked in every kind of kitchen.. from brand new, government built restaurants, catering and servicing the research centre and Parliament House… to “bush kitchens” catering fine dining weddings in the Australian bush.. to Mumma and papa restaurants that have been open for 25 years, low budget thrown together kitchens with ancient equipment, like The Bear.. I have worked at Hungry Jacks (our Burger King) hahaha.. and several mid range, small, well equipped, basic kitchens. Which is what I’m currently the owner of now. It’s called Louie’s Deli Norwood. We are a tiny Deli doing amazing sandwiches and coffee etc. 👍🏻
So incredible that you've opened your own restaurant. Totally a dream of mine to do so as well. Having worked in the industry for quite a while I know how much of a challenge that can be!
The intensity in an active kitchen was so spot on. I was working as a Prepmaster/Dishwasher when S01 came out, and the best advice I got from one of our line cooks was to "watch it after your shift, not on your day off" and he was 100% right
Episode 7 reminded me of one day working at this Fast Pasta place in the 90's in a mall. The bosses thought because it was a holiday it was not going to be busy, so they scheduled me and a new kid. It was a total shit show. Place was packed, only 2 of us and the new kid broke down and started crying and I had to take him to the back kitchen calm him down tell him we will just do it at the speed we can and just do what we can. I had to do register, orders and salads and he had to do pastas, sauses and bread. We weren't in the weeds, we were lost in a rain forest. But we got through it.
Reminds me of being a barista during Christmas. Manager thought it was going to be quiet evening and had 2 of us part timers with her. Ended up having to serve customers up to the closing minute where we have to tell people that we are taking last orders.
27 years in kitchens, the last 15 as an exec, the scene that triggered me to the point of being so angry I had to walk away from the tv, was the sabotage scene.
@@Jas-ms4tr Tina in either the 2nd or 3rd episode of Season 1 was turning up the heat on a pan that Sydney was using. Making it so that it just burst when Sydney just started cooking, and Carmen was lecturing her about how to use a heat service. Which if you been in a kitchen is very aggravating to deal with coworkers like that, and demining when your boss treats like your retarded when in fact the heat was to hot.
I've been in the business for 48 years. A dinosaur in this industry. The Food Network gives the impression to many people that the restaurant business & being a chef is sexy, and it's not. It's Incredibly hard work, but also equally rewarding. There was some "artistic license" & exaggerated drama but this show nailed it. Kudos to the entire staff on "The Bear".
I have friends who are chefs, cooks and restaurant managers. The one thing I can tell you is that I wouldn’t and couldn’t do those jobs. Food source, inspections, staff, permits, it’s much harder than anyone who is not industry could ever think.
As someone who really cut my teeth in the industry as a cook, then a hostess, a server, a bar tender, an expediter, a floor manager, a bar manager, and finally a sommelier, I can say that some of those scenes feel so real, and so authentic.
My mum always thought she could do what I do. But we would argue that just because you're a good cook doesn't mean you'll survive in a professional kitchen. I thought the films 'chef' and 'burnt' would help prove my point but they didn't really portray the stress and intensity of a professional kitchen. The the bear came around, and after watching it my mum quickly changed her tune. If anything it made her respect what I do even more. It's a great show. Cooooooouuuusssssssiiiiiinnnnnn!!!! 😂😂
For sure, I've seen videos of people making one loaf of bread and they would change their careers from video production to baker. It's fun to make but it's so different when you're hauling 50# of flour and mass producing products. My sister in law also had that view that she believed she could cook better than the contestants in Hell's kitchen because they would burn eggs. But then she worked at a restaurant briefly and was stressed out everyday from not being able to keep up. She definitely learned it's not a walk in the park and she put effort into becoming better
I started working at a restaurant when I was teenager and a decade after that. The yelling, the stress, the constant urgency as well as the colorful atmosphere of vulgarity, is so real. Things break down, food runs out, hours and hours of prep work, and then there’s the occasional new person asking what time is a break.
After watching that show I understand why my grandpa who was an executive chef at the Hilton in Manhattan 40 years ago never wanted me to be a chef lol. He's right I'd probably be a drug addict. So I became a fish monger now I'm a drunk lol
Bro the standout for me was that Christmas Scene the pure Chaos and all shot in one continuous shot was amazing, really showed where Carmy came from and what kind of family he grew up in
I teared up a few times watching the 2nd season. Oddly enough, one of them was when cousin found his passion for hospitality while astaging. I've never worked FOH but I felt that wholeheartedly. Amazing show. Bra fucking vo man
Working in hotels, I have always worked on the periphery of restaurants and kitchens. I learned quickly, I am not built for the kitchen, but i absolutely love the people who are. The show reminded me of a lot of things i saw, heard or learned about. The personalities were very familiar. And the love hate work/personal relationships really nailed it for me. My dad, who also worked around kitchens but in the airline industry, taught me that if chef is mad, walk away, as soon as the moment has passed they are your best friend again... Advice that has worked for the last 20 years lol. Plus I have had the added benefit of being the taste test guinea pig for one of my chefs... A happy chef will feed you stuff you never imagined... I hope they can keep the shows consistent for many more seasons to come.
As the third discussion stated: the restaurant industry is the closest to a meritocracy you'll ever get in the real world. It's uncanny the amount of lessons from those times I still apply today...and I'm a lawyer lol.
I really like how people who worked in actual kitchens notice a lot of the little things the creators got right. Which makes the show much more relatable for them.
In my late teens i spent a year and half working in an Italian deli in Amsterdam. The chaos, the yelling and the passion for their product was SPOT ON. Ive never worked so hard in my life, and i served in the army 😅 Its been over 20 years since i worked in that deli and this show brought back some really good memories.
I love that the first Chef is drink out of a 32 oz “ soup container”. We all use those to store our prep and to drink out of. This gives it a sense of being real!!
I developed a habit of giving my cups a good sniff before pouring a drink into them, even at home, solely from the fact I grabbed too many of those containers that were used to hold some very pungent ingredients.
By far the best series for me personally... I think it's almost anxiety inducing which is phenomenal and impressive. I loved it. I really liked when Sydney heard the ticket machine when it wasn't going off.. plus everyone I know said it was amazing so I didn't watch it until the second season came out. I think it's the most relatable restaurant show I have ever seen.
