
Jeremy Allen White as Carmen "Carmy" Berzatto needs to overcome a review highlighting the restaurant's inconsistencies in Season 4 of The Bear.
If you haven’t watched the final season of the Emmy-winning show The Bear, better get to it! This could be a spoiler for you.
Has The Bear finally closed its kitchen for good? Fans are left wondering after a finale that feels like goodbye—but maybe not the end.
The Shocking Exit of Carmy left all Reeling
FX’s critically acclaimed The Bear wrapped up Season 4 with a twist no one saw coming.
Carmy (Jeremy Allen White), the genius chef behind the Chicago restaurant, reveals to Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) that he’s walking away.
The restaurant will be out of debt, he promises. Then, he’s off on a path of self-reflection.
The episode, fittingly titled “Goodbye,” sets a bittersweet tone. Carmy reconciles with his past—offering closure to several lingering storylines. He apologizes to Claire (Molly Gordon), reconnects with his now-sober mother (Jamie Lee Curtis), and lets go of the emotional weight he’s carried through four intense seasons.
Season 4 Feels Like a Slow, Emotional Goodbye
This entire season has felt like a farewell tour for Carmy. He apologizes to Claire (Molly Gordon), his ex from Season 2. He softens toward his mother (Jamie Lee Curtis), who’s nearly a year sober. And then there’s the long-awaited reunion of his chaotic extended family at Tiffany (Gillian Jacobs) and Frank’s (Josh Hartnett) wedding. The familiar tension from the infamous “Fishes” episode returns—but this time with healing and closure.
Even the restaurant’s countdown clock, set by investor Uncle Jimmy (Oliver Platt), finally runs out—marking the end of more than just a fiscal deadline.
Has the Bear Lost His Fire?
Carmy’s emotional burnout is hard to miss. “This is all I’ve ever known,” he tells Sydney. He confesses that cooking, once his escape, has become a prison.
When Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) joins the conversation, Carmy gets more vulnerable than ever. “I don’t know what I’m like outside of the kitchen,” he says. It’s not just that he’s leaving—he’s unraveling.
Passing the Torch
Before walking away, Carmy restructures ownership of the restaurant. Sydney and his sister Natalie (Abby Elliott) each get 25%, with Jimmy holding 50%. Sydney insists that Richie get a cut too—and Carmy agrees.
But his parting words are what truly linger. “You’re the bear,” he tells Sydney. “You’re everything I’m not. And everything this place needs.”
It’s a moment of passing the torch—but also a full-circle moment that redefines who the show is really about.
Will There Be a Season 5?
FX hasn’t confirmed another season yet. The decision is entirely up to series creator Christopher Storer. It all depends on whether Storer has more story to tell, Chairman John Landgraf told to Variety.
Fans are left clinging to hope—and wondering if the show's silent message was always about more than food.
A Quiet Ending with a Loud Echo
The final moments aren’t flashy.
In the finale, Richie shares a memory of cruising by the lake with Carmy’s late brother. It was a simple, perfect moment—nothing fancy, just peace.
Perhaps that’s what Carmy’s chasing now. Something real. Something good.
The Bear may return. Or it may not. But one thing’s certain: this season reminded us that in life—just like in food—every second really does count.

