, a far outer suburb of Chicago, in the spring of 1992.) • The title of the episode is a reference to the film
Groundhog Day, directed by
Harold Ramis and starring
Bill Murray (both Chicagoans). Carmy also says "I got you" at various points during the season, addressing Tina, Sophie, Donna, and Sydney. Cracked.com writer Tara Ariano commented on the use of the film: "It's an allegory of, as [FX chief John]
Landgraf put it to
Vanity Fair, the 'stuckness' we may all feel from time to time. If the movie is being used as an
intertext here to make it very clear season three's wheel-spinning was intentional...good one? But maybe now Storer can spin his wheels like he's trying to drive himself and a screaming groundhog off a cliff and step on it." Abby Elliott's dad
Chris Elliott played cameraman Larry in
Groundhog Day. • The Ringer described the
Chicago Tribune review of the Bear restaurant as "not so much
bad as it is
disappointed, which always feels worse." Decider summarized the review as saying "that the place is trying too hard." The most important criticism seems to be the feeling of "culinary dissonance," which Computer translates as the restaurant's vibe being "harmonically fucked." Richie apologized for not recognizing the reviewer as a repeat guest, and Carmy apologized for changing the menu everyday, a reversal from his position at the beginning of season three, when, "reeling from a previous setback, [he] bullheadedly sets out to achieve a Michelin star. He create[d] an unsustainable menu with high-quality ingredients that change every day, and spends hours researching, developing and wasting expensive products." • In the Mikey flashback, Carmy mentions Omega Restaurant & Bakery in
Niles, Illinois and Homer's Ice Cream in
Wilmette, Illinois, but neither suburban location was filmed. • As he did in the season three episode "
Next," Carmy promises the Bears that the restaurant will get a starred rating in the
Michelin Guide to Chicago. • Richie calls the
Chicago Tribune reviewer a "
scustamad millennial ".
Scustamad is
Italian-American slang for someone with bad manners who is rude or otherwise cannot conduct themselves properly. In season one Richie called Sydney's reforms "
scustamad millennial bullshit". • Cicero and Computer reference the lyric "...the sound of her laughter may sing in your dreams" from the song "
Some Enchanted Evening" from the
1958 movie version of the
Rodgers and Hammerstein musical
South Pacific. • In a blink-and-you'll-miss-it shot near the Ebra-meets-Robot-Chuckie scene of the work montage in the second half of the episode, Carmy flips shut a journal with a dark blue cover, allowing the viewer a fractional glimpse of Sydney's
Coach K collage that was taped to the expo table in "
Omelette" and "
The Bear." Carmy, while working alone in the restaurant over the weekend in "
Tomorrow," took the collage for himself and pasted it inside the back cover of a notebook for safekeeping. ==Production==