Master of None

Master of None
Genre Comedy-drama
Created by
Starring
Composer(s)
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 20 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
Producer(s) Igor Srubshchik
Production location(s) New York City[1]
Modena[2]
Cinematography Mark Schwartzbard
Editor(s)
  • Jennifer Lilly
  • Suzy Elmiger
  • Daniel Haworth
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time 21–57 minutes
Production company(s)
Distributor Netflix
Release
Original network Netflix
Picture format 4K (2.35:1 UHDTV)
Audio format Dolby Digital 5.1 with Descriptive Video Service track
Original release November 6, 2015 (2015-11-06) – May 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)

Master of None is an American comedy-drama web television series, which was released for streaming on November 6, 2015, on Netflix.[3] The series was created by Aziz Ansari and Alan Yang, and stars Ansari in the lead role of Dev Shah, a 30-year-old actor, mostly following his romantic, professional, and cultural experiences. The first season was set in New York City, and consisted of ten episodes.[4][5] The second season, which takes place in Italy and New York, consists of ten episodes and was released on May 12, 2017.[6]

Master of None has won three Emmy Awards and a Golden Globe. The series has received critical acclaim, appeared on multiple year-end top ten lists, and received multiple awards and nominations.

Conception

The show's title alludes to the figure of speech, "Jack of all trades, master of none"[7] and was originally suggested by Ansari.[8] The series later incorporated a song of the same name by Beach House.[9][10] Ansari said it took months to come up with the show's title and he and Yang did not ultimately agree on it until all of the episodes were completed.[11]

Cast

  • Aziz Ansari as Dev Shah, a commercial actor whose best-known work was a Go-Gurt commercial.[12][13]
  • Noël Wells as Rachel Silva, Dev's primary romantic interest in the first season. Rachel works as a music publicist.[14][15][16][17]
  • Eric Wareheim as Arnold Baumheiser, Dev's friend who Ansari describes as the "token white friend". Wareheim notes his character's friendship is based on his real-life friendship with Ansari as they both enjoy eating.[15][16][18] The role was originally set to be played by Harris Wittels before his death in February 2015.[19]
  • Kelvin Yu as Brian Chang, Dev's friend who is the son of Taiwanese immigrants.[15][18][20] An interview with Yu in Vulture.com noted that Brian represented the "onscreen version of co-creator Alan Yang, Dev's chill, super-good-looking friend" and that he was a "hottie".[21]
  • Lena Waithe as Denise, Dev's friend, who is a lesbian.[15][18] In an Entertainment Weekly interview, Waithe said that her character was not originally intended to be African-American or gay but that Ansari wanted Denise's personality to reflect Waithe's own, so they rewrote her part.[16]
  • Alessandra Mastronardi as Francesca, a friend and eventual romantic interest Dev meets in Italy in the second season. She later visits him in New York.[22][23]

Also making recurring appearances in the series are Todd Barry, who plays a movie director named Todd;[24] Colin Salmon, who plays a fictionalized version of himself;[25] H. Jon Benjamin as Benjamin, an acting colleague on the film The Sickening; Leonard Ouzts as Lawrence, the producer of Clash of the Cupcakes in the second season; and Ansari's real-life parents Shoukath and Fatima, who play Dev's parents.[26][27] There have been guest appearances by Danielle Brooks, Claire Danes, David Krumholtz, Noah Emmerich, Bobby Cannavale, John Legend, Kym Whitley, Raven-Symoné, Riccardo Scamarcio, Clare-Hope Ashitey, and Angela Bassett.[11][28][29][30]