Watching this, made me think how the show had me remembering my 6 years at a family owned Italian joint. It was beautiful chaos, I just reached out to the owner who was an amazing person and had his workers' back at all times. Hope he hits me back, it's been almost 20 years.
What I find hilarious is every chef brought up the ticket machine scene as the example of the most realistic part. I've been a chef for 17 years and I've had versions of that scene in my nightmares throughout my career. I'd hear ticket machines like pstd flashbacks. Tgat was the scene where I went from liking the show to loving it.
I’ve been a food runner at multiple popular restaurants in Philly. All through out college and a bit after. It’s so real. I hope the show shows a bit of front house in the future just cuz communication between them and the kitchen can create some crazy situations. Such a good show.
Working in a restaurant is like a drug. When everything is on point you feel like you can accomplish anything. And when things are chaotic , leaving after a long day is like a monkey off your back. I worked in a Mexican restaurant in the early 2000s, the craziest thing I experienced was just me and my cook and I had at once lunch time a party of 20 and 10 other tables at once. I was floored. I could make a movie about my time delivering for Uber eats when it started in 2016..
I’m a sous chef who’s been working in the industry for around 7 years in 25 and honestly The Bear has struck so many chords in me where I had to stop watching because of stress and anxiety. It was such a well produced and directed show that made me want to keep watching. For all the chefs and cooks. KEEP PUSHING BABY!
I've worked with chefs and cooks that got there position just cause of a culinary degree with out earning there stripes. Ive also worked with chefs and cooks that have earned there stripes from working there way out of the pit. The ones who worked there way out of the pit are the ones who will show you tips and take you under there wings if they see potential in you
I was a server at a chain restaurant for nearly 2 years and I volunteered one night to come back after I got off to work in the dish pit and I realized that night my co-workers on the floor were assholes
7:32 thanks for calling out the birthday party scene. That one broke the realism for me and just felt like “let’s write something outrageous for laughs”
So cool to see you and other chefs' thoughts of "The Bear". Have a great day, cousin! (I love how the first chef was drinking out of a food container, too).
A prep chef knocked over two 22 quart containers of liquids in our cold storage. I had a full days shipment that I was in charge of putting away that shift. Thinking back, I could have cut down that sanitization and clean to 10-20 minutes vs 30-45 minutes had I kept my head.
Thank You for this video, Sir. Seriously, Cheers! I was in food service from 17 to 28 with much of it being full on kitchen work. I worked everywhere from small family businesses to big corporate to hotels. I've worked with great motley crews and amazing mentors. I truly loved it... until I hit THAT wall. The stress and mental / emotional grind got to me. I couldn't take the heat and bailed. Honestly, I think that there should be a national requirement for all high schoolers to work service industry jobs before graduation like other countries requiring military service. Be well, y'all.
I wholeheartedly Agree! Thanks for watching and stick around for the Season 2 video! It's going to be an epic camp fire round table with these same chefs and maybe one more! Oh, and a new podcast is coming...
I’ve worked in kitchens for 17 years. I tried watching the Bear, but had to turn it off after the first episode… it was TOO REAL. Felt like I was taking work home with me! Think I’m gonna give it another chance now
Interesting how all these chefs related to the online ordering chaos. I see the problems of it as a consumer & always wonder how ONE kitchen is balancing both fronts.
They all mentioned the online ticket thing but the third Jeff described the exact thing that happened to my wife and I on Mother's day during covid when restaurants opened back up. I had to wait at the front of the restaurant, in the rain, for two + hours, for an order I placed a week or two in advance.
Awesome video! I love that these are Pennsylvania restaurants! I’m a Philly girl living in the ‘Burgh!! The Bear is phenomenal!! I just subscribed! Glad to have found you
Listening to Chef Finnerty talk about the online-only orders of the Mother's Day after covid lockdowns brought back memories I don't personally have. I hadn't yet started working at the restaurant that employs me, but the ones who did describe that exact same scenario.
I completely blocked out that year from my memory. I worked at an extremely popular ramen restaurant that didn't do online orders so when we had to adapt to the pandemic, that's how it was. The ticket machine wouldn't stop. Someone had to change the roll every 45 min to an hour and we were running around like chickens with our heads cut off. Crazy time
I have talked to so many cooks that say it is too accurate for them. It triggers them. I feel the same way. I needed Xanax after the first episode. Congratulations to the writers, because my feelings don't matter on this. I need for everyone else to know what I go through.
@@LeslieLanagan I watched it with my headphones on and the editors were so brilliant that when the tickets began rolling on the sound was only in the right ear, and they incrementally got louder and in both ears. Just brilliant and panic inducing lol
@@BeergrYT I think I'm going to watch it eventually. It does sound cool, and the writers are brilliant. But listening to it on my headphones? I'm not sure I'd recover. Not without a waitress to take down because she put in six tickets without blinking. EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE and EXTREMELY LOUD AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE, all of it. And yet, the best time of my life so far.
Old episode. But I was randomly drawn to watch it. I loved hearing the chefs options on things. As a server and newly bartender every tip I can get being in this industry helps a lot. Taking the time to appreciate everything you do and have and what will be created after is important. But the biggest thing I grasps is that if I can put that time into my work ethic. Who says that I cannot do that with my life you know. Just a thought, great episode made me think.
I loved my time in the restaurant and this show was so solid and on point. I am glad they went to the lengths they did to depict things correctly. Having Matty certainly helped in getting everything right. Season 2 was great as well and apparently, they are supposed to start filming season 3 in the next couple of months. Easily one of my favorites to watch.
I've never seen this channel before but I thought your interviews and your questions were outstanding! Waitress in many different kitchens in the past, and mental health is definitely an interesting topic for you to bring up Thank you, I was thoroughly entertained
As a Chef myself I will say they truly do show so much of working in a kitchen...people may think we are just back there having fun cooking but there is sooooo much more to it....yelling, pissed off but you have two options...either you walk out or you just power through it...and at the end of the rush it's like the biggest adrenaline rush ever...you feel so accomplished like yeah we did that shit lol
the most innacurate thing about the show is it undersells the brutality and turnover rates, its accurate enough without feeling depressing - nobody is being racist, there's no sexual harrassment of female staff or weird games of grabass that are being soft-pedaled by the management. too few people are actively using cocaine.
