By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, July 09, 2025
We—I mean The Fair Jessica and I, not the royal
We—recently finished the latest season of The Bear.
This isn’t a review and I’m not going to get deep into
the plot, air my concerns about the season finale, traffic in spoilers, or
complain that it’s not really a “comedy” as it bills itself. But I will say I
love The Bear (and so does my wife, even though she has very strong
views about actual bears. It’s sort of like if they made a TV show called The
Flan that I loved, and I’d have to tell people, “I think The Flan is
great. Not the dessert, the TV show”).
If you haven’t seen The Bear, it tells the story
of Carmy Berzatto, a wunderkind chef who comes home to Chicago to take over his
brother’s restaurant after his brother commits suicide (I don’t think this is
much of a spoiler since that’s all laid out in the first episode).
I love The Bear for a bunch of reasons. One is
that I find it unpredictable. I don’t have many skills, but one skill I do have
is predicting what will happen next or at the end of a TV show or movie very
early. I don’t have a perfect record or anything, but I am comfortable saying
that I am very good at it (and it annoys my wife greatly). But I can’t reliably
do it with The Bear, and that makes it so much more compelling for me.
But it’s the reason I can’t do it that is the real attraction. The show
defies a lot of conventions in TV but also in our popular culture generally.
And I’ve been thinking about that a lot.
Let me zoom out. One of the most common themes in popular
culture is the idea of the Chosen One. Sometimes this is explicit. For obvious
reasons the TV show about Jesus, The Chosen, is a very on-the-nose
example. Indeed, I think Western civilization—maybe all civilizations—like this
motif because of the messianic tradition
at the heart of Jewish and Christian theology. But I think the idea of the
Chosen One might be something close to a human universal.
I’m no expert on world religions or anything, but it seems like almost everyone
has some version of this idea. Muslims have the Mahdi, or Guided One, Hindus
have the Kalki, Taoism anticipates the arrival of a Sage King, and even the
Norse believed that Baldr would come back to life after Ragnarök. I tend to
believe that Marxism is a kind of shadow religion of Christianity, which is one
of the reasons it’s so susceptible to cults of personality and to the belief
that Mao or Lenin were “chosen” by capital-H History to deliver a Kingdom of
Heaven on Earth. Nazism and Italian Fascism were suffused with messianic
garbage, too.
But that’s a conversation for another time. My only point
is that people are suckers for ideas about people being “born to do X.” X can be saving mankind, killing vampires, or
playing baseball. The idea diffuses and mutates into all sorts of plot devices.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a Chosen One. Neo in The Matrix was
the Chosen One. Star Wars, Dune, the Harry Potter books, Kung
Fu Panda, The Lion King, The Terminator, Moana, the
Percy Jackson books, Game of Thrones, The Witcher, Avatar: The
Last Air Bender: the list of stories predicated on some version of this
idea is very long.
It’s particularly popular in science fiction and fantasy
aimed at young people, and for a good reason. The Golden Age of science
fiction, as
Peter Graham said, is 12.
One of the small myths we cultivate about ourselves when
we’re kids is that we’re special, unique, and destined for something.
Sometimes we’re frustrated that others don’t see it. Other times, parents tell
their kids this is true about them. So much teenage angst is premised on
this stuff. That’s kind of the background premise of Holden Caulfield’s
character in The Catcher in the Rye. A catcher in the rye is someone who saves
people from falling off cliffs, and that’s what Caulfield wants to be. “I’d
just be the catcher in the rye and all. I know it’s crazy, but that’s the only
thing I’d really like to be. I know it’s crazy.”
Another variant is the hero who’s just better—at
everything—than everybody. He (and it’s usually, but not always, a he) is just
born better than everybody, a kind of Übermensch in a world of Last Men. Tom
Cruise plays this kind of character all the time. The Mission: Impossible
and Top Gun franchises are the most obvious examples, but he’s also the
Übermenschy wunderkind in The Last Samurai, Reacher, Oblivion,
Minority Report, Collateral, The Firm, Cocktail, Days
of Thunder, even Risky Business. In Edge of Tomorrow and Risky
Business he at least has a story arc where his talents have to be
cultivated or discovered.
But this idea lies at the heart of lots of movies, books,
and TV shows that treat talent as innate, as if the hero simply needs to
conjure the will to excellence rather than cultivate it. His superpower is like
a video game achievement to be unlocked in order to be realized, as with the
kid in Ender’s Game or The Last Starfighter, an Ender’s Game
rip-off in which a loser kid scores the high score in a video game, proving
that he’s the Chosen One of sorts. Only Arthur can pluck the sword from the
stone.
