Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gentefied a tasty medley of family, societal issues

- JAMES PONIEWOZIK

When does a taco cease to be a taco? In Netflix’s Gentefied, this is both a practical and an existentia­l question.

It arises when Chris (Carlos Santos), an aspiring chef, wants to help his grandfathe­r, Casimiro (Joaquin Cosio), save his struggling small restaurant by jazzing up the menu and drawing in new (richer) customers. One of his ideas, a tikka masala taco with curry, sounds to Casimiro like blasphemy. “Do you want tradition or innovation?” Chris asks, in English. His grandfathe­r answers, in Spanish: “What I want is a taco.”

The little question here is whether you can throw anything, however delicious, onto a tortilla and proclaim it a taco. (Roy Choi, the Korean-taco pioneer of Netflix’s The Chef Show, has one answer, but that’s another conversati­on and another binge.) The bigger question, propelling this feisty, funny and poignant comedy-drama is how much its setting — Boyle Heights, Los Angeles — can be upscaled and “discovered” until it is no longer Boyle Heights.

Created by Marvin Lemus and Linda Yvette Chavez (the producers include America Ferrera), Gentefied is one of several recent programs to look at how money bulldozes working-class and minority neighborho­ods, including Netflix’s She’s Gotta Have It and Starz’s Vida, which is also set in Boyle Heights. (It is an irony of TV that some of its most acute examinatio­ns of income inequality have come from paid cable and streaming outlets.)

This big-picture issue gives Gentefied its title (a portmantea­u for gentrifica­tion by upwardly mobile Latinos), its themes and many of its conflicts. But it’s powered by its little-picture focus on family and neighbors.

In part, Gentefied is about the tension between those who stay and those who leave. While Chris apprentice­s in a fancy Los Angeles restaurant and dreams of culinary school, Casimiro runs the Mama Fina’s Tacos with Chris’ cousin Erik (J.J. Soria), who thinks Chris is a pretentiou­s sellout. Their cousin Ana (Karrie Martin), is in between, an artist with a passion for the community (and a serious girlfriend tying her to home) but with ambitions pushing her beyond it.

The early episodes play up the cousins’ conflicts. Chris, who’s recently returned from Idaho, is a frequent punching bag for being overly assimilate­d into white hipster culture. But the 10-episode season eventually complicate­s their positions. Chris is dogged by the feeling that he’s not Mexican enough for Boyle Heights but too Mexican for the likes of his racist boss. Erik wants nothing more than to be a family man rooted to his neighborho­od, but his ambitious, progressiv­e ex-girlfriend, Lidia (Annie Gonzalez), doesn’t want him in her life.

Casimiro is the glue of the extended family, and Cosio is a magnetic, charismati­c anchor of the ensemble. His character, still mourning his late wife, is proud but less hidebound than he first appears. Beneath his cowboy hat and gruff exterior, he’s a dreamer — something he shares not just with his chef and artist grandkids but also with Erik, who reveals a sensitive, bookish side.

Gentefied makes its case for the present-day Boyle Heights as much through image as through character and dialogue. In its camera eye, the neighborho­od radiates light and thrums with energy. It is neighbors sitting in lawn chairs on a sidewalk, the kaleidosco­pe of packaged selections at a bodega, a pepper being coaxed out of the earth in a backyard garden. The production feels connected to the place, sidewalk and soil.

The show’s voice is distinctiv­e and assured, both figurative­ly and literally. It slips naturally among English and Spanish and Spanglish the same way its stories slip among worlds — from the Boyle Heights streets to the gallery world, from immigrant women sewing piecework to immigrant line cooks chiffonadi­ng herbs.

Its tone takes longer to establish. Sometimes it wants to be a sharpel-bowed satire, as in an episode that sends up “food tours” in which epicurean hipsters wander the neighborho­od as if on safari. Sometimes — more effectivel­y — it’s a workingcla­ss family dramedy, conscious of the cascading effects of small financial setbacks and the code-switching involved in moving across cultures.

Maybe most important for a show about neighborho­od-building, Gentefied has a handle on even its smaller characters. A mariachi musician, introduced as comic relief, gets his own episode that reveals him as a soulful artist trying to keep his integrity; Ana’s mother evolves from a hectoring nemesis to a toughened survivor.

Gentefied has a lot to say, and it can turn didactic in its urge to say all of it. But the show’s likability carries it through its rougher patches. This series puts a lot on its plate, and somehow, it all comes together.

 ?? (Netflix/Kevin Estrada) ?? Joaquin Cosio (left), Joseph Julian Soria and Carlos Santos star in Gentefied on Netflix. The series revolves around how working-class and minority neighborho­ods change and grow while the people who live there survive day to day.
(Netflix/Kevin Estrada) Joaquin Cosio (left), Joseph Julian Soria and Carlos Santos star in Gentefied on Netflix. The series revolves around how working-class and minority neighborho­ods change and grow while the people who live there survive day to day.

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