Hey Cousin! Really enjoyed this! Loved the Bear, it was one of my favorite shows in a very long time. Loved the B-Roll you shot of the chefs, and I am always looking to improve my channel as well, what camera and lens did you use for the B-Roll? Again great job!
Hey Cousin! Thanks for watching! I use two cameras, the Sony A7SIII and the Sony A1. For lenses, I love the 35mm 1.8 for straight on interview shots but I have been LOVING the Sony 90mm G Lens for just about everything especially food shots. The 90mm is just so buttery and crisp all at the same time. Wide angle shots, I love the Sony 14mm GMaster lens. Hope that helps!
@@BeergrYT I figured you were using some really great gear. That 14mm looks amazing I have to say especially when you use it to push in and pull out. I have the 16-35 power zoom and the 85mm but I think your use of the 14mm and the 90mm really take it to another level. I had the a7siii but it got stolen out of my car, had to go to the a7IV for now, but hope to get another one eventually. Going to subscribe - have a good one!
@@jostalking The 85 is great as well! I love the 90mm capability of switching to macro and the autofocus to manual switch is pretty "clutch" as well :) Throw either the 90 or the 14 on the DJI RS2 and you've got a WICKED combo. I subbed your channel as well, godd stuff Cheers!
I worked in kitchens and this is pretty accurate. The yelling, the anger, the fights, the good times. I developed an alcohol addiction from it but I learnt so much in that period. I hated working with the arrogant Italian chefs but I learnt a lot.
As someone who worked in restaurants the only callout I have is - take off your apron when you go outside for a smoke break!!!! Everyone always left the apron at the station for smoke or potty breaks.
Really fun video! I bloody love the series. Have you considered looking into lav mics? Might make conversation a little more convenient for you guests, again, really good video man, keep it up!
Oh yeah I have, I had the Rode go mics on the last two chefs but had some issues with them on this video because of mismatched firmware 😞 - I’ve switched to the DJI mics since then, much better experience. Be sure to check out our epic season 2 review!
I love this show!!!!! That beef sandwich is not an Italian beef. It looks good but it’s not a true Italian beef and if you’re from Chicago you’ll agree. We take our food seriously.
Holy shit, you introduced the first chef from The Skunk and Goat Tavern, and I'm like "huh that's interesting we have a restaurant near me that's called that." Then I saw the rest of the restaurants and realized you're in Erie lol. Small world!
loved the show, as a sous chef in the industry for 13 years it captures the chaos the stress and anxiety of a shift perfectly, all though its a bit cringe at times for my taste i still really enjoyed the show, already loved jeremy white from watching shameless, and seeing matty matheson on it was awesome too.
Boiling point starting Stephen graham for me is a better portrayal of working a shift in a restaurant. I worked in London where boiling point is set so it might be just that but if you like the bear you will like boiling point.
Not a chef, but a dishwasher... and watching The Bear while working in a restaurant is the most anxiety inducing thing ever.. literally had to wait until I wasn't working in a restaurant to watch it...
I worked in a restaurant for a month and I couldn’t cut it. My body was so sore from moving around so much that once I would get home I would just collapse
As a side story: There is a mob movie that I really see as a new york city restaurant movie called "Dinner Rush" It's a hidden gem... I highly recommend
18 years in hospitality for me in MD, DC, Minnesota and Florida. I was working at Doc B’s Restaurant @ International Plaza in Tampa back in 2018 and the day we went live with our Uber Eats and Doordash tablets was FUC@! INSANE!! The EXACT same way it was portrayed in The Bear. I remember watching the scene and telling my wife, “Whomever wrote this had to have gone through it to nail it that accurately.” LOL!!
@@BeergrYT Just finished it. Watch all the episodes in one night. Incredible show. Acting of Richie and Syd was a bit lacking at times but othen than it was phenomenal. One of the best I’ve seen in a very long time.
The show had a lot of downtime co pared to my experience (10+ years at this point) and there was a lot of prep and stuff being done before they were open. And the 2 who walked out being allowed back is pretty unlikely in my experience. Esepcially since they walked out on the problems they created. On a different note i really enjoyed these guys and their frankness about the kitchen environment. It's changed dramatically over the years and sometimes I miss the less professional, more personal style of it. It made me remember why I wound up in kitchens in the first place, thinking about how to motivate my guys to be better and to want to be better, and for me it was really as simple as somebody giving a shit enough to show me what to do at a time when I basically felt alone and useless in life. That really made kitchens my home and made me love it. And I kind of forgot that after all the years.
I thought the prep work before opening was true to my experiences for sure. The two that did walk out did so because of Chef's crazy outburst so if I were his character, I would have let them back. Now,. if they walked out just in the middle of a rush just because they couldn't handle the job, that's another story. To me, that just shows that Carmy's character is evolving through his seemingly endless struggles. IMO, I liked that.
@@BeergrYT there's a lot of truth to his character evolving but i felt like that scene focused entirely on carmys behavior and not the fact that the pastry chef straight up didn't do his job for service that day and the sous walked out on a disaster that she helped create. Idk I guess I've seen and had much worse done to me over the years and in situations like that you have to just take some things on the chin, especially with a chef of that caliber who has clearly shown a personal commitment to you. That kind of thing is pretty hard to find. Prep is done before service for sure but I've never been in that small of a kitchen so Its odd to me that all the same people running the line all day are alos prepping. That staff must have hella OT lol.
@@feircy I don't disagree, the pastry chef was def off his rocker, there a time and place for experimenting and that was not it lol. If I were that Sous Chef, (I am not a chef BTW) I wouldn't have walked, like you said, I would have just taken it and drank myself to sleep later lol.
