8Asians TalkAbout: Watching the ‘Fresh Off the Boat’ Pilot

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Our internal e-mail lists have us discussing all kinds of stuff: Asian American identity, representation in the media, the experiences of activism in an academia setting and its progression as we transition to the working, adult world. And since the premiere of Fresh Off the Boat is the biggest television event to hit the Asian American community since… um… Linsanity? (does that count?), there was quite a lot we all had to say, but unsurprisingly, not about specific moments in the show:

Tim: Good news is I didn’t hate it. Bad news is I didn’t love it.

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‘Fresh Off the Boat’ Episode Review: “Home Sweet Home-School”

Fresh Off the Boat, Season 1, Episode 2: “Home Sweet Home-School.”
Original airdate February 4, 2015.

*Watch Online*

RANDALL PARK, CONSTANCE WUMicrosynopsis: Jessica’s stinginess in trying to keep the restaurant from losing money becomes hostile, so Louis encourages her to spend time at home, tutoring the kids after school, in an effort to keep her away from the employees and customers.

Good: The show so far succeeds in very funny little moments. While it has more than its fair share of yelling, the funniest moments are often in lines whispered, or muttered under someone’s breath. I’m still feeling that a lot of stuff in this program is just to be endured; yet the small moments will keep me coming back. The small moments and Constance Wu.

Bad: There’s some funny stuff about getting straight As, but it’s kind of negated by too much time spent on the alligator and cloud stickers. Not funny and not interesting.

CONSTANCE WU, FORREST WHEELER, HUDSON YANG, IAN CHENFOB moment: If someone in a Chinese family says “Love you,” someone is hiding something!

Soundtrack flashback: Cypress Hill’s “Insane in the Brain.” Yes! Also Ice Cube’s “Today Was a Good Day.”

Final grade, this episode: I’m still expending a lot of energy reminding myself that the silly, cartoonish stuff can work if the rest of the show is sincere. The rest of the show is sincere, but I still find the cartoony stuff to be a distraction, not (yet) as much a part of the show’s charm as it is in shows like Ally McBeal and Malcolm in the Middle. On the other hand, I laughed aloud a few times, and both of this episode’s story lines revolve around Jessica. If my hopes for this show were lower, I’d give it a B, but because I think it might get a lot better, I’m giving it its second B minus in a row.

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Invitation to 8Asians Readers in Los Angeles: ‘Fresh Off the Boat’ “Watch Party” (Plus ‘Cristela’ & ‘Empire’)

UPDATE 2/11/2015: Thanks for a great turnout to the event. (The RSVP information is being removed from this post.)

8Asians is happy to partner with Fox Audience Strategy to invite our readers and (and your friends and family!) to join us at this fun and exclusive “Watch Party” at UCLA on Tuesday, February 10th, 2015, the official launch of the highly anticipated Fresh Off the Boat in its regular time slot (Tuesdays at 8pm). Refreshments will be available from 6-7pm and the screenings will follow.

Date: Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Time: 6:00PM – 8:00PM
Location: UCLA, 147 Dodd Hall
Seating is limited. Click here to RSVP (required)
Hashtag: #FreshOffTheBoat

FAQs:
1) What is the premiere date of FOTB?
ABC plans to air a special two-episode premiere TONIGHT, Wednesday, February 4, at 8:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

The first airdate in their actual time slot is 8 p.m. on ABC, beginning Tuesday, February 10, 2015.

2) If the show is airing on ABC, why is FOX hosting this screening?
While ABC is indeed distributing the show, Fresh Off the Boat is actually a 20th Century Fox Television production and is shot on the FOX lot.

3) How do I RSVP?
RSVP is required as seating is limited. Click here to RSVP.

4) Which episodes will be screened?
We will be showing Fresh Off the Boat Episodes 3 & 4… the same ones that will be airing that night, plus some bonus Cristela and Empire!

5) Why do you have a question 5?
Because I couldn’t end on question 4.