Episodes

Season 1 (2015)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release dateProd.
code[31]
11"Plan B"James PonsoldtAziz Ansari & Alan YangNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)101
Dev hooks up with a girl named Rachel, though their night ends awkwardly after his condom breaks during sex. Later on, Dev and his friend Arnold attend the birthday party of their friend's one-year-old son. He runs into another friend Amanda and her kids there and babysits them for a while. Already 30, he begins to wonder if he might want kids someday. In the end, he decides that for now he enjoys being childless.
22"Parents"Aziz AnsariAziz Ansari & Alan YangNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)102
After auditioning for a movie called The Sickening, Dev and his friend Brian discuss how their entire lives are the way they are because their immigrant parents sacrificed everything to move to America. They thank them by taking them to dinner, and discover the harshness of the lives they went through. Dev hopes that this will all help bring him and his parents closer together.
33"Hot Ticket"James PonsoldtStory by: Harris Wittels
Teleplay by: Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang
November 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)103
Dev gets two tickets to a secret show and starts asking girls out. Only two respond, and the one he takes, Alice, ends up being overly aggressive and a kleptomaniac, and she is kicked out of the club. He then runs into Rachel and they have a good time, but when he attempts to kiss her, she turns him down romantically, and is told that she is trying to make it work with her ex-boyfriend.
44"Indians on TV"Eric WareheimAziz Ansari & Alan YangNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)108
Dev runs into Ravi at an audition and they discuss how the majority of roles they audition are for accented, stereotypical Indians. After auditioning for a sitcom called 3 Buddies, Dev accidentally receives an email thread from the producer saying they can cast only one Indian and includes a racist remark. The producer tries to apologize by treating Dev to a Knicks game courtside and visiting a VIP area where he meets Busta Rhymes, who tells him to leverage his position. He gets called from his agent Shannon who tells them they went with somebody else. Dev begins to involve an Indian advocacy group. However, the producer dies and the replacement producer goes with a Perfect Strangers concept.
55"The Other Man"Eric WareheimJoe Mande & Aniz AnsariNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)104
Dev's friend Denise invites him to a work party, where he meets her publication's food critic, Nina (Claire Danes). Nina is intent on having sex with him, but before they do the deed, Dev discovers she is married and backs out. After conferring with Denise and Benjamin, a fellow actor from The Sickening, they agree that an affair may be doable if she does not have kids or if the husband never finds out. However, one day when the husband (Noah Emmerich) cuts in front of him at an ice-cream store and buys and destroys the last special, Dev goes ahead with the affair. The husband eventually finds out. Weeks later Dev and Denise run into them and learn that the affair brought up several problems the couple faced, and Dev's sleeping with Nina actually saved their marriage.
66"Nashville"Aziz AnsariAziz Ansari & Alan YangNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)105
Rachel texts Dev that she and her boyfriend have broken up, and to make their first date memorable, he asks her if she would like to fly to Nashville for a day with him. She agrees, as long as she would get home in time for her niece's recital on Sunday night. The two have a fun time together, but he takes a detour on their way to the airport and they miss their flight, and she misses her niece's recital. But she still likes him and they keep dating.