I've been in the industry for 30 years, I've owned 2 restaurants. this show made me cry in season 2. I'll just say it wasn't relaxing. I hope everyone enjoys it. I'm sure we've all had nightmares of the never ending ticket printer. I thought it was a great show, lots of research done
I worked in catering and in kitchens. I loved it. Looking at the intro, though, I hate the tough-guy macho shots of the chefs and i hate the meat. Matty Matheson is funny, totally unusual in that he never gives in to the screaming match, and he has great great dialogue. He also looks like he's going to drop dead of a heart attack any second now. The sandwich that they keep focusing on looks completely over-cooked, dry vegetables. Stuff yourself on french fries. Yuck The Cork looks like the best place.
I never worked as a Chef or a cook but I have worked in kitchens as a dishwasher. Some of my experiences dealing with chefs was toxic and abusive. I worked at restaurants where chefs would abuse me and the other dishwashers coming in yelling at us. They would take pleasure in humiliating us. I also remember one time working at a different restaurant and finding out we weren’t allowed to use a powdered detergent that breaks down tough stains on pots and pans, if we were allowed to use it and sink the pots and pans overnight in water it would make our job to clean the cooking utensils easier, the stains would come right off. They knew this but enjoyed coming back and throwing their pans at us and swearing at my co-workers and myself. Not all restaurants are like that but there are some toxic restaurant cultures and environments in the hospitality industry.
That’s really unfortunate as well as all too common. I never had to deal with anything like that, thankfully but would never wish that kind of treatment upon anyone.
Watch our EPIC SEASON 2 REVIEW HERE - th-cam.com/video/g3zOMUQtkOQ/w-d-xo.html
My father is a Sous Chef and has been in the industry for around 20 years. He said he can't watch the show as it gives him anxiety. I asked him why. He said "it's too accurate."
I mean it gives everyone anxiety 😭
A real man right there
The fact that Matt Matteson was the odd jobs handy man was a brilliant move.
Agreed!
@@BeergrYT❤yt😂❤😂🎉
My girlfriend has no clue who he is nor does she care lol but it's hilarious because she just calls him "the janitor" in my mind I'm like she has no clue 😂
Fun fact, he's a real chef in real life
Lol yeah and that he wanted to be called chef too was cute.
Having Matty Matteson as a producer and actor on the show is what truly made it. Being able to have his first hand knowledge of being a chef in the real world made those moments in the show feel real and and actual kitchen. I can 100% say I have experienced everything they portrayed. And every aspect made me over the moon as a chef of 10 years
I am right with you!!!
And the director’s sister was also a main influence since she was also a major chef!
exactly how it made me feel
They nailed it, and I've been a chef for twelve years.
The personal dynamics, the techniques, the skill exhibited by the actors, it's all perfect.
And get this;
No hand doubles or stunt doubles for the kitchen scenes.
The lead actor went to culinary school and worked in a couple kitchens to get the real taste of the industry, and all the other actors kill it as well in the kitchen scenes.
I love Matty and he killed it acting and producing, but the whole damn cast brought their A+ game.
Season 2 killed it. I love how all Carmys staff could get training from high end restaurants because he had such a good reputation.
One of the most overlooked things in regards to High end dining.
As a professional chef, its like a John Wick universe.
IT IS!!!!
That is when the show lost me. Training for a week and become that good and all... 😅
but all of them were already cooking for years in restaurants (aside from marcus afaik who was only a year in) and knew what to do. the trainings just refined everything they already knew and exposed them to a setting that bear (the restaurant) needed. they are good chefs, but they didn’t have the harmony and openness before sydney and carmy started venturing new things for months to improve the place and their relationships with one another.
how was it a week if they trained for most of the months leading up to opening day@@OkabexKurisu
Watch Pig with Nic Cage in it. The John Wick of restaurant movies in a weird way
As a chef who has worked in the grittiest and the most high end restaurants (now own my own)… I wholeheartedly AGREE that this show has captured it perfectly. I struggled to see them as actors, not real chefs.
I absolutely love this show. It makes me feel sane about my life’s choices.
The actors did really do an incredible job didn’t they? Have you watched season 2 yet? Be sure to check out our season 2 review! ITS EPIC!
@@Joeysaladslover I’m in Australia.. so I’ve worked in every kind of kitchen.. from brand new, government built restaurants, catering and servicing the research centre and Parliament House… to “bush kitchens” catering fine dining weddings in the Australian bush.. to Mumma and papa restaurants that have been open for 25 years, low budget thrown together kitchens with ancient equipment, like The Bear.. I have worked at Hungry Jacks (our Burger King) hahaha.. and several mid range, small, well equipped, basic kitchens. Which is what I’m currently the owner of now. It’s called Louie’s Deli Norwood. We are a tiny Deli doing amazing sandwiches and coffee etc. 👍🏻
So incredible that you've opened your own restaurant. Totally a dream of mine to do so as well. Having worked in the industry for quite a while I know how much of a challenge that can be!
The intensity in an active kitchen was so spot on. I was working as a Prepmaster/Dishwasher when S01 came out, and the best advice I got from one of our line cooks was to "watch it after your shift, not on your day off" and he was 100% right
Oh shit as a former cook I couldn't even imagine watching this on my day off! Hell I want nothing to do with cooking on days off
Episode 7 reminded me of one day working at this Fast Pasta place in the 90's in a mall. The bosses thought because it was a holiday it was not going to be busy, so they scheduled me and a new kid. It was a total shit show. Place was packed, only 2 of us and the new kid broke down and started crying and I had to take him to the back kitchen calm him down tell him we will just do it at the speed we can and just do what we can. I had to do register, orders and salads and he had to do pastas, sauses and bread. We weren't in the weeds, we were lost in a rain forest. But we got through it.
Oh man, I bet that was one hell of a night! Obviously still stuck with you! Thanks for watching!
i just hope that other kid is doing well now
Respect lol
Can’t front. Sounds like you made this up
Reminds me of being a barista during Christmas. Manager thought it was going to be quiet evening and had 2 of us part timers with her. Ended up having to serve customers up to the closing minute where we have to tell people that we are taking last orders.
27 years in kitchens, the last 15 as an exec, the scene that triggered me to the point of being so angry I had to walk away from the tv, was the sabotage scene.
What happened in that scene again?