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8 Reasons to Catch the ‘Fresh Off The Boat’ Premiere Tonight

HUDSON YANG

*Watch Online/Download the pilot for free at Amazon Instant Video & iTunes*

My heart is still stinging from the cancellation of Sullivan & Son by TBS, so it’s entirely possible that Wednesday’s premiere (plus one extra episode) of Fresh off the Boat on ABC is merely a rebound infatuation by a recently jilted lover, but “Life is heavy, son,” says our narrator Eddie Huang, and “We have to make the best of it,” says his mother Jessica.

Making the best of it just got a little easier, because I’ve seen the first episode, and I’m all in with a season pass on my TiVo. Here are 8 reasons.

  1. Because Asian.
    Without getting too into it (because that’s not really what I’m about), I’d like gently to remind anyone who’ll hear me that the America I grew up in is loaded with Asians, yet the America represented on television seems to have just a few, a strange disconnect that my brain still can’t make sense of. And while Fresh off the Boat‘s 1995 Orlando seems exaggerated in its dearth of Asian Americans–Eddie appears to be the only Asian student in his whole school–I figure it’s a step. There’s one ramen restaurant in my neighborhood that’s not very good, but I eat there all the time because I don’t want there to be zero ramen restaurants in my neighborhood.
  2. Constance Wu.
    I don’t think I’ve seen anything Constance Wu has been in until just now, but she’s very good as Eddie Huang’s mother Jessica. She reminds me of a M*A*S*H-era Rosalind Chao, if Rosalind were to play a tiger mom, and she’s the best thing this show has going for it. Read: She’s freaking beautiful.
  3. The Wonder Years + The Middle = Fresh off the Boat.
    CONSTANCE YU, RANDALL PARKEddie Huang, our eleven-year-old protagonist, tells his story (via the real Eddie Huang’s voiceover narration) wistfully and nakedly, like Daniel Stern’s voicing of grown-up Kevin Arnold in The Wonder Years. It mostly works, and where Kevin’s looking back had a tone that longed for more innocent times, Eddie’s has just a touch of Nineties-era Gen-Y cynicism, something that serves the show well. Add quirky characters, cartoonishly silly only-in-a-sitcom situations, and a sincere fondness for its own characters without getting sappy about it, and you get something flavored like The Middle that could still be unique in prime time if it’s allowed to find its groove and its audience. Also like these two esteemed shows, Fresh off the Boat is blessedly absent a laugh track.
  4. “This is for the Gs.”
    Where The Wonder Years had Joe Cocker and the Jefferson Airplane, Fresh off the Boat pays tribute to mid-Nineties hip hop. Music by MC Breed, Old Dirty Bastard, and Snoop Doggy Dogg gets prominent attention in the first episode. Somebody is putting a lot of thought into what’s on the soundtrack, and it’s a nice, credible mix. Viewers not into rap might find it a difficult adjustment, but I’d suggest giving it a try. This is some pretty good stuff, and it makes the show feel different from most things you see on TV.
  5. Subtitles.
    Okay, so maybe it’s been done before (Arrested Development, maybe?), but there’s a pretty funny running gag involving subtitles. Although it’s not a huge part of the show, it’s maybe my third-favorite thing about it.
  6. “Evan, Emery, and Grandma.  Whatever.”
    Randall Park as Eddie’s father Louis is well-intentioned but goofy, as are many of the jokes on this show, but Eddie’s younger brothers (Ian Chen and Forrest Wheeler) and their grandmother (Lucille Soong) are really funny, too.
  7. The nail that sticks up.
    Without giving anything away (and because I can’t put my finger on it exactly), there’s a spirit of defiance and a theme of rebellion here in the pilot episode. Characters make decisions that look at first like conforming to expectations but then they either change course or stick doggedly to some part of those expectations that makes them suspiciously subversive. Eddie’s father moves away from Washington D.C.’s Chinatown to open a restaurant, but it’s not a Chinese restaurant.  Eddie’s mother caves in on a disagreement about “white people food” for lunch, but does anything but cave in over another lunchroom conflict.  Eddie has a look that’s definitely his own, but his two little brothers looks eerily alike. And something happens near the end that’s as big an upraised fist at the establishment as the rap lyrics coming through Eddie’s headphones. Perhaps I read too much into things, but if I don’t, there might be some genius-level social commentary going on here despite some pretty sophomoric choices by the writers.
  8. Constance Wu.
    Seriously, she’s worth a double mention. I may have a new favorite. Vivian Bang who?

