TV programs often inspire paeans to their costumes and soundtracks, and Aziz Ansari and Alan Yang’s popular new show, “Master of None,” is no exception.

Days after it debuted Nov. 6 on Netflix, publications heralded its fashion and music: “The Most Stylish Show You Should Be Watching,” GQ wrote; “The Most Stylish Show on TV,” MTV News said. Pitchfork called the music selections “prolific and distinctive,” and Bustle said the show “takes the aural cake and serves as the year’s best mixtape.”

But perhaps the most frenzied attention has been paid to something less chronicled: the locations. (That may be because many shows are still taped on Hollywood soundstages.) “Master of None” is set in New York, and websites that cover the local bar and dining scenes have rushed to publish the places where characters nosh, nibble, drink, celebrate, date, catch up, speculate and advise.

One of the first compilations came from Untapped Cities, founded by Michelle Young, an adjunct professor at the Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Ms. Young was impressed to see Hotel Delmano, a cocktail bar in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on the show.