@@Jas-ms4tr Tina in either the 2nd or 3rd episode of Season 1 was turning up the heat on a pan that Sydney was using. Making it so that it just burst when Sydney just started cooking, and Carmen was lecturing her about how to use a heat service. Which if you been in a kitchen is very aggravating to deal with coworkers like that, and demining when your boss treats like your retarded when in fact the heat was to hot.
Sabotage scene? Which scene is that?
@@gandanek Yeah thanks man
I've been in the business for 48 years. A dinosaur in this industry. The Food Network gives the impression to many people that the restaurant business & being a chef is sexy, and it's not. It's Incredibly hard work, but also equally rewarding. There was some "artistic license" & exaggerated drama but this show nailed it. Kudos to the entire staff on "The Bear".
Indeed!!!
I have friends who are chefs, cooks and restaurant managers.
The one thing I can tell you is that I wouldn’t and couldn’t do those jobs. Food source, inspections, staff, permits, it’s much harder than anyone who is not industry could ever think.
@@TheDevnul right you are! Stay tuned for our epic review of season 2! Hopefully going public this week!
As someone who really cut my teeth in the industry as a cook, then a hostess, a server, a bar tender, an expediter, a floor manager, a bar manager, and finally a sommelier, I can say that some of those scenes feel so real, and so authentic.
This show triggers me so badly. it brings up every nightmare i ever lived through. It's such an excellent show.
I’m just about to finish season two! Stay tuned for our epic review!
@@BeergrYTOMG. I didn’t know. I’m on it.
Same. I watched the first episode and I was like, "nope." In fact, I'm not sure that I've ever noped out that fast.
Can I get a "heard" on that? :P
Why I’ll never watch it 🙄🫠
My mum always thought she could do what I do. But we would argue that just because you're a good cook doesn't mean you'll survive in a professional kitchen. I thought the films 'chef' and 'burnt' would help prove my point but they didn't really portray the stress and intensity of a professional kitchen. The the bear came around, and after watching it my mum quickly changed her tune. If anything it made her respect what I do even more. It's a great show. Cooooooouuuusssssssiiiiiinnnnnn!!!! 😂😂
Coouuuzzzzzzzin!!! Great story!!! Stay tuned for our epic review of season 2!
A lot of people think they can do it, eithout really knowing what it is. Same with many jobs.
Do you make the fries at McD?
@@agentcooper4627 yeah, hoping to get promoted to burger prep soon
For sure, I've seen videos of people making one loaf of bread and they would change their careers from video production to baker. It's fun to make but it's so different when you're hauling 50# of flour and mass producing products.
My sister in law also had that view that she believed she could cook better than the contestants in Hell's kitchen because they would burn eggs. But then she worked at a restaurant briefly and was stressed out everyday from not being able to keep up. She definitely learned it's not a walk in the park and she put effort into becoming better
I have been a chef for 52 years, The Bear hits the nail on the head. Great writing.
I started working at a restaurant when I was teenager and a decade after that. The yelling, the stress, the constant urgency as well as the colorful atmosphere of vulgarity, is so real. Things break down, food runs out, hours and hours of prep work, and then there’s the occasional new person asking what time is a break.
Honestly I love how all the chef’s talked about the online orders being there oh sh*t moment lol, but great show
It was great learning how they are pretty much all the same in how they see the entire industry! Thanks for watching!
Anyone who has worked in the industry has been in the weeds.
After watching that show I understand why my grandpa who was an executive chef at the Hilton in Manhattan 40 years ago never wanted me to be a chef lol. He's right I'd probably be a drug addict. So I became a fish monger now I'm a drunk lol
This is a wonderful comment! LOL
@@BeergrYTand the mental health aspect of drinking ? To quote your add-on question
Bro the standout for me was that Christmas Scene the pure Chaos and all shot in one continuous shot was amazing, really showed where Carmy came from and what kind of family he grew up in
Yes!!!
That was season 2, be sure to check out our epic season review!
I teared up a few times watching the 2nd season. Oddly enough, one of them was when cousin found his passion for hospitality while astaging. I've never worked FOH but I felt that wholeheartedly. Amazing show. Bra fucking vo man
Dude! It got me too!!!
The chocolate banana throwback! Stay tuned for epic review of season two!
Every second counts!! ❤
Working in hotels, I have always worked on the periphery of restaurants and kitchens. I learned quickly, I am not built for the kitchen, but i absolutely love the people who are.
The show reminded me of a lot of things i saw, heard or learned about. The personalities were very familiar. And the love hate work/personal relationships really nailed it for me.
My dad, who also worked around kitchens but in the airline industry, taught me that if chef is mad, walk away, as soon as the moment has passed they are your best friend again... Advice that has worked for the last 20 years lol.
Plus I have had the added benefit of being the taste test guinea pig for one of my chefs... A happy chef will feed you stuff you never imagined...
I hope they can keep the shows consistent for many more seasons to come.
As the third discussion stated: the restaurant industry is the closest to a meritocracy you'll ever get in the real world. It's uncanny the amount of lessons from those times I still apply today...and I'm a lawyer lol.
Like what lessons. I would really like to know.
I really like how people who worked in actual kitchens notice a lot of the little things the creators got right. Which makes the show much more relatable for them.
Absolutely!
when they said "fuck brunch" is the moment I knew this show was real 🖤🖤
In my late teens i spent a year and half working in an Italian deli in Amsterdam. The chaos, the yelling and the passion for their product was SPOT ON. Ive never worked so hard in my life, and i served in the army 😅
Its been over 20 years since i worked in that deli and this show brought back some really good memories.
I love that the first Chef is drink out of a 32 oz “ soup container”. We all use those to store our prep and to drink out of. This gives it a sense of being real!!
Glass is for customers. Lol
I developed a habit of giving my cups a good sniff before pouring a drink into them, even at home, solely from the fact I grabbed too many of those containers that were used to hold some very pungent ingredients.
and in the show the chefs use this to drink to
In a lot of kitchens, we call them "delis." As in, deli containers. Its totally realistic and my personal favorite thing to drink out of.