I have no huge gripes with this stuff on its own. But I
think culturally we have way too much Chosen One-ness out there. I won’t get
into a big rant on Rousseau and Romanticism (again), but this idea—that we all
start out as perfect diamonds, or at least diamonds in the rough, and that our
task is to reveal our excellence rather than cultivate it—permeates a lot of
our culture, including our politics. But it’s worth noting that Rousseau was
hugely influential on educational theory, and his ideas about human nature
suffuse his educational theories and have adherents to this day (though in
fairness, Rousseau was an early proponent of free-range kids, so he wasn’t all
wrong). Rousseau never used the term “noble savage,” but it captures his belief
that we are born good and that society corrupts us by imposing rigid external
rules on us. The job of the educator is to nurture our innate perfection, not
lard on abstract, authenticity-depleting rules.
We tell kids they’re like Roy Hobbs in The Natural.
We cater to their lack of attention spans by increasingly letting kids take all
the time in the world for standardized tests. We tell them that they should be
true to themselves and make personal authenticity the highest moral standard,
forgetting that we are works in progress and that our authentic selves are
often just a cocktail of desires and insecurities, not some perfect diamond the
world needs to be a setting for. Social media fuels the epidemic of “main
character syndrome” afflicting so many young people.
As for politics, I’ve
covered this before. But it’s fair to say we constantly want politicians to
be Chosen Ones who will save us from the messy muddling-through of politics
and, well, modern life. Barack Obama explicitly played into this cultural
appetite. Oprah Winfrey, a kind of secular priestess for some people, tapped
into it when she called Obama “The One.” Obama was clever about it. He
personally downplayed the messianism his campaign cultivated, letting
surrogates incept the idea: “We need a leader who’s going to touch our souls.
Who’s going to make us feel differently about one another,” Michelle
Obama said. “Who’s going to remind us that we are one another’s keepers.
That we are only as strong as the weakest among us.” She promised her husband’s
leadership would help fix “our broken souls.”
And let’s not kid ourselves, long before the
assassination attempt on Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, parts of MAGA
world pushed the idea that he was chosen by God to save America, a claim he has
leaned into quite
a bit since. With Obama, the messianic stuff was mostly couched in secular,
salvific language; with Trump it’s often explicit (see, for example, “7 Biblical Signs That Trump
Is God’s Chosen One” and Trump
– God’s Chosen Servant: For Such a Time as This).
But I don’t want to talk about politics. I bring this up
only to illustrate the point that our hunger to believe in the Chosen One
doesn’t stay on the screen or the page. It’s a major part of cultural language
and sets our expectations for how we see and define heroes.
And that brings me back to The Bear. The thing I
truly love about this show is that it refutes all of this. As readers know—and
probably tire of hearing—I am a huge subscriber to Yuval Levin’s argument about
institutions. In short for the uninitiated, institutions are supposed to shape
you. You enlist, join, and commit to an institution for the good of the
institution, to make it better, and in the bargain the institution makes you
better. Too many people in our culture exploit membership in institutions for
their own benefit. They use them as platforms to promote themselves.
The Bear is a massive corrective to this trend.
The premise feels like it should be a typical story of a Chosen One (Carmy) or
a diamond in the rough (Sydney, the incredibly talented protégé) or the even
rougher diamond (Marcus, the pastry chef). But little in the show plays out
according to that familiar script (nor does the show try to score points about
race, which it could so easily do, itself another source of its welcome
unpredictability).
The whole show is grounded in a different anthropology or
metaphysics than the one that’s become so familiar. Carmy is a wunderkind, but
he is a mess plagued by demons. The only world that makes sense to him is in
the kitchen. More to the point, the only thing that makes him truly excellent
are other people. The institution of the restaurant asks every character
to bend their existence to the demands of the institution, to commit to an
excellence that can only be achieved collectively. And that sacrifice not only
makes the institution better, it makes the members better by changing them. They
shed bad habits, and they abandon any notion of being the main character in
fealty to something outside themselves. And it’s not just the cooks. The whole
idea of service—not just food service but true, real, other-directed service—is
a passion that transcends mere cooking. The collective enterprise makes messy,
self-centered, scared, emotionally wounded, and vulnerable people—which we all
are to some extent—want to be better people. The goal isn’t to be true to
yourself, but by committing to something that is greater than yourself and
others, your true self is improved.
I could provide examples of this for nearly every
character (especially Richie, Ebraheim, and Tina), all of whom are played
beautifully by outstanding actors. But if you’ve seen the show, you know what
I’m talking about, and if you haven’t it will just spoil it.
Besides, the larger point is that this is a lesson about
life. We are not born diamonds in the rough. We are all born lumps of coal. And
it is only under the pressure of life—in work, in our families, in our
friendships, and in our own complicated souls—that we even have a chance of
becoming diamonds. And, at the risk of straining the metaphor, none of us
really become diamonds. Most of us are lucky to become diamonds in one or two
aspects of our lives. In superficial fidelity to the metaphor, I would call these
aspects of our lives facets. But the truth is uncut diamonds don’t have facets.
Those are formed by jewelers at the end of the process. And that, I think, is
true of us as well. Our best selves are still formed by others. And we can only
see those facets in the light of other people.
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