When Deli Boys premiered on Hulu in March 2025, it did so quietly — a crime comedy about two hapless Pakistani-American brothers inheriting their father’s cocaine empire, created by a digital journalist, starring actors Hollywood had spent years underestimating. It wasn’t backed by a massive IP or a recognizable franchise. What it had was specificity, a loyal comedy community, and word of mouth that wouldn’t quit. The show became inescapable, the kind of series beloved by those in comedy, and the one your favorite comedian already knew about before you did.
By the time Season 2 arrived on May 28, 2026, Deli Boys was no longer a sleeper hit. It was a cultural moment in the making. And the rollout behind it was engineered to match.
The Cast Expansion
The first and perhaps most strategic move Hulu and Onyx Collective made was letting the guest cast do the talking. Fred Armisen joins as a series regular this season, playing Max Sugar — casino king, money launderer, and Lucky’s new romantic complication. Joining him are Kumail Nanjiani as Danyal, a defense attorney hired by Sugar; Andrew Rannells as Andrew Chadwater, a Philadelphia district attorney with mayoral ambitions; Lilly Singh as Aisha, a character with an obsession for Raj; and Tan France returning as the British Pakistani mobster Zubair. Robin Thede also delivers a guest turn as Dr. Iverson, a couples therapist with questionable ethics.
The announcement of this lineup — rolled out in April 2026 — wasn’t just a casting notice. It was a signal flare. Each name represents a distinct community: SNL fans, Silicon Valley loyalists, Queer Eye devotees, South Asian diaspora audiences, and the deeply online comedy world. The ensemble was designed to fracture audiences into overlapping fandoms, all arriving at the same destination.
Kumail Nanjiani and Andrew Rannells appear across multiple episodes as integral players in the criminal underworld, while Lilly Singh and Robin Thede deliver guest turns that exploit their comedic timing. Tan France’s return as Zubair demonstrates audience investment in Season 1 characters.
Rannells, for his part, made clear his enthusiasm for the project was genuine. “I was such a big fan of the first season,” he said. “They all went out of their way to make me feel incredibly welcomed.” That kind of cast chemistry — and the willingness to say so publicly — translated directly into press.
The Mamdani Collab Was a Masterstroke
One of the rollout’s most talked-about moments was a promo video collaboration with Zohran Mamdani, who was sworn in as Mayor of New York City on January 1, 2026 — making him the city’s first South Asian mayor, and a figure with enormous cultural cachet among exactly the progressive, diaspora, and chronically-online demographics that make up Deli Boys’ core audience.
The collaboration was engineered by The Third Place Co, a “creative agency that’s obsessed with creating third spaces for the community & content for the culture”. The cutting edge digital agency was also behind the TV show’s explosive first season marketing, and has quickly become recognizable for their ability to execute campaigns that are simultaneously universal and deeply culturally engaged.
The clip, posted to Mamdani’s Instagram, showed the mayor endorsing the show in a characteristically irreverent, on-brand way — and immediately went viral. The clip celebrated Small Business Month in NYC and highlighted the services available to New Yorkers.
It was the kind of crossover that money cannot buy: a sitting political figure with a devoted following, a shared cultural identity, and the comedic credibility to play along. The collaboration underscored what makes Deli Boys so marketable in 2026 — its South Asian lens is not a niche qualifier. It’s the mainstream entry point.
NYC Mayor’s Office YouTube
NYC Mayor’s Office YouTube
A Press Run Built on Access and Authenticity
Hulu leaned into long-form press access in a way that paid off. The result was a rollout of interviews that functioned less like promotional copy and more like genuine television journalism — the kind of coverage that drives cultural conversation rather than just awareness.
The leads spoke at length and with candor. Asif Ali and Saagar Shaikh sat down with Variety to break down the season’s diverging character arcs. IndieWire went deep on their journey to the show — and the weight of being told, repeatedly, that there was only room for one South Asian actor per audition. “I feel like we as a community have been beat down so hard by rejection,” Shaikh told IndieWire. “We’re living our bonus life.” Ali’s addition — “The real breakout is steady employment” — became one of the most-shared quotes of the press cycle.
Philly Mag ran a definitive long-read that leaned into the show’s Philadelphia roots and comedic irreverence. The Associated Press ran a video interview on Season 2’s cultural Easter eggs. Deadline’s The Actor’s Side took Ali and Poorna Jagannathan on location to Soho House Holloway for a sit-down ahead of Disney’s Toast to TV. The Nerds of Color captured the full trio at the Disney 2026 Upfronts Red Carpet.
PARK CITY, UTAH – JANUARY 27: (L-R) Tan France and Poorna Jagannathan attend the “See You When I See You” Premiere during the 2026 Sundance Film Festival at Eccles Center Theater on January 27, 2026 in Park City, Utah. (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)
Getty Images
Poorna Jagannathan’s Press Run Was Its Own Campaign
If there is one performer whose rollout deserved its own marketing budget, it is Poorna Jagannathan. Lucky Auntie — a role that series creator Abdullah Saeed originally wrote as male before being encouraged to rethink it — became the breakout character of Season 1, and Jagannathan’s team leaned into that momentum fully.
Variety ran a dedicated feature in which Jagannathan broke down Lucky’s Season 2 arc with the kind of character insight that makes readers care about a fictional drug empire. “Lucky loves toxic, and she knows toxic when she sees toxic,” she told the outlet. “She’s met her match in Max Sugar.” The Hollywood Reporter India ran a wide-ranging interview with her on Lucky’s expanded role, South Asian representation on international TV, and her forthcoming DC series Lanterns. JoySauce, one of the most trusted outlets covering Asian American culture, dedicated its Season 2 review largely to Lucky’s arc, reflecting how fully Jagannathan had become the gravitational center of the show’s cultural conversation.
Her press run also traveled internationally, reaching South Asian streaming audiences on JioHotstar in India — a distribution partnership that doubled as a marketing channel for a global diaspora audience.
On-Theme Cultural Content and Genuine Representation
What set this rollout apart from standard streaming promotion was the degree to which the cultural content felt earned rather than manufactured. Creator Abdullah Saeed has been explicit about his philosophy: “The heart of everything is the joke…I’m just letting the characters exist. They’re not trying to justify their South Asian culture or rectify that culture with their American culture. That shit is boring.” That ethos translated into marketing that didn’t explain the show’s identity — it embodied it.
In 2026, the South Asian diaspora is one of the highest-yield demographics for streaming platforms, both in terms of disposable income and social media engagement volume. Deli Boys didn’t treat that as a niche. It built toward it as a foundation.
Social Creator Collabs Extended the Conversation
Social amplification for Season 2 extended beyond traditional press, with creators across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube picking up the show organically — and Hulu leaning into that energy. The cast’s own social presence became a distribution channel: behind-the-scenes content, character teasers, and the kind of unscripted moments that feel native to short-form platforms helped the show travel to corners of the internet that a press junket alone cannot reach.
The Mamdani video itself lived natively on Instagram and functioned as a creator collab in everything but name — and its virality demonstrated that the right cultural partnership, with the right figure, at the right moment, can do what no paid media placement can replicate.
The Business Case Behind the Buzz
The renewal for Deli Boys Season 2 was triggered in August 2025, just five months after its March premiere, completely bypassing the standard “wait-and-see” cancellation window. That decision reflected both confidence and strategy. Hulu is making a highly calibrated economic bet on the subscriber retention math of the 26-minute comedy format, with production budgets running roughly half the cost of a standard Marvel or Star Wars streaming property.

