Man I absolutely love and respect Tony and everything he said within his books and interviews. He was one of the most relatable, engaging writers I’ve ever had the pleasure of exploring the works of. I sorely miss him as if I knew him, thinking about his passing moves me to tears often. There’s such a bitter sadness seeing him in front of flashing cameras up on a podium, after having read about how much he hated the thing he eventually became through his popularity... he often mentioned in his books how he felt giving the same “never order fish on a Monday” talks over and over again.. I hope he’s enjoying a couple cold ones on a warm beach somewhere in heaven, no cameras, no forced small talk, just good food and good company. Peace and love to anyone struggling with their mental health. You are always loved. And thank you to Tony for sharing a fierce love of all foods and their power to transcend language and borders. You are greatly missed.
And how highly does he really regard the industry he’s commenting on? And we’re supposed to be surprised at the state of things? This interpretation is cute and all and looks great on film, but people are actually hurting. Time for change. No more “misfits”. We are here.
An absolute genius. He loved his craft and he loved food. One of the few chefs I've seen that could enjoy food in a Michelin star restaurant as much as in a street cart. Humility, that's what made him great.
The power of Anthony Bourdain lies in the fact that he could have been an exemplary, convincing writer in whatever field he chose, no matter how nefarious. We should rejoice that he chose to write about his passion and not for strategic reasons.
His books brought me through my chef aducation back in Germany, when I hated my self and the situation I got put into seems unmanageable, Anthony was sitting on my shoulder and helped me through,
I love it when he rolls over to the divider to shut down the talking. That's direct disrespect, and I love that Bourdain doesn't put up with that sh**. That's the self-respect that a guy like Bourdain demanded.
Anthony is absolutely right on describing what it's like being a cook or chef in a restaurant. Coming up from a dishwasher to the lead sous chef in a fine dining restaurant it's exactly what he said. It's hard asf, and at the end of every service you did a full roller coaster of emotions and physical work that you do feel great that you made it thru another night of busy service and customers are full and happy. Did it for 15 years and loved it but had other serious choices to make. Still love cooking but at home now. God bless Tony and may he inspire in heaven as he has done here on earth.
As a chef Anthony makes you feel like a rockstar. He says “you feel like the man on the subway. You feel like you deserve that seat” I tell every chef I meet that we are rockstars. We aren’t doctors or lawyers but we do a lot for people. We can heal people and help them just by serving them a plate…. That’s punk rock
Wish i had been able to hear this when i was offered the head chef positiion at a new restraunt. Yes i could cook...yes i could teach...but i had no idea of how to hire...or to pull a kitchen together. I had been a one man band in a restraunt 20 years before ,but never to culinary school and never in a kitchen that had more than one cook doing it all. I turned down the job, but i will always wonder,..could i have "done" it. I miss Mr.Bourdain....RIP.
@@hikelifeforwardresearchgroup great. Hope you find a way to lead a kitchen without driving yourself into the ground. I think it's better than being flat in bed for the rest of your life ( like me) thinking wouda, shoulda,, coulda.....horray!
You’re sorely missed Tony. In hindsight I can see the early signs of depression or him hating himself. His shirt and “hang yourself in the shower” along with his other references of death and dying on his shows. Thanks for showing the world that we can all come together over food.
JB B Yeah, watch Parts Unknown Season 7 Ep 8 Argentina. He ends up going to a therapist and reveals a lot about how he actually feels. It’s really insightful.
I always thought he simply had a macabre sense of humour - and I'm sure he did. But the other side of that coin is the realisation he might have thrown statements like that out so causally because he just never thought to question whether suicidal thoughts weren't something everyone deals with.
Miss this guy and Byon Bernstein so much. I try to take their painful passings as a sign to live on and experience new life, culture and ideas every day. Fantastic speech that really parallels both service industries, restaurants and the military.
Listening to him reminds me of the proverb "“The flame that burns twice as bright burns half as long”. RIP. Can anyone imagine how ferocious he would have been in another career?
