How I Got Radicalized

‘MasterChef Junior’ Is a Cooking Show About Generational Wealth

Only a certain class of kid can make the best matcha macarons

Minda Wei
GEN
Published in
6 min readDec 18, 2020

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Oliva and Remy Bond from Season 6 of MasterChef Junior. Photo illustration; source: Mike Pont/Getty Images

Welcome to “How I Got Radicalized,” which tells the story of a cultural moment that made you drastically rethink how society works.

I’ve loved shitty TV since I was in elementary school. As a kid growing up in the 2000s, my attention was split between live broadcast TV, early-era Netflix, and Friends in syndication. The only way to feel a part of something bigger was through reality TV like America’s Next Top Model and American Idol, a buzz that happened when a whole generation came together for an hour every week to revel in their competitive entertainment.

As monthly streaming subscriptions overtook our home antenna use, the excitement of event TV became harder to chase. The only way I could catch that high was watching Big Brother’s live feeds, available 24/7, and read updates from its ravenous superfans. As exciting as this was, it felt like work, and I wasn’t a kid anymore. Trump had just been elected and I had a full-time career; I wanted to spend the precious hours escaping the doldrums of adulthood. I wanted easily digestible drama, served up on an hour-long platter. That’s when I found MasterChef Junior.

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GEN
GEN

Published in GEN

A former publication from Medium about politics, power, and culture. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Minda Wei
Minda Wei

Written by Minda Wei

Chinese-American comedian, journalist, screenwriter, and actor in Austin, Texas. Unpublishable thoughts at @notminda.

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