From his stand-up comedy to his book Modern Romance to his hilarious Netflix series Master of None, Aziz Ansari always delivers a multicultural depiction of the millennial American experience. In season one, we watch as Dev (Ansari), a 30-year-old New York actor and first-generation American, refuses to speak in an Indian accent while auditioning for stereotypical Indian roles, contrasts his life to his dadโ€™s upbringing, and tries to make it work with his girlfriend Rachel (Noรซl Wells).

Dev has an impressively diverse collection of friends: Thereโ€™s Black lesbian Denise (Lena Waithe), his Asian friend Brian (Kelvin Yu), the super-tall and sensitive Arnold (Eric Wareheim), and fellow Indian actor Ravi (Ravi Patel). They all walk the line of maturity and wokeness in the information age, but they also arenโ€™t quite ready (or quite sure if they want) to settle down and have kids.

In other words, the show fluently speaks millennialโ€”with iPhones, Uber, and the internet playing a realistically significant role in the charactersโ€™ daily lives. Itโ€™s also refreshing to see a show that lets straight men be feminine, with scenes that feature Dev and Arnold discussing date deets while Arnold gets a routine pedicure.

What I love about Master of None is that each episode has a unique format, focusing on different characters and their backstories. Season two brings even more of that, and dials up the multicultural factor: The first two episodes, shot in black and white, are set in Italy with Dev fresh off his breakup with Rachel. In pursuing his passion for pasta, Dev takes a few weeks to learn how to make it by hand from a local shop in Rome. After Dev says goodbye to his new Italian friends, he returns to New York to become the host of a ridiculous baking competition show, Clash of the Cupcakes.

Four episodes in, season two is already concept-rich: โ€œReligionโ€ is beautifully done, examining Devโ€™s lack of personal faith compared to his parentโ€™s devout faith in Islam. Many can relate to Dev pretending to be more of a believer than he actually is in order to appease super-religious relatives; even more on point is when 2Pacโ€™s โ€œOnly God Can Judge Meโ€ soundtracks the first time Dev rebels and eats bacon. But โ€œReligionโ€ stays balanced, also exploring the positive role church can play in someoneโ€™s life, taking pains to note you can definitely be Muslim and not believe women are inferior, just as you can be Christian and not believe being gay is an abomination. Itโ€™s a topic I havenโ€™t seen tackled this well onscreen, which is extra impressive considering Azizโ€™s real-life parentsโ€”non-actors, mind youโ€”are playing themselves.

Perhaps my favorite of all is season twoโ€™s Denise episode, โ€œThanksgiving,โ€ which is essentially the story of her and Devโ€™s childhood friendship, and a telling of her coming-out story to her traditional-but-loving mom, played by Angela Bassett. The episode packs in coming-of-age lessons, a daughterโ€™s journey to familial acceptance, and Dev being immersed into soul food.

Itโ€™s also fun to watch Dev get put through the wringer as he uses Tinder to unsuccessfully date a slew of womenโ€”a realistic portrayal of how dating nowadays truly is the worst. Along with series regulars like Danielle Brooks as Devโ€™s agent, there are lots of hot cameos, from John Legend to Cedric the Entertainer to Aparna Nancherla.

There are also many laughs to be had, but season two has a much thicker romantic plotline, one thatโ€™s surprisingly thrilling as Dev falls for an unavailable woman. But while Master of None seems to be made for millennials, it also seems to be made for Gen-Xers, and romantics, and comedy fans, and foodies, and world citizens, and everybody. With a scope this wide, writing this good, and a cast this diverse, itโ€™s anything but niche. recommended

Tagged: