logo
Create A Restaurant To Find Out Your "The Bear" Twin

Create A Restaurant To Find Out Your "The Bear" Twin

Buzz Feed13 hours ago
Attention fans of The Bear: It's time to give Carmy some culinary competition. Up for the challenge?
If your answer to the above is "Yes, chef," then let's get cooking! Build your very own restaurant from scratch, and we'll reveal which character from The Bear you would be in another timeline.
What are you waiting for? Customers are already lining up! Let's get started.
Stream The Bear on Hulu.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Popular '90s Actress, 49, Looks Back at First ‘Fuller House' Table Read With 10-Year-Old Photo
Popular '90s Actress, 49, Looks Back at First ‘Fuller House' Table Read With 10-Year-Old Photo

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Popular '90s Actress, 49, Looks Back at First ‘Fuller House' Table Read With 10-Year-Old Photo

Popular '90s Actress, 49, Looks Back at First 'Fuller House' Table Read With 10-Year-Old Photo originally appeared on Parade. On Wednesday, the actress known for playing Kimmy Gibbler on Full House posted an Instagram story of an old selfie with her co-stars from the hit 1990s sitcom, in honor of the first table read for its spinoff, Fuller House, which took place 10 years ago. The selfie featured original Full House cast members Jodie Sweetin, the late Bob Saget, Dave Coulier, Candace Cameron Bure and Scott Weinger. Fuller House, which aired on Netflix from 2016 to 2020, centered on D.J. Tanner-Fuller (Bure), now a widowed mother of three, who moves back into her childhood home in San Francisco. To help raise her sons, her sister Stephanie (Sweetin) and best friend Kimmy (Barber) also move in, along with Kimmy's teenage daughter, Ramona (Soni Bringas). "First table read for Fuller House - 10 years ago!" the 49-year-old actress wrote on top of the photo. "What?!?!" Bure, who played D.J. Tanner, reposted the selfie to her own Instagram story shortly after. Andrea Barber, who played Kimmy Gibbler in Full House, on her Instagram story this Wednesday — liz lindain (@lizlindain) July 17, 2025 Full House became a staple of '90s family television, and Fuller House introduced the beloved characters to a new generation, continuing the appeal of the Tanner family's story. Although Full House ended decades ago and Fuller House wrapped just a few years back, the cast from both the original show and its spinoff have remained close, often sharing heartfelt posts, reunions and celebrating milestones together. The popular sitcom originally aired on ABC from September 1987 to May 1995. Fans can watch all eight seasons of Full House on Hulu or HBO Max, as well as stream all five seasons of its spinoff, Fuller House, on Netflix. Popular '90s Actress, 49, Looks Back at First 'Fuller House' Table Read With 10-Year-Old Photo first appeared on Parade on Jul 17, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 17, 2025, where it first appeared.

Scandal-Ridden Fyre Festival Is Sold for $245,000 on eBay
Scandal-Ridden Fyre Festival Is Sold for $245,000 on eBay

New York Times

time7 hours ago

  • New York Times

Scandal-Ridden Fyre Festival Is Sold for $245,000 on eBay

It had billed itself as an unrivaled music festival experience, one that its organizers fancied would bring together jet-setters for an Instagram-worthy lineup of A-list acts and hedonism in paradise. Eat your hearts out, Coachella and Burning Man. But after ignominiously failing to deliver on lofty promises, ones that resulted in prison time for the event's founder and documentaries by Netflix and Hulu, the scandal-ridden Fyre Festival sold its branding rights on Tuesday via the auction website eBay. It did not exactly go out in a blaze of glory — more like a whimper — with an unidentified buyer paying $245,300 to take over the brand and its intellectual property rights from Billy McFarland, 33, a so-called 'big-time millennial grifter.' Still, the sale raised a fundamental question: Why would anyone would pay any amount to inherit a brand with such a dubious reputation? According the eBay listing, 175 bids had been placed in about a week on the auction site, where a description about the marketing opportunities associated with the Fyre Festival was presented in familiar grandiose terms. 'FYRE isn't just a name — it's a global attention engine,' the listing said. The listing was not eligible for eBay's purchase protection programs, the auction site advised. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store