As great as a writer and television personality, and when he speaks of kitchens with such passion, he never returned to work in one side by side with his cooks everyday. Stardom or success can never fill a emptiness , I too was saddened by his death, I was a addict and finally got clean. Today my life is a dream compared to before.
I wish that Bourdain had remained in the kitchen, and just continued to write books on the side. He still could have done a little television work as well, but traditional cultures were correct in their belief that the camera steals the soul.
When I was learning the ins n outs of the broiler I struggled real bad. I couldn't touch temp, the thermometer threw me off... I would have overcooks and refires.... I wondered am i cut out for this? A coworker recommended I read kitchen confidential. I was hooked. Such a funny but true story. And when I made it to the part where he talked about the broiler I was like "what I do is pretty cool"
Been in the biz all my life, amish people say im the toughest they've ever met. I wake earlier, work harder, play harder, smarter or in their words clever, and eat more then anyone on their farm.. After bankruptcy from greedy investors and now homeless have had the greatest experiences and insights to life from my upper middle class upbringing an a life worth reflection and to be proud of an im not done at 55.. I wish he was alive to spew hatred of this standard American diet and how the gov is pulling this bull shot on gmo, pesticides, oh an their new definition of natural flavors... 14 yrs culinary 4 yrs b&p wholesale high end dessert biz, chocolatier, edibles biz in denver 5 yrs. Catering, hang out music festival in Alabama, country clubs ny fl, hotels white table cloth itailian restaurant.. My pinnical was owning a restaurant on south beach and how i got it .. Culinary school b& p school too.. I did marry a mexican woman for 6 yrs and 5 step kids an she owned 3 double wides an rented to other first gen. An saw whow they lived.. Then, long story, got deported when dad passed and mom went to❤ altzimers Anyway, tony is holding back on the stories and i will miss everything about him Except most of his tv but his books an interviews are amazing with behind the scenes craziness.. Rest in peace ✌️ sir.. I am a firm believer that he did not kill himself and he got to close to the Hollywood truth and iv seen his depression vids but still noóo..
"There are two types of people in the world... People who like the relentless futility, heat, pressure, the madness, insanity of restaurant kitchens... and then there's everybody else. Normal people, who don't find that attractive" Miss this guy's wisdom & humor. ❤❤❤
Lol at Bourdain talking about how to make a stock. There is literally an episode where he reveals that he cheated in cooking school by carrying chicken stock in his pocket so that he didn't have to cook so long by making it from scratch. ;)
They’re a dry crowd - at least in the beginning. I’ll continue and see how it goes. I love Bourdain! Plus, his chapter on the interviews he did in lean years is maybe my fave chapter (Kitchen Confidential) - I take lessons from that. (Mission to Tokyo also fave chapter)
Theory of alternate principle delivered on his own style … I love the way he said about employee employer relationship is “don’t care who you are , it’s what do your u Do” Missing a pure genius
The way thomas Keller ran his entire kitchen was ( hopefully still is) just AMAZING. I would have loved to worked in The French Laundry...instead I worked less than 100 feet from my garden/ orchard/ goat barn. But Keller is GOD.
I only have 1 question: Why did you leave us? You have left such a huge, gaping hole in so many lives and in this brutal, insane industry. I miss you so much.
It makes me so sad to watch him now and know what lay ahead. I think he suffered from the same internal demons as Kurt Cobain. There was an insecurity in his perfectionism that kept driving him to keep outdoing himself, and at some point he just realized it wasn't worth it anymore. He should have just moved to Vietnam, which he loved, and chilled for a few years and then understood just being himself was enough. Asia broke him at a vulnerable point in his life and she didn't realize what she was doing to him, at exactly the wrong time.
The highest number of obese people in the world distinction wasn't earned by people who consume a variety of high quality food. Nearly 20 years later, we still fly that flag (though with smaller margins, many countries catching up) on a pillar of unavailability, inaccessibilty, and utter lack of knowledge of the variety of high quality food that would spare us this fate. Real education and sound guidance on nutrition and health has a very long way to go.