77"Ladies and Gentlemen"Lynn SheltonStory by: Andrew Blitz
Teleplay by: Sarah Peters & Zoe Jarman
November 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)106
While working on a commercial, Dev finds out that a colleague Diana had been pursued by a man on her way home. When Dev tells Denise and Rachel about it, the women share similar experiences. Dev realizes he is privileged just by being male, and he identifies himself as a feminist. While hanging with the cast of his commercial one night, he discusses with the director that all the women in the commercial are just there for eye candy. The director revises the commercial so that all the main speaking roles are given to the women, and Dev is later removed from the ad for not being a good fit with his new role in it. Although he is disappointed, the women are thankful that he stood up for them.
88"Old People"Lynn SheltonAziz Ansari & Alan YangNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)107
When Arnold's grandfather dies a week after Dev and Arnold visited him, Dev re-evaluates his relationship with his own grandparents and Rachel feels guilty for not visiting her own grandmother more often. Dev and Rachel visit her grandmother, but Rachel is summoned to a work emergency and Dev stays with her grandma. The two get along and he sneaks her out of her retirement home to enjoy a fancy dinner, but she escapes when he isn't looking. He and Rachel search for her, and finally find her singing at a popular jazz club.
99"Mornings"Eric WareheimAziz Ansari & Alan YangNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)109
Rachel moves in with Dev and the two have good times together and fall in love. But as the months pass, they start finding problems: their conflicting amounts of cleanliness; the fact that Dev hasn't told his parents that he's even seeing Rachel. Then Rachel learns that a work promotion would require her to move to Chicago for six months. She has a breakdown about whether or not she wants to keep her job. She decides to go to Chicago for the interview. At home, Dev starts using a pasta-maker she gave him when they first moved in together, and he discovers that he's great at making pasta. She returns and says she turned down the job, but her PR firm will make accommodations for her to make sure she's happy with them. Their relationship continues happily.
1010"Finale"Eric WareheimAziz Ansari & Alan YangNovember 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)110
Dev and Rachel attend a wedding, and Dev considers a life together, believing that if they get married, it might only be because it's the point in life that society dictates they should settle down. Dev meets his dad for advice, who asks if he really wants to be an actor, and Dev is unsure. He, Rachel, his friends, and his parents then attend The Sickening's premiere. Dev's scenes were cut from the film, and Rachel drunkenly lambasts the director's talent. Later, Dev shares with Rachel his concerns about their future and asks what their relationship's end course is if they're not 100% sure they'll be happy with each other forever. Rachel unhappily goes to stay with her friend, and a few days later informs Dev that she's moving to Tokyo to salvage the rest of her young adult life. Dev meets up with Benjamin (who was also cut from the film), and both talk about their relationships, with Benjamin opining that relationship stability can fluctuate depending upon small gestures for a lasting passion. Determined to overcome his stagnant attitude, Dev makes up his mind to move to Italy and study pasta-making at culinary school.

