I first saw this commercial in H Mart while waiting for The Wife to finish shopping. I had never seen it on TV, but it played on the monitors inside the store. This commercial and others on the H Mart YouTube channel struck me as charming, very Asian American, and clever business-wise.
H Mart Overview
I assumed that you all know what H Mart is. In the unlikely case that some of you do not, it is the biggest Asian grocery chain in the United States, even larger than Ranch 99. Ranch 99 has been around the area for many years, but H Mart is relatively new to the Bay Area. John recently wrote that the US’s biggest H Mart is scheduled to appear in Fremont, California.
Asian American Commercials
Why do I think that this commercial is very Asian American? To start with, the main character is Asian and speaks English with regular American accent. Also, she has memories of food with her mother, playing on the way that many Asian parents express their love not from saying “I love you” but through food. The contrast between eating cold food in a mainstream American workplace and having warm mom-cooked Asian reflects the dichotomy’s of Asian American life.
In another commercial, a man makes a meal for his partner that he learned from her mother. Both are Asian American speaking English with no accent. As John has pointed out many times, Asian American women are often portrayed with white husbands or boyfriends. Asian American men sometimes complain that they are portrayed in media as asexual, weak, or as jerks. This commercial follows none any of those tendencies.
Playing to a broader Asian American community is a much better business direction than having marketing that focuses on immigrants. Especially given the current administration, newer immigrants are going to become rarer. When I was a younger, eating Asian food was something you did with your parents, something that you hid along with that lunch box full of home cooked food. Now, I see my own kids and other younger Asian Americans embrace a variety of food from not their own heritage but from other Asian ethnicities. Catering to that trend is smart business.
H Mart as a Special Asian American Place
H Mart seems to have a special place in many Asian American hearts. When local Asian Americans ask me where I live in Silicon Valley, I often say that I live within walking distance of the San Jose H Mart. They often greet my reply with “oohs” and “ahs” and acknowledgment of the location even from that vague description. John mentioned the book Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner. I personally think of this clip where Rei Ami talks about H Mart being her happy place:
@fallontonight @REI AMI tells @ejae_k and @audreynuna about the time she heard a little kid singing “Golden” in an H Mart 🥹 #KPopDemonHuntersOnFallon #FallonTonight #TonightShow #KPopDemonHunters
When many people think of Asian Americans, especially here in Silicon Valley, they often picture engineers, tech startups, and academic/college-obsessed students. Motorhead isn’t a term that often comes to mind. But if you grew up certain Asian American neighborhoods, import car culture was (and still is) a thing. I was reminded of this when I read an essay by Ky-Phong Tran about his mid-life crisis car. It wasn’t some fancy European sports car or American muscle car, but
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