5 Reasons You Should Be Watching Master of None
I’ve been home sick with bronchitis for the last week, so by the time Friday rolled around and Master of None popped up on my Netflix suggestions, I was already pretty eager to give it a try. And when I did, I could not stop watching. And watching. All ten episodes. Twice. In two days. Created by Aziz Ansari and Alan Yang (who wrote for Parks & Recreation), Master of None follows Dev, played by Ansari, who’s making his way as a commercial actor in New York trying to date and figure out life at the same time. That sounds like a pedestrian premise, but it doesn’t matter—Master of None is not a show focused on story, but on the exploration of modern adulthood. And it has a tone that perfectly balances silly moments with meditations on deeper topics. It’s already drawn comparisons to Louie (the de rigueur parallel for any comedy show that deviates from traditional sitcom format—the same was said about Girls). But as you go deeper into season one, it’s clear Ansari and Yang are working out something entirely their own.
Here’s five reasons you should move Master of None to the top of your queue, stat.
1. It’s reliably funny even as it explores deeper themes
Like Louie, Master of None has a looseness to it that allows the show to explore many broader themes and travel into subjects that could easily be bummer territory—the sheer exhaustion brought from raising kids, aging parents and the sacrifices they made for their children, male privilege, the stereotyping of Indian Americans. But while it certainly strays—to its benefit—from traditional sitcom structure, Master of None never travels far from the laughs, reaping them either from the irony inherent in some of those more serious situations or from the just plain silly, like Dev’s Tom-Haverford-reminiscent enthusiasm for brunch foods and pastas.
2. It explores the cultural in-betweenness of being the child of immigrants
Episode 2, “Parents,” examines the relative privilege of people raised in the United States against that of their immigrant parents who worked hard to make them such inconsiderate numbskulls. The topic feels as fresh as it feels familiar to anyone with a diverse background. My mom immigrated to the U.S. in 1975, and I grew up in a community with second generation kids of every nationality. I’m white, so my experience doesn’t exactly track that of Dev and his best friend Brian (Kelvin Yu), but I still couldn’t get over how familiar their conversations about relating to their parents are—like how Brian’s father had to slaughter his pet chicken for dinner, and how Dev’s father worked in a zipper factory for two years so he could afford med school, or even how Dev is afraid to tell his traditional parents he’s living with his girlfriend. I’ve witnessed friends struggling through the same things for years, but never seen it represented—or even acknowledged—on television before.