Season 2 (2017)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release dateProd.
code[31]
111"The Thief"[lower-alpha 1]Aziz AnsariStory by: Andy Blitz
Teleplay by: Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang
May 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)201[33]
As an apprentice pasta maker in Modena, Italy, Dev has made new friends and has improved his culinary skills over the past three months, but has not quite moved on from his ex-girlfriend Rachel, who is in Japan. For his birthday, he had booked a reservation for one at a restaurant, but offers to share his table with a visiting British woman named Sara who had botched her reservation date. The two have a great day together, and Dev gets her phone number. However, his phone is stolen, so he and his pasta instructor's son try to track down the thief. They eventually spot him, but he no longer has the phone. Dev is discouraged that he may never see Sara again. After his Italian friends celebrate his birthday and present some gifts, Dev sits alone in his apartment and writes an email to Rachel.
122"Le Nozze"[lower-alpha 2]Aziz AnsariAziz Ansari & Alan YangMay 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)202
Arnold visits Dev in Modena. After celebrating Dev's birthday with a meal at an exclusive restaurant, and talking about posting videos on singles websites, the two drive out to the countryside to attend a wedding of Arnold's friend, Ellen. However, Arnold soon reveals that the friend is his ex-girlfriend whom he dated for 11 years. Arnold breaks down when he sees that the groom physically resembles him but is shorter, and starts to antagonize him. Dev pulls him aside, the two discussing how he and Ellen are different people now, and whatever he idealized is gone. After receiving a cheerful message from another online girl, he returns to the wedding and apologizes to Ellen, who forgives him. Meanwhile, Dev, who had been texting Rachel again, tries to tell her that he thinks their messaging isn't helping either of them move on. Following the conclusion of his apprenticeship, he says goodbye to his Italian friends, and moves back to New York, where his agent gets him a gig as a host of a food competition show, Clash of the Cupcakes.
133"Religion"Alan YangAziz Ansari & Aniz Adam AnsariMay 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)02007
Dev fakes being a devout Muslim while his relatives are visiting. While hanging out with his younger cousin Navid, he offers him a bite of his pork sandwich, at which Navid decides he loves pork and later wants Dev to go with him to a barbecue food festival, and they excuse themselves from Eid prayer to sneak out to attend. At a later restaurant gathering, Dev reveals that he eats pork and is not religious, but his family and relatives are in shock. His mother is upset, and does not wish to speak to him. Two weeks later, Dev's father explains that his mother tried to raise him as a Muslim, and while it's okay to follow his own religious practices, when he does it in front of mother, it makes her feel like a failure. That night, Dev skims through a copy of the Qur'an his mother gave him as a child, and texts her. They make up, coming to terms with each other's spirituality.
144"First Date"Eric WareheimStory by: Sarah Schneider
Teleplay by: Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang
May 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)02003
Dev meets a dozen women on a popular dating app, and he takes each one to the same restaurant and rooftop bar. His dates are of all races—and maturity levels. The women include an aspiring actress, a cocaine addict, a WWE fanatic with poor social skills, and a woman who Dev discovers is using the app trying to meet someone else while still on her date with Dev. He seems to hit it off with Priya, who is also Indian, and they joke about non-Indian people who only date Indians, which Dev labels an "Indian fetish". Later, when he is with another Indian woman named Sona, they run into her friend Patrick, a tall, handsome combat photographer who just returned from assignment in Syria. Dev feels inadequate next to Patrick, and it's apparent Sona and Patrick have feelings for each other. At the end of the night he kisses Priya, who reciprocates but politely declines his offer to go up to his apartment for a drink, since it is only their first date. He does get lucky with one of the women, Christine, who invites him back to her place. There he is shocked to find that she stores her condoms in a cookie jar that depicts a cartoonish black woman in the racist mammy archetype. Dev doesn't say anything until after they have sex, and then tells her finds it offensive. Christine is flustered and defensive at first, saying it was a gift and she didn't know it was offensive, but quickly gets angry when she realizes that Dev saw the cookie jar and thought she was a racist, but then went ahead and had sex with her anyway.
155"The Dinner Party"Eric WareheimAziz Ansari & Alan YangMay 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)02004
After hosting the Jabbawockeez on Clash of the Cupcakes, Dev is ecstatic to hang out with his Italian friend Francesca, who is in town accompanying her boyfriend on a business trip. Dev meets his show's producer, a world-renowned chef and TV host, Chef Jeff, and they hit it off. Despite consulting Arnold for good tips, Dev's second date with Priya, a girl from the previous episode, bombs. Dev takes Francesca to Chef Jeff's dinner party, and the two run into Dev's friend Ravi. John Legend performs as a featured guest. Dev and Francesca have a good time, and later Dev is pulled aside by Jeff, who sees clearly that Dev likes her. Dev does not act on his feelings, and says goodbye to Francesca later that night, who is leaving back for Italy.