Final grade, this episode: The show has a lot of promise, but it goes for some unnecessarily creepy humor and caricaturish portrayals of non-Asian characters.  I get that we’re seeing things through the eyes of an eleven-year-old boy, so some exaggeration is appropriate and funny (as with the store where the “white-people food” is), but more often there’s nothing clever or smart about the “we’re not like them” humor. Because I’m sensing some potential for greatness, I have to be tough on it. B-.  

PS: Just kidding, Vivian. If you’re reading this, I will have a cold soda waiting for you at the bus stop.

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8Asians.com Exclusive: Interview with ABC’s ‘Fresh Off the Boat’ Hudson Yang & his Dad Jeff Yang

As we’ve all heard by now, Fresh Off the Boat, is the first American television series staring an Asian American family in over twenty years (since Margaret Cho’s All American Girl in 1994) is coming to ABC, with the first two episodes premiering this upcoming Wednesday, February 4th – before settling into its regularly scheduled Tuesday evening time slot.

http://youtu.be/mOutgc-GG6g

The comedy series is based on the memoirs of NYC-based chef and restauranteur Eddie Huang’s memoir of the same name, Fresh Off the Boat, where:

“It’s the ’90s and 12 year old, hip-hop loving Eddie just moved to suburban Orlando from DC’s Chinatown with his parents. It’s culture shock for his immigrant family in this comedy about pursuing the American Dream.”

Recently, Hudson Yang, the star of the new ABC sitcom Fresh Off the Boat, and his dad, noted Wall Street Journal columnist Jeff Yang, were in San Francisco for a fundraising event for the 1990 Institute, and I had the great opportunity able to interview the two of them, right after HoChie Tsai (who I like to describe as the “Godfather of Taiwanese America, 2nd Generation”) of TaiwaneseAmerican.org did one.

2015_01_Hudson_Jeff_Yang_8asiansI first met Jeff Yang over 20 years ago at an ITASA conference at Harvard. Although I had already graduated from college, I often visited friends and my brother in the Greater Boston area. Yang was on a panel for “alternative careers” for Taiwanese Americans (i.e. for those not pursuing a medical, law, engineering, etc. stereotypical career) and he was the the publisher of A. Magazine and had re-started to follow him when he used to be a regular columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle and then, the Wall Street Journal.

I watched an online screener of the pilot for Fresh Off the Boat, so I was surprised to see Hudson as a regular young kid acting like a kid (also being impatient, bored at the dim sum fundraiser – playing videogames, etc.), unlike his on-screen persona as Eddie Huang that he portrays on the TV series, as someone with a lot of swagger and confidence.

The New York Times does a nice overview of the upcoming anticipation, challenges and expectations of the show:

The deeply neutered “All-American Girl,” in effect “apologized for the Asianness of this family,” Mr. Yang said, by filtering it through the lens of traditional white sitcom values. On “Fresh Off the Boat,” about an immigrant family of Taiwanese descent making its way in white America with varying degrees of success, it’s the white perspective that’s foreign. It is also a memoir about falling under the spell of hip-hop at a time when, for an outsider, that could feel like a more or less solitary pursuit. (The first two episodes will be shown on Wednesday, and the following week, it will switch to its regular Tuesday time slot.)

Both series in their own ways have underscored tensions about how Asian-Americans can be represented in the mainstream. And both arrived with similar stakes: Whether designed to be a universally relatable representation or birthed from one person’s singular vision, it was the only one in sight.

“It freaks me out that if it doesn’t work for some reason, it’ll be another 20-year drought,” said Melvin Mar, one of the executive producers of “Fresh Off the Boat,” who said he had read countless scripts by Asian-Americans in search of one he wanted to produce.

