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The Emmy-winning series is coming back with a new story and cast
Season 1 of Netflix's Beef won over audiences in 2023 with its unhinged-but-in-a-fun-way story of a road rage incident that neither party is able to get over even a little bit. Finally, Netflix has confirmed that this particular show will go on — though without Season 1 stars Ali Wong and Steven Yeun. Their story is done, and Season 2 of Beef will move us on to a new over-the-top interpersonal conflict. And we can't. Freakin'. Wait.
The first season of Beef, which was created by Lee Sung Jin, saw Amy (Wong) and Danny (Yeun) cross paths when their cars nearly collide in a parking lot. Amy honks her horn and gives him the finger, and Danny, on his very last nerve, loses his mind and starts a high-speed chase across Los Angeles — and that's before things really escalate.
Given the popularity of the first season and the eight Emmys it won, another round of Beef was always likely even if it was intended to be a limited series, but it seems as though Netflix and Lee wanted to make sure they had some material first. And now that they apparently do, Season 2 is officially a go. Here's what we know so far.
We don't have any info about the planned release for Beef Season 2, as Netflix didn't mention any dates in its announcement. But with both a story and a cast in place, a late 2025 or 2026 release is likely.
Lee Sung Jin is returning as showrunner on Beef Season 2 and, as mentioned above, Beef has been renewed as an anthology — this means that Season 2 will tell a fresh story about new characters rather than continuing on with Danny and Amy. While it's sad to see Yeun and Wong go, the Season 2 announcement came with a pretty star-studded new cast list, headlined by Dune's Oscar Isaac, Saltburn's Carey Mulligan, Priscilla's Cailee Spaeny, and Riverdale's Charles Melton, whose performance in May December last year was snubbed by the Oscars.
This new season will set its sights on a higher tax bracket than Season 1 did, with a new, country club-related beef. Netflix's synopsis goes like this: "A young couple witnesses an alarming fight between their boss and his wife, triggering chess moves of favors and coercion in the elitist world of a country club and its Korean billionaire owner." That's not an easy description to parse — an "alarming fight" could mean a large number of different things. But the country club setting is rife with potential for a series like Beef, and if Season 1 is any indication, Lee and co. won't pulling any punches in this one.
The first season of Beef is available on Netflix.