166"New York, I Love You"Alan YangStory by: Cord Jefferson
Teleplay by: Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang
May 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)02008
Dev, Denise, and Arnold are on their way to see the hit new movie Death Castle. The intersecting lives of different New Yorkers are shown. A doorman named Eddie must juggle favors for his apartment's residents, eventually standing up for himself against a tenant who wanted him to hide his affair. His friend goes to a convenience store, where a deaf girl named Maya is struggling with her sex life. She eventually tells her boyfriend she wants to receive oral sex more often. She and her boyfriend discuss it and get into a cab. In the next cab, two women spoil Death Castle for their driver Samuel, a Burundian immigrant. That night, Samuel and his roommates find no clubs to go to on their night out. They eventually find some women trying to get into their other roommate's fast food place. Samuel convinces him to let them all in, and the group has a good time. The women don't wish to end the night there, so they all go to see Death Castle together, where all the characters in the episode are watching the film, with Samuel happening to sit next to Dev.
177"Door #3"Melina MatsoukasStory by: Lakshmi Sundaram
Teleplay by: Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang
May 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)02005
Jeff informs Dev that the network wishes to lock him down for a seven-season Clash of the Cupcakes contract. Dev wants to think about it, as he is not passionate about the show. Meanwhile, Brian's dad begins dating two women. When Brian asks how he can do that, he tells Brian and Arnold that the two women are alright with it, as old people like him are lonely. Dev visits his dad in the hospital he works at, and later the guest-judge on Clash injures himself while doing a magic trick. Dev sits down with Jeff, and tells him he wishes to quit Clash, but pitches a show called BFFs: Best Food Friends, where he and Jeff travel around the world together tasting foods and immersing themselves in cultures. Jeff loves it, and gets it greenlit. When Dev Skypes Francesca to tell her the news, she tells Dev that she is engaged. Brian's dad tells his son both women have broken up with him, and he gets a dog.
188"Thanksgiving"Melina MatsoukasAziz Ansari & Lena WaitheMay 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)208
As Dev's family does not celebrate Thanksgiving, he has spent it with Denise's family for years, the two being childhood friends. In 1995, 12-year-old Denise begins to realize she is attracted to women. On Thanksgiving 1999, she comes out to Dev. When he asks why she is nervous to tell her family, she says LGBT issues are touchy in black families. In 2006, Denise comes out to her mother Catherine (Angela Bassett). Catherine asks her sister Joyce if this is her fault. On Thanksgiving 2015, Denise brings her girlfriend Michelle. Denise and Joyce are obviously annoyed, and attempt to hide the fact that Denise is gay from her grandma, Ernestine. The next year, Denise brings home a superficial girl named Nikki. After dinner, Dev talks with Catherine and Joyce. Catherine admits that while she does struggle with embracing her daughter's sexuality, she still wishes for Denise to end up with a nice woman, and misses Michelle. Finally, on Thanksgiving in 2017, Denise and Michelle are dating again. Joyce and Ernestine are happy to see her. Michelle and Catherine talk alone, and Catherine admits to Denise she is happy the two of them are together. Denise, Catherine, Joyce, Ernestine, Dev, and Michelle have a wonderful dinner, and happily say grace together.
199"Amarsi Un Po'"[lower-alpha 3]Aziz AnsariAziz AnsariMay 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)02009
Francesca visits for the month, and wants to spend time with Dev. The two spend so much time together, and Dev asks Arnold if he should confess his feelings for her. He believes she feels the same way, but she is still engaged. At one point, the two spend the night at his place because of a blizzard, and she asks to share his bed, but nothing happens. At a party, Francesca seems absent, and Dev asks her what's wrong. She insists it is nothing, and admits this situation is difficult for both of them. She then gets into an argument with her fiancé, Pino, where she confesses that she does not wish to leave New York. On one of her final days there, Dev reveals that he is in love with her. She tells him that she is in love with him too, and asks for time so she can figure out what to do.
2010"Buona Notte"[lower-alpha 4]Aziz AnsariAziz Ansari & Alan YangMay 12, 2017 (2017-05-12)02010
While filming BFFs, Dev discovers that his former makeup artist Lisa had quit the show because she and other women were sexually harassed by Jeff. Although advised to keep quiet, Dev becomes noticeably bothered by the news during their guest spot on the talk show Raven Live!, starring Raven-Symoné. When Raven learns of the news through social media, she confronts Jeff, who walks off the set, and condemns Dev, who inadvertently stated that he condones the behavior. Dev talks with Francesca about their relationship, but Francesca eventually says she is leaving. On the way to ask Arnold what to do, Dev runs into Rachel and they briefly exchange pleasantries. At home, Dev wonders if a relationship with Francesca would ever be possible, while Francesca ponders the same as she packs her bags. The final scene shows Francesca and Dev lying next to each other in bed, the former no longer wearing her engagement ring.

