
Critics at Large | The New Yorker “Beef,” “The Drama,” and the New Marriage Plot
Apr 16, 2026
A lively conversation about cultural skepticism toward marriage and why rates keep falling. They dig into Beef’s look at couples, class, and rivalry, and The Drama’s chaotic wedding unraveling. Memoirs and debates about polyamory and open relationships get attention. The panel traces how 19th-century ideals shaped today’s romantic expectations.
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Marriage As A Choice Not An Obligation
- Contemporary culture is reevaluating marriage as fewer people see it as an automatic life milestone and more as a chosen arrangement.
- Hosts cite falling U.S. marriage rates and mainstreaming of open relationships and polyamory as evidence of this shift.
Economic Strain Drives Marital Cracks In Beef
- Beef Season 2 uses a country-club meltdown to reveal how economic pressure and status anxiety fracture marriages.
- The plot hinges on a recorded fight that younger staffers exploit, linking class mobility and marital stress.
The Drama Uses A Wedding To Expose Hidden Pasts
- The Drama centers a wedding-ruining revelation: Emma confesses she planned a school shooting at 15, exposing how little Charlie knows her.
- The film frames marriage as fragile when deep past traumas suddenly surface at a public event.