After Covid there has been a shift toward equal pay throughout the restaurant.. front and back making the same wages/tip share. I think it's worked wonders for camaraderie.
I was young getting into the kitchen but all my chefs n Sous chef were old school, real pirates, yelling crusing throwing pots n pans, dumping ur dishes if it wasn't to par!!! baptized in fire but no longer is acceptable for the current atmosphere
This is a good time-capsule showing what it was like for people to have a spine and good work ethic. Sadly, no spine and no work ethic is the trend in 2021.
im 18, a few months in as a line cook doing saute now, i worked from plateu, cold, hot and i really love it. cooking feels second nature to me and i hope my love for it never fades.
well in my opinion it deppend by how individuals react trough tough situations. me myself im 22, i've been working in hospitality industry since 17. Yes the pressure are immense, but otherwise there's a self archievement when i did a good job somehow, especially when we got guests compliment/apreciation. note : sorry for the bad english :)
Anthony was a humanist. To all of us cooks he was the ultimate underdog who went to the top and we all lived vicariously through him.
Doesn’t say much for humanism given that he defended his pedophile girlfriend then killed himself lol
Man I absolutely love and respect Tony and everything he said within his books and interviews. He was one of the most relatable, engaging writers I’ve ever had the pleasure of exploring the works of. I sorely miss him as if I knew him, thinking about his passing moves me to tears often. There’s such a bitter sadness seeing him in front of flashing cameras up on a podium, after having read about how much he hated the thing he eventually became through his popularity... he often mentioned in his books how he felt giving the same “never order fish on a Monday” talks over and over again.. I hope he’s enjoying a couple cold ones on a warm beach somewhere in heaven, no cameras, no forced small talk, just good food and good company. Peace and love to anyone struggling with their mental health. You are always loved. And thank you to Tony for sharing a fierce love of all foods and their power to transcend language and borders. You are greatly missed.
The GOAT at story telling and getting the point across in a funny and relatable way
RE z2adawv wx
💯🥩❤️
Anthony's commentary on who has been cooking in America for a long time (even today in 2021) is spot on.
Not just america it's the same here in Scotland... and what a perfectly mad bunch of misfits we are !
And how highly does he really regard the industry he’s commenting on? And we’re supposed to be surprised at the state of things? This interpretation is cute and all and looks great on film, but people are actually hurting. Time for change. No more “misfits”. We are here.
Fn A!!
@@MarcoGonzalez-ix2tp I see what you mean.
Eh I get it and not disagreement on his point, but I've worked plenty of restaurants with white folks back of house .
"the gentle art of hazing" Tony has an unparalleled way with words
An absolute genius. He loved his craft and he loved food. One of the few chefs I've seen that could enjoy food in a Michelin star restaurant as much as in a street cart. Humility, that's what made him great.
The power of Anthony Bourdain lies in the fact that he could have been an exemplary, convincing writer in whatever field he chose, no matter how nefarious. We should rejoice that he chose to write about his passion and not for strategic reasons.
His books brought me through my chef aducation back in Germany, when I hated my self and the situation I got put into seems unmanageable, Anthony was sitting on my shoulder and helped me through,
What books in particular if I may ask?
Best. Leadership. Lecture. Ever.
A lecture to all of us cooks or chefs.
Truly a master, I admire you wherever you are Anthony, you've been impactful in many lifes.
I love it when he rolls over to the divider to shut down the talking. That's direct disrespect, and I love that Bourdain doesn't put up with that sh**. That's the self-respect that a guy like Bourdain demanded.
How does someone demand "self-respect"? Makes no sense. 🤔
@@itannoysme3348 you don't work in Hospitality, do you?
@@konne16regardless, self respect is self earned so one cannot demand it of others because it’s within themself.
Fine sense of humour, direct, honest and smart. Shame he is not around but he left a lot of interesting stuff and people behind.
My Hero Chef, RIP...
Every cook should listen to this...