Reception

Critical response

Season Critical response
Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic
1 100% (64 reviews) 91 (31 reviews)
2 100% (53 reviews) 91 (24 reviews)

Season 1

On Rotten Tomatoes, the first season holds an approval rating of 100% based on 64 reviews, with an average rating of 9.03/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Exceptionally executed with charm, humor, and heart, Master of None is a refreshingly offbeat take on a familiar premise."[35] On Metacritic, the series has a score of 91 out of 100, based on 31 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[36]

James Poinewozik of The New York Times called it "the year's best comedy straight out of the gate" and a "mature rom-com."[37] IGN's Matt Fowler gave the entire first season an 8.8 out of 10, saying "by the second episode it takes flight and offers up a very funny, unique take on food, dating, relationships, etc (the usual suspects). Ansari is a smart and engaging presence and his perspective on things lends itself very well to this type of single-camera comedy. And his supporting cast, particularly Wells, is on point. A few episodes may have fizzled out right at the finish...but there's no denying Master of None's success overall."[38] James Dempsey of Newstalk described the show as "like a transatlantic cousin of Ricky Gervais’ Extras, another story of an actor navigating show business and his personal life. But whereas that show relied heavily on stunt cameos of Hollywood actors playing pantomime versions of themselves – along with painfully blunt awkwardness that attempts to wring every possible laugh out of increasingly cringe comedy – Master of None is content and confident to let the viewer warm to it entirely on its terms. And it's all the better for it."[39]

Season 2

On Rotten Tomatoes, the second season also holds an approval rating of 100% based on 53 reviews, with an average rating of 8.91/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Master of None's second season picks up where its predecessor left off, delivering an ambitious batch of episodes that builds on the show's premise while adding surprising twists."[40] On Metacritic, the series has a score of 91 out of 100, based on 24 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[41]

Top ten lists

Master of None was included on many lists of best TV shows of 2015.[42] Jaime Lutz from Time Out New York called it the best TV show of 2015.[43] In addition, it was awarded the runner-up position by Matthew Gilbert from The Boston Globe, Mark Peikert from TheWrap, and Paste. Master of None was also ranked as one of the top 10 shows of the year by many publications, including Complex, Entertainment Weekly, Film School Rejects, The Guardian, IGN, Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, People, TIME, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, Variety, Vogue, and The Washington Post.[42] In 2018, TV Guide listed the "Thanksgiving" episode as number 10 in their "TV Guide's 65 Best Episodes of the 21st Century" issue.[44]

Accolades

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2015 American Film Institute Awards Top 10 TV Programs of the Year Master of None Won [45]
2016 Critics' Choice Television Awards Best Comedy Series Won [46]
Best Actor in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Actor in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy Nominated [47]
Dorian Awards TV Comedy of the Year Master of None Nominated [48]
NAACP Image Awards Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang Nominated [49]
Outstanding Directing in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari Nominated
Peabody Awards Entertainment and children's programming honorees Master of None Won [50]
GLAAD Media Awards Outstanding Comedy Series Nominated [51]
TCA Awards Outstanding Achievement in Comedy Nominated [52]
Outstanding New Program Nominated
Individual Achievement in Comedy Aziz Ansari Nominated
Gold Derby Awards Best Comedy Series Master of None Nominated [53]
Best Comedy Actor Aziz Ansari Nominated
Best Comedy Guest Actor Shoukath Ansari Nominated
Best Comedy Guest Actress Claire Danes Nominated
Online Film & Television Association Awards Best Actor in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari Nominated [54]
Best Direction in a Comedy Series Nominated
Best Writing in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Comedy Series Master of None Nominated [55]
[56]
[57]
[58]
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari Nominated
Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari for "Parents" Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari & Alan Yang for "Parents" Won
Gotham Awards Breakthrough Series – Long Form Master of None Nominated [59]
2017 Black Reel Awards for Television Outstanding Directing, Comedy Series Melina Matsoukas Nominated [60]
Outstanding Writing, Comedy Series Aziz Ansari & Lena Waithe Nominated
Outstanding Guest Performer, Comedy Series Angela Bassett Nominated
Television Critics Association Awards Outstanding Achievement in Comedy Master of None Nominated
Individual Achievement in Comedy Aziz Ansari Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Comedy Series Master of None Nominated [61]
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari & Lena Waithe for "Thanksgiving" Won
Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series Angela Bassett Nominated
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series Cody Beke & Teresa Razzauti Nominated
Outstanding Music Supervision Zach Cowie & Kerri Drootin Nominated
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series Jennifer Lilly Won
Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Comedy or Drama Series (Half-Hour) and Animation Joshua Berger & Michael Barosky Nominated
Gold Derby Awards Best Comedy Series Master of None Nominated
[62]
Best Comedy Actor Aziz Ansari Nominated
Best Comedy Guest Actress Angela Bassett Nominated
Best Comedy Episode of the Year "Thanksgiving" Won
"New York, I Love You" Nominated
Hollywood Music in Media Awards Outstanding Music Supervision – Television Zach Cowie and Kerri Drootin Nominated [63]
Online Film and Television Association Awards Best Comedy Series Master of None Nominated
[64]
Best Actor in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari Nominated
Best Guest Actor in a Comedy Series Shoukath Ansari Nominated
Best Guest Actress in a Comedy Series Angela Bassett Nominated
Best Writing in a Comedy Series Master of None Nominated
American Film Institute Awards Top 10 TV Programs of the Year Master of None Won [65]
2018 Critics' Choice Television Awards Best Actor in a Comedy Series Aziz Ansari Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy Master of None Nominated [66]
Best Actor in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy Aziz Ansari Won [67][68][69]
Guild of Music Supervisors Awards Best Music Supervision in a Television Comedy or Musical Zach Cowie & Kerri Drootin Nominated [70]

