Hot off the rave reviews from their new Netflix series Master of None, show creators Aziz Ansari and Alan Yang held a joint Ask Me Anything (AMA) session earlier this evening to answer all of redditors’ questions—about tacos, B-Rabbit, interracial relationships, and more.

Here are a few things we learned about the duo from their answers.

If you haven’t watched their new show yet, you really should.

Throughout the AMA, Ansari and Yang sprinkled their answers with hilarious bits from Master of None. If you haven’t checked it out on Netflix, here are a few quotes to push you over the edge:

Ansari: “The show opens with Rachel and I talking about jizz/precum.”

Yang: “[Busta Rhymes] improvised the line ‘Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m gonna go fuck with some of those shrimp.'”

Ansari: “Someone told me they heard us talking about [Master of None] on NPR and legit thought [Master of Naan] was the title.”

Yang: “…each episode touches on a different subject matter … If your parents are immigrants, you might like [the episode called] ‘Parents,’ if you’re close with your grandma, you might like ‘Old People,’ and if you’re a mildly racist television executive, you might like ‘Indians on TV,’ because there you are on screen!”

Yang says Ansari paid him $75 million to work on the show. (Maybe.)

User whysoserious385 probably didn’t expect to uncover this bombshell when they asked, “Alan, how was it writing for Aziz on Parks and Rec?”

Yang’s 100% true, definitely-not-joking response?

Ansari takes tacos seriously.

Departing from stand-up and a successful NBC show to create a new streaming-only series might seem like a pretty big risk, but Ansari shares that it’s not his greatest gamble in life:

Of course, he was only kidding. In real life, he has a rigorous taco selection process—but don’t call him a “foodie.”

Ansari desperately wants Eminem to answer his question about 8 Mile.

In Master of None, Ansari’s character raises questions about all of life’s most important issues—including whether the Eminem song “Lose Yourself” is from the perspective of Eminem (the real-life rapper) or B-Rabbit (the fictional rapper in 8 Mile).

Ansari told redditors he really, really wants the Rap God to settle this question once and for all:

The question came up more than once:

(Eminem, if you’re reading this, you have one opportunity to answer everything Aziz ever wanted, in one moment… Will you capture it or just let it slip?)

The late Parks & Rec writer Harris Wittels was a writer for Master of None.

Both Yang and Ansari shared memories of their friend and former writer Harris Wittels, who passed away in February.

“We loved Harris and when we started the show we wanted to hire him as a writer immediately,” Yang writes in a comment. “I had worked with Harris in the Parks and Rec writers room for six years, and he was legitimately one of the funniest people I’ve ever met.”

Ansari adds, “The week we got all the insane reviews … I must have went from being really happy to crying that Harris wasn’t around to see it about a thousand times.”

While paying tribute to Wittels in the AMA, Yang shared one of the comedian’s jokes:

Ansari also notes that Wittels is the writer responsible for the now-famous 8 Mile dialogue.

Their show offers a new model for TV casting.

Much of the positive critical reaction to Master of None has zeroed in on Ansari and Yang’s handling of race, ethnicity, and the immigrant experience in their show.

In response to user nonpresser’s question about the role of race in TV casting, Ansari shares, “I have heard of shows legit saying they have filled an ethnic quota.”

And when user AsianManLife asked the comedian about the portrayal of his relationship with a white character in the show, he added, “… many South East Asians have told me … they’d never seen an interracial relationship depicted this way in TV/film before.”

He continues, “I’m a fan of all these conversations and there are interesting nuances in both interracial relationships and relationships between two Asian people—if we get a second season it’s definitely an interesting topic to address.”

Ansari is trying to spend less time on the Internet.

If you followed @azizansari on Twitter and waited in vain for a followback, don’t feel bad—he’s just trying to waste less time online.

The first season of Master of None is streaming on Netflix now. Once you’ve caught up with the show, check out the new Master of None community on Reddit that Ansari and Yang created, where fans can discuss each episode with the creators every week.