If you ain't drinking out of a quart container, what are you doing with your life? (jk, but very very barely... Quart life is best life)
By far the best series for me personally... I think it's almost anxiety inducing which is phenomenal and impressive. I loved it. I really liked when Sydney heard the ticket machine when it wasn't going off.. plus everyone I know said it was amazing so I didn't watch it until the second season came out. I think it's the most relatable restaurant show I have ever seen.
Hahahahahahaha
I agree 💯
Watching this, made me think how the show had me remembering my 6 years at a family owned Italian joint. It was beautiful chaos, I just reached out to the owner who was an amazing person and had his workers' back at all times. Hope he hits me back, it's been almost 20 years.
Good memories!
Yelling "shut it off!" was literally me tonight 😂
What I find hilarious is every chef brought up the ticket machine scene as the example of the most realistic part. I've been a chef for 17 years and I've had versions of that scene in my nightmares throughout my career. I'd hear ticket machines like pstd flashbacks. Tgat was the scene where I went from liking the show to loving it.
All the prep & knife work was done by the actors. Props to them, too.
They were fantastic!
Stay tuned for our epic review of season 2!
I’ve been a food runner at multiple popular restaurants in Philly. All through out college and a bit after. It’s so real. I hope the show shows a bit of front house in the future just cuz communication between them and the kitchen can create some crazy situations. Such a good show.
Being a chef I love it, it’s hard to explain to people how hectic it can get and chaotic, this show really hits it on the head I’ll always be a fan
Working in a restaurant is like a drug. When everything is on point you feel like you can accomplish anything. And when things are chaotic , leaving after a long day is like a monkey off your back. I worked in a Mexican restaurant in the early 2000s, the craziest thing I experienced was just me and my cook and I had at once lunch time a party of 20 and 10 other tables at once. I was floored. I could make a movie about my time delivering for Uber eats when it started in 2016..
💯 accurate!
You’re gonna love my new podcast that is coming very soon!
I’m a sous chef who’s been working in the industry for around 7 years in 25 and honestly The Bear has struck so many chords in me where I had to stop watching because of stress and anxiety. It was such a well produced and directed show that made me want to keep watching. For all the chefs and cooks. KEEP PUSHING BABY!
I've worked with chefs and cooks that got there position just cause of a culinary degree with out earning there stripes. Ive also worked with chefs and cooks that have earned there stripes from working there way out of the pit. The ones who worked there way out of the pit are the ones who will show you tips and take you under there wings if they see potential in you
Love this! Thanks for watching!
I was a server at a chain restaurant for nearly 2 years and I volunteered one night to come back after I got off to work in the dish pit and I realized that night my co-workers on the floor were assholes
Legitimately 30 yrs in this industry and The Bear is like watching my life lol
7:32 thanks for calling out the birthday party scene. That one broke the realism for me and just felt like “let’s write something outrageous for laughs”
So cool to see you and other chefs' thoughts of "The Bear". Have a great day, cousin! (I love how the first chef was drinking out of a food container, too).
A prep chef knocked over two 22 quart containers of liquids in our cold storage. I had a full days shipment that I was in charge of putting away that shift. Thinking back, I could have cut down that sanitization and clean to 10-20 minutes vs 30-45 minutes had I kept my head.
Oh man!!! I love real life kitchen stories/memories like this!
Thank You for this video, Sir. Seriously, Cheers! I was in food service from 17 to 28 with much of it being full on kitchen work. I worked everywhere from small family businesses to big corporate to hotels. I've worked with great motley crews and amazing mentors. I truly loved it... until I hit THAT wall. The stress and mental / emotional grind got to me. I couldn't take the heat and bailed. Honestly, I think that there should be a national requirement for all high schoolers to work service industry jobs before graduation like other countries requiring military service. Be well, y'all.
I wholeheartedly Agree! Thanks for watching and stick around for the Season 2 video! It's going to be an epic camp fire round table with these same chefs and maybe one more! Oh, and a new podcast is coming...
Show rebooted my kitchen PTSD!! It was so good!
I’ve worked in kitchens for 17 years. I tried watching the Bear, but had to turn it off after the first episode… it was TOO REAL. Felt like I was taking work home with me! Think I’m gonna give it another chance now
Haha it really is great! Be sure to watch our epic season 2 review after you’re all caught up!
Interesting how all these chefs related to the online ordering chaos.
I see the problems of it as a consumer & always wonder how ONE kitchen is balancing both fronts.
They all mentioned the online ticket thing but the third Jeff described the exact thing that happened to my wife and I on Mother's day during covid when restaurants opened back up. I had to wait at the front of the restaurant, in the rain, for two + hours, for an order I placed a week or two in advance.
That was a crazy time for sure! Thanks for watching
Awesome video! I love that these are Pennsylvania restaurants! I’m a Philly girl living in the ‘Burgh!! The Bear is phenomenal!! I just subscribed! Glad to have found you
Yay!!! Thank you so much! Stay tuned for a very epic season 2 review!
Excellent interviews dude. Great quality cut aways & editing. Keep up the great work and I can't wait for season 2 of 'THE BEAR!"
Thank you!!! Me too!!!
Damn Tom Segura is really knowledgable about restauranting
😂😂😂
Was looking for this comment! Haha
Immediately what I thought too
Helps that he's also a bear
Was looking for this lol
Listening to Chef Finnerty talk about the online-only orders of the Mother's Day after covid lockdowns brought back memories I don't personally have. I hadn't yet started working at the restaurant that employs me, but the ones who did describe that exact same scenario.
It certainly was a crazy time, and one that I’m sure you’ll relate to with your own restaurant soon enough! Cheers and thanks for watching
I completely blocked out that year from my memory. I worked at an extremely popular ramen restaurant that didn't do online orders so when we had to adapt to the pandemic, that's how it was. The ticket machine wouldn't stop. Someone had to change the roll every 45 min to an hour and we were running around like chickens with our heads cut off. Crazy time
So good. I loved the show. Worked four or so years in the kitchen in many roles. It really brought me back hahahah
This was such a great video. Thanks for giving this to us!
I'm happy you got something out of it!
I have talked to so many cooks that say it is too accurate for them. It triggers them. I feel the same way. I needed Xanax after the first episode. Congratulations to the writers, because my feelings don't matter on this. I need for everyone else to know what I go through.
