The cast of Culinary Class Wars‘ second season felt like the cooking equivalent of the perfect heist team. Each chef had a unique specialty, and the ones who survived the initial mass elimination round—from 100 beginning amateur chefs, only 18 ended up facing as many professional cooks later—all shone with creativity. Some even boasted the nicknames to match.
Son Jong-won was the kindhearted, humble chef-next-door despite cooking haute cuisine and running two Michelin-star restaurants. The “Barbecue Lab Director” could get any meat to slide right off the bone, even when he only had an hour and a half to cook it. Choi Kang-rok is the underdog “white spoon” who returns after being eliminated in the first season. He’s extremely shy and probably wears his cap even when he sleeps. The “Witch With a Wok” is just that: mean with the metal bowl on a stove. She always gets the perfect mix of spiciness and crunch into any dish. Chef Hou Deok-juk has been cooking Chinese cuisine in Korea for over 57 years, longer than even most other participants’ parents have been alive. The list goes on and on, and it makes the show a joy to watch.
Of course, all of these people are far bigger than the one-liners through which we view them in the show. Still, it’s fun to think through the cast of your own life like that every once in a while. It makes you appreciate how diverse a group of humans you have assembled around you.
Years ago, I wrote a story about my perfect heist team. Each of my friends got the role they were most suited for, and, together, we imaginatively “pulled off” some mix of Ocean’s Eleven, The Fast and the Furious, and Mission Impossible. It’s been many years, and their character bios have changed several times hence. So has mine in their lives, I assume. But every now and then, it’s fun to ask: If you were all cast on a show, which archetype would you represent?
Whether it’s on TV or in your life: There’s nothing like a batch of cool characters thrown together—because if the people are right, it barely matters what’s going to happen. All you know is you want to be there, and that’s the part that counts.