Ali wong husband flips off coworkers
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Beef Recap: What Happened in Season 1? - Netflix Tudum
🤐 SPOILER ALERT 🤐
Most beefs between people are low-stakes, short-lived disagreements — maybe resulting in a diss track if you’re a rapper. This is not the case for Danny Cho (Steven Yeun) and Amy Lau (Ali Wong) in Lee Sung Jin’s dark comedy BEEF. After a road rage incident, Danny, a contractor with a chip on his shoulder, and Amy, an unfulfilled entrepreneur, become inseparable in the worst way — caught in a vicious cycle of revenge that endangers everyone around them.
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For Danny, that’s his younger brother Paul (Young Mazino), opportunist cousin Isaac Cho (David Choe) and parents back in Korea. Danny wants to save enough money to build a Southern California dream home and bring his mom and dad over to live in it, but the harder he goes after his goal, the more setbacks he encounters.
Amy’s circle includes her zen husband George (Joseph Lee), candy-obsessed daughter June (Remy Holt), opinionated
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Beef’s Ending Is Totally Bonkers—but It Had to Be
This article contains spoilers for Beef.
Near the beginning of Netflix’s new series Beef, Ali Wong’s high-strung Amy begrudgingly attends a couples therapy session at the behest of her laid-back husband George (Joseph Lee), who feels they have reached a crossroads in their marriage. At the core of the issue is Amy’s indignation at long-held resentments expressed during a particularly bad fight, but George can’t understand her outsize rage. That’s when Amy explains that talking about feelings as a first-generation child of immigrants was a nonstarter, and the reality of her parents’ sacrifices—and subsequent internalizing of those struggles—ultimately left no room for self-expression and release. Before immigrating to the U.S., Amy explains, her mother had never heard songbirds because all the birds had been eaten during the Vietnam War. “Can you imagine what that does to a person?” she asks. “No birds.”
A successful So
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Amy Lau
Childhood[]
In the 1987, Amy was born at the same time as Danny Cho in the USA, and she is the only child of her migrant parents from China. As a toddler, Amy overheard her parents fighting each other in their house. Amy wondered in her bedroom to hope that nothing bad happens in her family. Unfortunately, in her teenage years, Amy witnessed her father cheating on her mother with a Caucasian woman outside of Amy's house, shattering Amy's psyche that romance between two people is nothing more but a facade to pleasure each other in favor of lust over love. Furthermore, Amy held a grudge against her father for his affair, but her mother is fully aware of it and that her mother said that they should forget all about it in the past. In other words, Amy's traumatic experience had cause her ironic self, like her unfaithful father, to do the