I worked in kitchens almost 20 years ago and it INSTANTLY put me right back in the shit! Incredible! Well said my friend!
@@BeergrYT Mine is more recent, but no one talks about the fact that you'll hear tickets coming in and triggered for years in your sleep.
@@LeslieLanagan I watched it with my headphones on and the editors were so brilliant that when the tickets began rolling on the sound was only in the right ear, and they incrementally got louder and in both ears. Just brilliant and panic inducing lol
@@BeergrYT I think I'm going to watch it eventually. It does sound cool, and the writers are brilliant. But listening to it on my headphones? I'm not sure I'd recover. Not without a waitress to take down because she put in six tickets without blinking. EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE and EXTREMELY LOUD AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE, all of it. And yet, the best time of my life so far.
Old episode. But I was randomly drawn to watch it. I loved hearing the chefs options on things. As a server and newly bartender every tip I can get being in this industry helps a lot. Taking the time to appreciate everything you do and have and what will be created after is important. But the biggest thing I grasps is that if I can put that time into my work ethic. Who says that I cannot do that with my life you know. Just a thought, great episode made me think.
Loved these interviews and really dig you channel.
Keep making content.
Thank you!!!!
I’m not in the industry but I would always feel on edge/anxious during every episode! Respect to the chefs out there
I loved my time in the restaurant and this show was so solid and on point. I am glad they went to the lengths they did to depict things correctly. Having Matty certainly helped in getting everything right. Season 2 was great as well and apparently, they are supposed to start filming season 3 in the next couple of months. Easily one of my favorites to watch.
I totally agree! Loved season 2 as well. Excited to see where it goes from there!
I've never seen this channel before but I thought your interviews and your questions were outstanding! Waitress in many different kitchens in the past, and mental health is definitely an interesting topic for you to bring up
Thank you, I was thoroughly entertained
Thanks for watching!!!
Im in love with this show! It's so dynamic. And it's spot on!
EVERY SECOND COUNTS!
Yes!!! Be sure to check out our season 2 review in the channel!
I only worked as a temp in an Italian kitchen in Germany for just under six months, but a lot of it reminded me of that time.
Best cooking movie ever . I’m chef and it’s touching my heart
Didn’t work in the restaurant industry and I freaking LOVED it.
As a Chef myself I will say they truly do show so much of working in a kitchen...people may think we are just back there having fun cooking but there is sooooo much more to it....yelling, pissed off but you have two options...either you walk out or you just power through it...and at the end of the rush it's like the biggest adrenaline rush ever...you feel so accomplished like yeah we did that shit lol
These were awesome conversations, thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching! Be sure to check out our Season 2 review!
I'm both working in the industry already and in culinary school and ep7 raised my blood pressure
I live in pa and ive been to 2/3 of these restaurants and i was surprised to see someone so close to home
Which ones have you been to?
“Everyone thinks they can be the guy without being the guy”, yet the second protagonist is a whiny person who hasn’t ever done anything. Dei.
As a professional chef of 20 years they freaking killed it.👍
the most innacurate thing about the show is it undersells the brutality and turnover rates, its accurate enough without feeling depressing - nobody is being racist, there's no sexual harrassment of female staff or weird games of grabass that are being soft-pedaled by the management. too few people are actively using cocaine.
Hey Cousin! Really enjoyed this! Loved the Bear, it was one of my favorite shows in a very long time. Loved the B-Roll you shot of the chefs, and I am always looking to improve my channel as well, what camera and lens did you use for the B-Roll? Again great job!
Hey Cousin! Thanks for watching! I use two cameras, the Sony A7SIII and the Sony A1. For lenses, I love the 35mm 1.8 for straight on interview shots but I have been LOVING the Sony 90mm G Lens for just about everything especially food shots. The 90mm is just so buttery and crisp all at the same time. Wide angle shots, I love the Sony 14mm GMaster lens. Hope that helps!
@@BeergrYT I figured you were using some really great gear. That 14mm looks amazing I have to say especially when you use it to push in and pull out. I have the 16-35 power zoom and the 85mm but I think your use of the 14mm and the 90mm really take it to another level. I had the a7siii but it got stolen out of my car, had to go to the a7IV for now, but hope to get another one eventually. Going to subscribe - have a good one!
@@jostalking The 85 is great as well! I love the 90mm capability of switching to macro and the autofocus to manual switch is pretty "clutch" as well :) Throw either the 90 or the 14 on the DJI RS2 and you've got a WICKED combo. I subbed your channel as well, godd stuff Cheers!
I worked in a burrito shop ,on 5 de mayo, when lock down first started . Let me tell you that one episode gave me ptsd of that day. 😂
I loved this. They did it very real definitely portrayed the feeling
I worked in kitchens and this is pretty accurate. The yelling, the anger, the fights, the good times. I developed an alcohol addiction from it but I learnt so much in that period. I hated working with the arrogant Italian chefs but I learnt a lot.
Ohh god, those dream scenes. Ive had similar "kitchen nightmare" dreams
Great video, great insight from everyone you interviewed
Glad you enjoyed it! Stay tuned for the review of season 2!
Really excellent video, so glad I found your channel!
Glad you enjoy it!
As someone who worked in restaurants the only callout I have is - take off your apron when you go outside for a smoke break!!!! Everyone always left the apron at the station for smoke or potty breaks.
I Love the bear work in Resturants my whole life this is so real love it
Really fun video! I bloody love the series. Have you considered looking into lav mics? Might make conversation a little more convenient for you guests, again, really good video man, keep it up!
Oh yeah I have, I had the Rode go mics on the last two chefs but had some issues with them on this video because of mismatched firmware 😞 - I’ve switched to the DJI mics since then, much better experience. Be sure to check out our epic season 2 review!
Awesome watch! Thank you BEERGR ❤Only just found out about the show recently and loving it
Thanks!!! Be sure to check out our season 2 review!
It’s also the best show that has ever captured the essence of Chicago culture! ❤ The Bear!
I love this show!!!!! That beef sandwich is not an Italian beef. It looks good but it’s not a true Italian beef and if you’re from Chicago you’ll agree. We take our food seriously.
