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 dadโs upbringing, and tries to make it work with his girlfriend Rachel (Noรซl Wells).
Dev has an impressively diverse collection of friends: Thereโs 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 arenโt quite ready (or quite sure if they want) to settle down and have kids.
In other words, the show fluently speaks millennialโwith iPhones, Uber, and the internet playing a realistically significant role in the charactersโ daily lives. Itโs 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: โReligionโ is beautifully done, examining Devโs lack of personal faith compared to his parentโs 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 2Pacโs โOnly God Can Judge Meโ soundtracks the first time Dev rebels and eats bacon. But โReligionโ stays balanced, also exploring the positive role church can play in someoneโs 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. Itโs a topic I havenโt seen tackled this well onscreen, which is extra impressive considering Azizโs real-life parentsโnon-actors, mind youโare playing themselves.
Perhaps my favorite of all is season twoโs Denise episode, โThanksgiving,โ which is essentially the story of her and Devโs 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 daughterโs journey to familial acceptance, and Dev being immersed into soul food.
Itโs also fun to watch Dev get put through the wringer as he uses Tinder to unsuccessfully date a slew of womenโa realistic portrayal of how dating nowadays truly is the worst. Along with series regulars like Danielle Brooks as Devโs 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 thatโs 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, itโs anything but niche. ![]()
