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It has new couples and new beef, but this dramedy is as twisted and delicious as ever | Beef seas…

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It has new couples and new beef, but this dramedy is as twisted and delicious as ever

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If rage provided the connective tissue of season one of Lee Sung Jin’s series Beef, in which the enmity between Steven Yeun’s Danny and Ali Wong’s Amy spiralled ever more intensely from a minor altercation in a car park, season two is all about envy.

It opens with a scene of smarmy self-satisfaction, with Josh Martin (Oscar Isaac) thanking the guests at a country club fundraiser for their contributions to saving the frogs, and paying special tribute to his interior designer wife, Lindsay Crane-Martin (Carey Mulligan), “who helped put this thing together”.

Beef season two review – the best show on TV becomes an unlovable White Lotus rip-off

Carey Mulligan and Oscar Isaac are a miserable couple who run a country club and get blackmailed in a rich v poor potboiler that has been done so much better before – not least in the stunning first series. What a shame

We may have to start calling it White Lotus Derangement Syndrome. This is a condition spreading through the television commissioning system since Mike White debuted his brilliant anthology series five years ago, whereby drama is produced by setting poorer Americans alongside richer Americans in a location the latter choose to come to and the former can’t escape. In The White Lotus, they are the staff and guests at a variety of luxury resorts. In Sirens, the personal assistants of kabillionaires. In whatever Nicole Kidman is in they can be single mothers with children at assisted places at schools with the cashmere-clad elite, servants to expats nursing secret sadnesses in luxurious apartments, masseuses and other service providers at exclusive spa retreats, or exploited or sexually harassed nannies to people who think nothing of exploiting or harassing their nannies. In non-Kidman derivatives, the dogged blue collar viewer-avatars can also include cops, struggling novelists or academics. Unless the academic is a tenured professor, in which case the underdog becomes a sexually harassed student, who should probably unionise with the nannies.

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Warring couples keep 'Beef' juicy: Season 2 review

Let's get your biggest question out of the way: Does Season 2 of Lee Sung Jin's anthology series Beef surpass the highs of Season 1?

It does not, but that doesn't mean the season is a disappointment. Season 1 set an extraordinarily high bar for any follow-up to clear, and Lee does his best to clear it by going bigger than before. In Season 2, the people involved in the show's titular beef have multiplied. Instead of two people going head-to-head like Steven Yeun and Ali Wong did in Season 1, Beef Season 2 throws two couples in the arena, played by Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, Charles Melton, and Cailee Spaeny. It also goes international, spinning a tale of cover-ups and corruption that will take its rage-fueled antics all the way to Seoul, South Korea.

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