Song Kang-ho and Youn Yuh-jung to Star in Netflix’s ‘Beef’ Season 2

Eunsil Ju Reporter

bb311.eunju@gmail.com | 2026-03-07 09:53:12



The world of prestige television is bracing for a monumental collision of East and West. Netflix has officially confirmed that South Korean cinema titan Song Kang-ho—best known for his iconic role in the Oscar-winning Parasite—will make his American television debut in the second season of the critically acclaimed series, Beef.

The news broke on March 6, 2026, alongside the release of a high-octane teaser trailer and a series of character stills that have sent ripples through the global entertainment industry.

 
A New Setting: The Country Club Powder Keg
While Season 1 focused on a gritty road-rage incident in the suburbs of Los Angeles, Season 2 shifts its lens to the manicured lawns and marble halls of an ultra-exclusive country club.

The central conflict ignites when a young couple witnesses a shocking and violent argument between their bosses. This single moment of domestic friction spirals into a complex web of coercion, psychological warfare, and blackmail involving the club’s elite members and its enigmatic owners.

The Powerhouse Cast
The ensemble for the new season reads like a "Who’s Who" of contemporary cinema:

Oscar Isaac & Carey Mulligan: Playing "Josh" and "Lindsey," a millennial power couple navigating the pressures of the upper class.
Charles Melton & Cailee Spaeny: Starring as "Austin" and "Ashley," a Gen Z couple working as staff members at the club who find themselves caught in the crossfire.
Youn Yuh-jung: The Academy Award winner portrays "Chairman Park," the formidable billionaire owner of the country club.
Song Kang-ho: In his first-ever U.S. series, Song plays "Dr. Kim," the second husband of Chairman Park.

A Masterclass in Tension
The teaser opens with a chilling line from the club’s general manager, Josh: "Do you know why our members spend a fortune to come here?" This sets the stage for a season that explores the dark underbelly of "polite society" and the explosive resentment that simmers beneath the surface of extreme wealth.

Showrunner Lee Sung-jin, who swept the Emmys and Golden Globes with the first season, returns to helm this installment. Fans can expect the same sharp wit and suffocating tension that made the original a cultural phenomenon, now amplified by the chemistry between Hollywood mainstays and Korean legends.

WEEKLY HOT