Future

Regarding future seasons, Ansari told Vulture, "I don’t know if we’re going to do a season three. I wouldn’t be surprised if I needed a looonng [sic] break before I could come back to it [...] I’ve got to become a different guy before I write a third season, is my personal thought, I’ve got to get married or have a kid or something. I don’t have anything else to say about being a young guy being single in New York eating food around town all the time."[71] In July 2018, Netflix head of original content Cindy Holland expressed interest in creating a third season "when Aziz is ready."[72][73]

Notes

  1. The episode is a homage to the classic Italian film Bicycle Thieves directed by Vittorio De Sica.[32]
  2. The title "Le Nozze" is a reference to the Italian film La Notte directed by Michelangelo Antonioni.[34]
  3. The title is a reference to the song of the same name (which means "Loving each other a little") by Lucio Battisti. Battisti released an English version of the single for international markets, with the song renamed "To Feel in Love".[34]
  4. The title means Good night in Italian.

References

  1. Mink, Casey (May 30, 2017). "How Filming a Series in New York Differs From L.A". Backstage. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  2. Carey, Meredith (May 11, 2017). "A 'Master of None' Guide to Italy". Condé Nast Traveler. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  3. Kissel, Rick (July 28, 2015). "Netflix Sets Premiere Dates for 'Longmire,' Aziz Ansari Series 'Master of None'". Variety. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  4. "Shows A-Z - master of none on netflix". The Futon Critic. Retrieved August 16, 2015.
  5. Han, Angie (October 22, 2015). "Master of None Trailer: Aziz Ansari Gets a Netflix Show". Slashfilm. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  6. Lesnick, Silas (March 15, 2017). "Aziz Ansari's Master of None Season 2 Arrives in May". ComingSoon.net. Retrieved March 15, 2017.
  7. Thomas, Rob (November 9, 2015). "Bingeworthy: Treat yourself to Aziz Ansari's new Netflix series 'Master of None'". Madison.com. Capital Newspapers. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  8. Bentley, Rick; Bee, Fresno (November 7, 2015). "'Master of None's' Aziz Ansari: 'Coming up with a title is so hard'". Screener. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  9. Renner Brown, Eric (November 11, 2015). "'Master of None' music supervisor explains the show's best musical moments". Entertainment Wekly. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  10. Gordon, Jeremy (November 9, 2015). "Aziz Ansari on the Music of "Master of None": Father John Misty, Aphex Twin, Arthur Russell, and More". Pitchfork. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  11. 1 2 Goldberg, Lesley (July 28, 2015). "Aziz Ansari's Netflix Show 'Master of None' Will Build on His Stand-Up". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
  12. Sugar, Rachel (November 11, 2015). "'Master of None' Is Completely Unsubtle, and That's What Makes It So Good". Vulture. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
  13. Henderson, J. Maureen (November 19, 2015). "Is Aziz Ansari's 'Master Of None' The Show That Aging Millennials Have Been Waiting For?". Forbes. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
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