Writing In 2009,
Variety magazine named Yang one of "10 Screenwriters to Watch." He worked on
Last Call with Carson Daly and
South Park before landing a job in 2008 as a staff writer for the then-upcoming
NBC comedy
Parks and Recreation. During the six months before that job began, he wrote two screenplays,
White Dad and
Gay Dude. and
Gay Dude was on the
Hollywood blacklist before being sold to
Lionsgate Films in 2011 and released in 2014 as
Date and Switch, starring
Nicholas Braun and
Dakota Johnson. In 2012, Yang started writing a sitcom about a father-son relationship; when
Parks and Rec producer
Greg Daniels suggested he make the characters Asian, Yang declined as he assumed it would not be successful. On
Parks and Recreation, Yang became friends with actor/comedian
Aziz Ansari, and the two later co-created
Master of None, which was well received—especially for its diverse cast and subject matter—and earned four
Emmy nominations. Yang and Ansari won the Emmy for
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series for their
Master of None episode, "Parents." Yang said in an interview that Brian's character in the episode, played by
Kelvin Yu, was largely based on himself and his family. "It's based on my dad, Aziz's dad, and our families in general. A lot of that stuff was written as conversations that Aziz and I would have." According to Yang, while topics on the show include racial diversity and racism, the main goal is to be authentic to their life experiences. "We try to do a blend in our show of what we talk about in our real lives," he told
Variety in June 2016. "There's an episode or two about being Indian or Asian on TV, about dealing with your parents who are immigrants — but we fall in love, we have work trouble, we have all these other stories that make the characters more well rounded." In 2016, Yang wrote the second episode of
The Good Place and directed an episode in the show's second season. In 2018, he reunited with
Matt Hubbard, who worked on
Parks and Recreation with Yang, to create
Amazon's Forever, a comedy-drama series starring
Fred Armisen and
Maya Rudolph. Yang and Hubbard collaborated again in 2022, co-creating
Loot for
Apple TV +, also starring
Maya Rudolph.
Directing and producing For
Parks and Recreation, Yang directed two episodes: "New Beginnings" (2014) (Season 6, Episode 11) and "
Swing Vote" (2013) (Season 5, Episode 21). He also occasionally appeared as the bassist of Andy's band, Mouse Rat. In 2017, Yang directed the Jay-Z music video "Moonlight," which depicted the show
Friends with an all-Black cast. He was as an executive producer for
Master of None, a co-executive producer, supervising producer, producer and co-producer on
Parks and Recreation, an executive producer on
Date and Switch (2014), a consulting producer on
South Park (the episode "Miss Teacher Bangs A Boy" (2006)), a producer on the
Funny or Die short
Parks and Recreation is the Wu Tang of Comedy (2010), and as an associate producer on
Last Call with Carson Daly. He served as a consultant for the 2007
MTV Movie Awards. Yang co-created and executive produced the Amazon series
Forever, which is a drama/comedy about a married couple and their adventures in Riverside, California, Yang's hometown. Yang was also an executive producer of
Little America, a show he describes as "like
Black Mirror, but instead of being super-dark sci-fi stories, it is immigrant stories." == Personal life ==