Anthony is absolutely right on describing what it's like being a cook or chef in a restaurant. Coming up from a dishwasher to the lead sous chef in a fine dining restaurant it's exactly what he said. It's hard asf, and at the end of every service you did a full roller coaster of emotions and physical work that you do feel great that you made it thru another night of busy service and customers are full and happy. Did it for 15 years and loved it but had other serious choices to make. Still love cooking but at home now. God bless Tony and may he inspire in heaven as he has done here on earth.
This is knowledge for life not just working a restaurant.
As a chef Anthony makes you feel like a rockstar. He says “you feel like the man on the subway. You feel like you deserve that seat” I tell every chef I meet that we are rockstars. We aren’t doctors or lawyers but we do a lot for people. We can heal people and help them just by serving them a plate…. That’s punk rock
Wish i had been able to hear this when i was offered the head chef positiion at a new restraunt. Yes i could cook...yes i could teach...but i had no idea of how to hire...or to pull a kitchen together. I had been a one man band in a restraunt 20 years before ,but never to culinary school and never in a kitchen that had more than one cook doing it all. I turned down the job, but i will always wonder,..could i have "done" it. I miss Mr.Bourdain....RIP.
I'm in that same situation now, but I said yes now I'm trying to prepare myself for the challenge of leadership 🤞🙏
@@hikelifeforwardresearchgroup great. Hope you find a way to lead a kitchen without driving yourself into the ground. I think it's better than being flat in bed for the rest of your life ( like me) thinking wouda, shoulda,, coulda.....horray!
@@marjoriejohnson6535 thank you for your kind words 🙏
You’re sorely missed Tony. In hindsight I can see the early signs of depression or him hating himself. His shirt and “hang yourself in the shower” along with his other references of death and dying on his shows. Thanks for showing the world that we can all come together over food.
I noticed that too…
I think he was tired and largely affected by his travels. That's what traveling does to the human soul.
JB B Yeah, watch Parts Unknown Season 7 Ep 8 Argentina. He ends up going to a therapist and reveals a lot about how he actually feels. It’s really insightful.
@@jbb729 traveling is nourishment for the soul.
I always thought he simply had a macabre sense of humour - and I'm sure he did. But the other side of that coin is the realisation he might have thrown statements like that out so causally because he just never thought to question whether suicidal thoughts weren't something everyone deals with.
Miss this guy and Byon Bernstein so much. I try to take their painful passings as a sign to live on and experience new life, culture and ideas every day. Fantastic speech that really parallels both service industries, restaurants and the military.
Listening to him reminds me of the proverb "“The flame that burns twice as bright burns half as long”. RIP. Can anyone imagine how ferocious he would have been in another career?
This is the greatest talk I’ve ever watched.
As great as a writer and television personality, and when he speaks of kitchens with such passion, he never returned to work in one side by side with his cooks everyday. Stardom or success can never fill a emptiness , I too was saddened by his death, I was a addict and finally got clean. Today my life is a dream compared to before.
I wish that Bourdain had remained in the kitchen, and just continued to write books on the side. He still could have done a little television work as well, but traditional cultures were correct in their belief that the camera steals the soul.
We're incredibly lucky to have this man's teachings recorded in audio and video format.
Love and miss his voice so much…
He was a rock star.
When I was learning the ins n outs of the broiler I struggled real bad. I couldn't touch temp, the thermometer threw me off... I would have overcooks and refires.... I wondered am i cut out for this? A coworker recommended I read kitchen confidential. I was hooked. Such a funny but true story. And when I made it to the part where he talked about the broiler I was like "what I do is pretty cool"
He had such great insight and was very gifted with expressing it in words and expressions
The whole time I listened to this, I thought, “yup, this was definitely recorded in 2006.” 😂
13:12 "I can't have a simmering resentment that's just waiting for one overcooked order of flounder to set off Apocalypse Now" 😂😂
Been in the biz all my life, amish people say im the toughest they've ever met.
I wake earlier, work harder, play harder, smarter or in their words clever, and eat more then anyone on their farm..
