How Netflix’s “Beef” Captures Asian American Men, Friendship

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How Netflix’s “Beef” Captures Asian American Men, Friendship


Beef. Steven Yeun as Danny in episode 101 of Beef. Cr. Andrew Cooper/Netflix © 2023

The sharp improve in Asian illustration in motion pictures and TV exhibits has been the stuff of celebration in recent times, and for good purpose. But whereas “Crazy Rich Asians” could also be a caricature of utmost wealth, and “Everything Everywhere All at Once” is totally bizarre (in all the correct methods), Netflix’s “Beef,” starring Ali Wong and Steven Yeun, is grounded in a relatable actuality. Even if issues spiral approach uncontrolled because the sequence progresses.

There is a couple of approach to “be a person” in trendy Asian American tradition.

Growing up within the Eighties and ’90s, it was uncommon if I noticed one other Asian male face on display. And if I did, he was most frequently a single-faceted secondary character. He’d be the token Asian amongst a bunch of predominantly white buddies, like Ke Huy Quan’s Data in “The Goonies.” He in all probability had an accent and was normally nerdy. He was a trope, performed for laughs.

As a second-generation immigrant, I by no means actually related with Asian tales in Asia, both. The “Young and Dangerous” crime drama sequence is nice, however that is not me. I did not see myself in these characters and people conditions.

More lately, although, we’re seeing increasingly Asian American and Asian Canadian tales being instructed. In motion pictures like “The Farewell” and “Turning Red,” and in TV sitcoms like “Kim’s Convenience” and “Fresh Off the Boat,” the youngsters of immigrants attempt to navigate two cultures on the identical time. They play basketball and take heed to hip-hop, however are nonetheless sure to cultural expectations from their dad and mom and prolonged household. They’re by no means absolutely American, nor are they ever absolutely Asian. They’re caught in between.

Beef. (L to R) Rekstizzy as Bobby, Andrew Santino as Michael, Steven Yeun as Danny, Young Mazino as Paul in episode 106 of Beef. Cr. Andrew Cooper/Netflix © 2023

This underpins the depiction of Asian masculinity in Lee Sung Jin’s “Beef”; it units the stage for what it means to be an Asian American man at present in Western society. Collectively, Danny, Paul, George, Isaac, and Edwin present us there may be a couple of approach to “be a person” in trendy Asian American tradition.

Danny Cho, performed by Steven Yeun, is an entire, complicated human being. He is not simply “the Asian man.” He’s a struggling common Joe who retains making an attempt to do the correct factor, however retains messing issues up. Like so many different Asian Americans, he struggles to be “the great son” for his dad and mom. Unspoken filial piety is a given, as a result of Asian households do not speak about that stuff. It’s all assumed, and that is why Danny, because the eldest son, feels a lot stress to construct a brand new dwelling for his people.

Because “Beef” is ready to transfer past tokenism, it’s also capable of transfer previous the stereotypes of Asian male pacificism and the mannequin minority narrative. David Choe’s Isaac is a morally suspect “cool hustler.” While he clearly will get mad, his anger nearly feels restrained. Like he is holding one thing again. Truly, all the characters show some type of repressed emotion.

For my half, rising up, I used to be all the time taught to maintain my head down and never draw undue consideration to myself. It was an unstated rule. Violent, public outbursts simply weren’t a factor. So, the way in which Danny retreats into himself, struggling alone, is remarkably relatable. The passive-aggressive methods he lashes again — like within the rest room scene on the finish of the primary episode — really feel true to the Asian American expertise. Looking up the least painful approach to kill your self, alone at nighttime, is one other instance.

We must let go of that generational trauma, that repressed anger.

If anybody asks, Danny says he is doing high quality, even though he is clearly not. He would not understand how he’ll handle, or sort things, however he is bent on figuring it out himself. Even if he retains failing. Ali Wong’s Amy maybe mentioned it greatest: “I hate pretending that I do not hate issues.” We’re anticipated to placed on a present of constructive humility, even once we’re utterly falling aside inside. Not even 4 rooster sandwiches from one of the best Burger King in LA can fill the void.

Maybe that is why the extra excessive outbursts in “Beef” are so cathartic. We’re residing vicariously by these characters. I’d by no means have the ability to yell at somebody in the course of a parking zone myself.

And these characters supply us dimension. Amy’s husband, George, performed by Joseph Lee, may be the primary Asian stay-at-home dad I’ve ever seen on TV. Then, we have now Danny’s brother, Paul, performed by Young Mazino. We would possibly first understand him as dumb and lazy. He’s referred to as an f-ing little one. But all he desires is to be seen. Who cannot relate to that?

Paul and Danny additionally present how concord works in culturally particular methods. Even in battle, after a cooling-off interval, household continues to come back first. They wish to do proper by each other, even when they’re each remarkably flawed of their approaches. Despite all of it, constructing animosity by no means materializes into precise violence.

Beef. (L to R) Young Mazino as Paul, Steven Yeun as Danny in episode 104 of Beef. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2023

Indeed, all of the characters present that we battle in our personal approach. And all of us really feel like failures in our personal approach, too, even picture-perfect Edwin (Justin H. Min). Maybe we’re all burdened with an inferiority complicated.

For me, even the “friendship” between George and “Zane,” which is predicated on false pretenses, represents Asian male friendship objectives. They speak brazenly with each other about their emotions. We get the impression that the emotional assist is real (even when it is clearly not). In one other life, they may have been actual buddies. They’re two actual folks connecting over the struggles of their shared Asian American humanity, regardless of large variations in life-style and upbringing.

But, it isn’t actual. Nothing lasts. Everything fades.

Perhaps that is the true take-home lesson from all of this. “Beef” is about studying to let go. We must let go of that generational trauma, that repressed anger, all these expectations positioned on us by the mannequin minority delusion. That approach, we will simply kick it with the blokes, take the wheel, and drive for some time.



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