Holy shit, you introduced the first chef from The Skunk and Goat Tavern, and I'm like "huh that's interesting we have a restaurant near me that's called that." Then I saw the rest of the restaurants and realized you're in Erie lol. Small world!
Hey hey!!!
loved the show, as a sous chef in the industry for 13 years it captures the chaos the stress and anxiety of a shift perfectly, all though its a bit cringe at times for my taste i still really enjoyed the show, already loved jeremy white from watching shameless, and seeing matty matheson on it was awesome too.
Boiling point starting Stephen graham for me is a better portrayal of working a shift in a restaurant. I worked in London where boiling point is set so it might be just that but if you like the bear you will like boiling point.
Thanks!!! You’re actually the second person that recommended that. I will look it up!
Not a chef, but a dishwasher... and watching The Bear while working in a restaurant is the most anxiety inducing thing ever.. literally had to wait until I wasn't working in a restaurant to watch it...
My wife is a Nurse and the first episode was so stressful to watch the rest of the show. lolol Editing and Directing was amazing.
I worked in a restaurant for a month and I couldn’t cut it. My body was so sore from moving around so much that once I would get home I would just collapse
As a side story:
There is a mob movie that I really see as a new york city restaurant movie called "Dinner Rush"
It's a hidden gem... I highly recommend
I will look it up!!! Thank you!
18 years in hospitality for me in MD, DC, Minnesota and Florida. I was working at Doc B’s Restaurant @ International Plaza in Tampa back in 2018 and the day we went live with our Uber Eats and Doordash tablets was FUC@! INSANE!! The EXACT same way it was portrayed in The Bear. I remember watching the scene and telling my wife, “Whomever wrote this had to have gone through it to nail it that accurately.” LOL!!
100% !!!
Ever had someone pull your tags and relabel your prep?
I clenched my fist and jaw just reading this lmao 😅
Could you explain what this means for someone who isnt a cook?
Where's the last guys' deli cup?
I love this show so much. My absolute favorite in years.
Man pumped to see this show now
It’s so good!
@@BeergrYT Just finished it. Watch all the episodes in one night. Incredible show. Acting of Richie and Syd was a bit lacking at times but othen than it was phenomenal. One of the best I’ve seen in a very long time.
The show had a lot of downtime co pared to my experience (10+ years at this point) and there was a lot of prep and stuff being done before they were open. And the 2 who walked out being allowed back is pretty unlikely in my experience. Esepcially since they walked out on the problems they created.
On a different note i really enjoyed these guys and their frankness about the kitchen environment. It's changed dramatically over the years and sometimes I miss the less professional, more personal style of it.
It made me remember why I wound up in kitchens in the first place, thinking about how to motivate my guys to be better and to want to be better, and for me it was really as simple as somebody giving a shit enough to show me what to do at a time when I basically felt alone and useless in life. That really made kitchens my home and made me love it. And I kind of forgot that after all the years.
I thought the prep work before opening was true to my experiences for sure. The two that did walk out did so because of Chef's crazy outburst so if I were his character, I would have let them back. Now,. if they walked out just in the middle of a rush just because they couldn't handle the job, that's another story. To me, that just shows that Carmy's character is evolving through his seemingly endless struggles. IMO, I liked that.
@@BeergrYT there's a lot of truth to his character evolving but i felt like that scene focused entirely on carmys behavior and not the fact that the pastry chef straight up didn't do his job for service that day and the sous walked out on a disaster that she helped create. Idk I guess I've seen and had much worse done to me over the years and in situations like that you have to just take some things on the chin, especially with a chef of that caliber who has clearly shown a personal commitment to you. That kind of thing is pretty hard to find.
Prep is done before service for sure but I've never been in that small of a kitchen so Its odd to me that all the same people running the line all day are alos prepping. That staff must have hella OT lol.
@@feircy I don't disagree, the pastry chef was def off his rocker, there a time and place for experimenting and that was not it lol. If I were that Sous Chef, (I am not a chef BTW) I wouldn't have walked, like you said, I would have just taken it and drank myself to sleep later lol.
Walking out during a killer rush definitely puts you on the "do not rehire" list imo.
You won me with the 90s R&B lol. I’m subscribing.
They did a good job getting you in that sense of urgency and keeping it about the food.
Gotta love Chef Firestone - awesome interview! Thanks for the smile boys xoxo
Thanks for watching!
Chef Firestone was the real fucking deal! Just straight spittin' truth!
I've been in the industry for 30 years, I've owned 2 restaurants. this show made me cry in season 2. I'll just say it wasn't relaxing. I hope everyone enjoys it. I'm sure we've all had nightmares of the never ending ticket printer. I thought it was a great show, lots of research done
I worked in catering and in kitchens. I loved it. Looking at the intro, though, I hate the tough-guy macho shots of the chefs and i hate the meat. Matty Matheson is funny, totally unusual in that he never gives in to the screaming match, and he has great great dialogue. He also looks like he's going to drop dead of a heart attack any second now. The sandwich that they keep focusing on looks completely over-cooked, dry vegetables. Stuff yourself on french fries. Yuck
The Cork looks like the best place.
I never worked as a Chef or a cook but I have worked in kitchens as a dishwasher. Some of my experiences dealing with chefs was toxic and abusive. I worked at restaurants where chefs would abuse me and the other dishwashers coming in yelling at us. They would take pleasure in humiliating us. I also remember one time working at a different restaurant and finding out we weren’t allowed to use a powdered detergent that breaks down tough stains on pots and pans, if we were allowed to use it and sink the pots and pans overnight in water it would make our job to clean the cooking utensils easier, the stains would come right off. They knew this but enjoyed coming back and throwing their pans at us and swearing at my co-workers and myself.
Not all restaurants are like that but there are some toxic restaurant cultures and environments in the hospitality industry.
That’s really unfortunate as well as all too common. I never had to deal with anything like that, thankfully but would never wish that kind of treatment upon anyone.
i would never treat my young dishies like that i always try to encourage them i know it sucks!
I have walked in situations like this and never looked back
Great interview! It’s definitely a excellent Show.
INDEED! Thanks for watching!
One of my best line cooks got his early training at McDonald's. He knew how to properly deep clean equipment !