After bankruptcy from greedy investors and now homeless have had the greatest experiences and insights to life from my upper middle class upbringing an a life worth reflection and to be proud of an im not done at 55..
I wish he was alive to spew hatred of this standard American diet and how the gov is pulling this bull shot on gmo, pesticides, oh an their new definition of natural flavors...
14 yrs culinary 4 yrs b&p wholesale high end dessert biz, chocolatier, edibles biz in denver 5 yrs. Catering, hang out music festival in Alabama, country clubs ny fl, hotels white table cloth itailian restaurant..
My pinnical was owning a restaurant on south beach and how i got it ..
Culinary school b& p school too..
I did marry a mexican woman for 6 yrs and 5 step kids an she owned 3 double wides an rented to other first gen. An saw whow they lived..
Then, long story, got deported when dad passed and mom went to❤ altzimers
Anyway, tony is holding back on the stories and i will miss everything about him
Except most of his tv but his books an interviews are amazing with behind the scenes craziness..
Rest in peace ✌️ sir..
I am a firm believer that he did not kill himself and he got to close to the Hollywood truth and iv seen his depression vids but still noóo..
Miss this dude so much
I need this, thank you buddy!
A great listen. Take notes.
We all miss Tony so much ♥️
my jersey brother miss you n your show my fave
Every time he casually mentions hanging in the shower, my neck gets chills. Anthony mentioned hanging multiple times before his death. It's eerie.
Chef life is sweet and sour. Love it!
You are lovely! I miss him so much!
This man had passion. He did not off himself. #endure
Tony, I didn’t cook until you were gone but in part, it’s for you.
You really can't understate how many chefs today were inspired by this man to join the profession.
Bourdain explains the kitchen system and leadership well. I miss this man. 👨🍳🔪🍳
Yes food is the best way to learn about others and it is the most important thing to bring people together. As usual Tony is right.
As a lifelong misfit of the kitchen/restaurant life (happily I might add) I agree 💯 15:59 👌🏻
Hell yeah I miss working in a kitchen
Great talk with some interesting questions at the end. I miss this man.
Thanks for sharing.
"There are two types of people in the world... People who like the relentless futility, heat, pressure, the madness, insanity of restaurant kitchens... and then there's everybody else. Normal people, who don't find that attractive" Miss this guy's wisdom & humor. ❤❤❤
Also I was a server for almost 16yrs... miss it!
Awesome human being
Lol at Bourdain talking about how to make a stock. There is literally an episode where he reveals that he cheated in cooking school by carrying chicken stock in his pocket so that he didn't have to cook so long by making it from scratch. ;)
I miss Tony so much! 😭
I have al love/hate relationship with the restaurant business but its always been there for me. If and when im in it?...im in it all the way.
We miss you more than you could know.
Unquestionably the greatest of all time. The legend of our generation! He does mention that thought of hanging at 4th min into this video
Much respect this guy knows
MISS SEEING YOU MAN , ENJOYED YOU FOR YEARS ! THE ONES THAT TOOK U WILL GET THEIR JUST DESSERTS IN THE END GO IN PEACE
People who want to land managerial positions should watch this, and read kitchen confidential. Years later this is still relevant
What a master!
They’re a dry crowd - at least in the beginning. I’ll continue and see how it goes.
I love Bourdain!
Plus, his chapter on the interviews he did in lean years is maybe my fave chapter (Kitchen Confidential) - I take lessons from that.
(Mission to Tokyo also fave chapter)
We love you 🧬
You would be shocked how many of these lessons apply working in surgery. Just imagine the surgeon is the chef and the scrub tech is the cook
I miss him so very much. The World lost a huge person. 😢❤
Tony was just built different! Love his unfiltered honesty!
Theory of alternate principle delivered on his own style … I love the way he said about employee employer relationship is “don’t care who you are , it’s what do your u Do” Missing a pure genius
It's a great talk about what it is to be a cook.
FACTS, Tony!! RIP…
Thanks Tony :-)
Gotta love that man
2024 is wild. Kitchens have changed a little. But so accurate still. ❤ R.I.P.
I'm actually addicted to Kitchen Confidential
I lived this book. It is the truth.
audience did not pass the vibe check
"Hang yourself in the shower" at 4:13...the idea was already in his head :(
Exactly hit me in my stomach hearing it from him
He spoke a lot of the drawbacks of being in a high pressure position, but he also enjoyed many things and found ways to be happy
The one and only
The way thomas Keller ran his entire kitchen was ( hopefully still is) just AMAZING. I would have loved to worked in The French Laundry...instead I worked less than 100 feet from my garden/ orchard/ goat barn. But Keller is GOD.
So good 👍👍
I only have 1 question: Why did you leave us? You have left such a huge, gaping hole in so many lives and in this brutal, insane industry. I miss you so much.
OMG!! Did he really say that? A reminder to really listen to people. His demise foretold. It makes me sad. I'm so sorry Anthony.
I caught that too 😢
Yes, he said that. Many MANY times over the years. Books, shows, tv…
Genius man!
You shorted us, sir.
Dustin Freely
So casually confident and casually independent. How far from his emotional indentiture when he was taken down.
EXCELLENT!
It makes me so sad to watch him now and know what lay ahead. I think he suffered from the same internal demons as Kurt Cobain. There was an insecurity in his perfectionism that kept driving him to keep outdoing himself, and at some point he just realized it wasn't worth it anymore. He should have just moved to Vietnam, which he loved, and chilled for a few years and then understood just being himself was enough. Asia broke him at a vulnerable point in his life and she didn't realize what she was doing to him, at exactly the wrong time.
Brutal with the honestly if it it makes you feel a little angry than he’s done his job and it’s relative to you my man chef tony
The highest number of obese people in the world distinction wasn't earned by people who consume a variety of high quality food. Nearly 20 years later, we still fly that flag (though with smaller margins, many countries catching up) on a pillar of unavailability, inaccessibilty, and utter lack of knowledge of the variety of high quality food that would spare us this fate. Real education and sound guidance on nutrition and health has a very long way to go.
After Covid there has been a shift toward equal pay throughout the restaurant.. front and back making the same wages/tip share. I think it's worked wonders for camaraderie.
We fucking miss you Tony- from everyone
I have a friend who is a rockstar kitchen manager chef and one of the cooliest mfers ive ever know. Reminds me a bit like tony
ALL chefs need to see this
Aspiring chef ✋
18:16
Awesome.
Gold
I was young getting into the kitchen but all my chefs n Sous chef were old school, real pirates, yelling crusing throwing pots n pans, dumping ur dishes if it wasn't to par!!! baptized in fire but no longer is acceptable for the current atmosphere
brother have you been in a kitchen recently it is still exactly like this
Give me a good farm cook every day...but they are hard to find...
I’m probably going to watch this multiple times and use it as a Bible
@26:10 Is spot on
"I can teach cooking, I cannot teach character"
This is a good time-capsule showing what it was like for people to have a spine and good work ethic. Sadly, no spine and no work ethic is the trend in 2021.
Just narcissism, materialism, and entitlement to an easy life.
You obviously haven't worked in any kitchens recently.
The only kitchens I worked in that had bad chemistry, Chefs who were not cooks, resentment and backbiting, were big hotel kitchens.
"you're not thirsty, you're fucked up" LMAO
he reminds me of bojack horseman
He didn’t know about surveillance cameras. Owners treat their staff like robots.
Never work in a restaurant unless you wanna be upset long term
im 18, a few months in as a line cook doing saute now, i worked from plateu, cold, hot and i really love it. cooking feels second nature to me and i hope my love for it never fades.
well in my opinion it deppend by how individuals react trough tough situations.
me myself im 22, i've been working in hospitality industry since 17. Yes the pressure are immense, but otherwise there's a self archievement when i did a good job somehow, especially when we got guests compliment/apreciation.
note : sorry for the bad english :)
Genius