“You have to remember we’re not making a show just for Asian-Americans, we’re making a show through the Asian-American point of view for everybody,” he continued. “We work on the Fox lot, so everything is compared to ‘Modern Family,’ so it became, ‘We want to be the Chinese Steve Levitan!’ ” (Mr. Levitan is a creator of that sitcom.)

I had a fantastic time interviewing Hudson and Jeff and look forward to seeing Fresh Off the Boat hopefully succeed into a second season. Who knows, if Fresh Off the Boat is a success, Hudson Yang’s fame may surpass Jeremy Lin’s! I hope you enjoy the interview!

As for my review of the show, well, I’ve only seen the pilot. I can say that I enjoyed it – but a lot of the show seemed already familiar to me since I had already seen the online trailer and television spots for the show – and they were mostly, if not all, taken from the pilot. I can’t say that the pilot was funnier than Blackish (which I thought was  *hilarious* and smart), but definitely better than I think than the ill-fated Fall 2014 debut of John Cho’s Selfie’s pilot. 8Asians will be reviewing the episodes, so keep your eyes open for those posts!

Photo courtesy of Anna Wu Photography.

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Karen Chen takes Third in US Figure Skating Nationals but Can’t Represent US Internationally

FIGURE SKATER KAREN CHEN15 year old Karen Chen of Fremont, California took third in the US Figure Skating Nationals held last month in North Carolina.  In instance that reminds me of what happened last year with Mirai Nagasu, she cannot compete internationally at the Senior World Championships in Shanghai because of how the sport’s rules are applied.  The San Jose Mercury News recently published a profile on Chen that revealed her inspirations and the sacrifices that she and her parents make to enable her to compete at that level.

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Asian American Commercial Watch: Progresso Soup’s Creamy Potato with Bacon & Cheese Maid of Honor

http://youtu.be/KGiMZHM22og

While watching my local evening news, I came across this Progresso Soup commercial for their Creamy Potato with Bacon & Cheese soup.

8Asians_AACW_Progresso_SoupI kind of like these Progresso Soup commercials with their childhood nostalgic use of empty soup cans used as play phone toys. In this particular commercial, a Progresso Soup customer ‘calls’ a Progressive Soup chef about how much she likes the soup, loves her sister (but hates her hideous bridesmaid dress).

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8Books Review: “How Much Do You Love Me?” by Paul Mark Tag

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“How Much Do You Love Me?” by Paul Mark Tag is the kind of novel I usually hate.

Here’s the Amazon.com synopsis:

It’s December 1941, and the Japanese have bombed Pearl Harbor. Politicians fuel anti-Japanese hysteria and campaign to segregate Japanese Americans. During this period of hate and racial frenzy, Keiko and James, a Japanese American and a Caucasian, fall in love and marry. Before long, James goes off to war and Keiko to an internment camp.

Sixty years later, Keiko has a stroke and lies near death, while James suffers from Alzheimer’s. Coincidentally, a chance incident makes their daughter, Kazuko, born in the camps, suspect a family secret. Fighting the clock before her mother’s death, she races to unravel the mystery. What she uncovers represents nothing short of the epitome of human love and self-sacrifice. But beyond Kazuko’s dramatic discovery, only the reader knows that this is only half the story.

When I read that synopsis and saw that it was a love story about a Japanese American girl and a Caucasian guy – I immediately thought “Snow Falling on Cedars.” I unconsciously rolled my eyes and shook my head. Why do all the fictional stories about the Japanese American internment camps involve a love story between a white guy and Japanese American woman?

I figured that I didn’t even have to read the book. I could just bash it based on premise alone.

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Josh Paler Lin’s Homeless Video: Truly Unstaged or Just Another Prank?

You may have seen this video released during the holidays where YouTube Prankster Josh Paler Lin gives $100 to a homeless man and follows him to see what he will do with money. The homeless man named “Thomas” goes to a liquor store, but instead of buying of alcohol which Lin and a lot of other people would expect, he gets food which he distributes to other homeless people in a local park. Lin apologizes to Thomas about his stereotyping, and the video goes viral. Is this a truly touching moment, a life lesson about making assumptions, or is it as some point out, a hoax and staged money making scheme?  What does this say, if anything, about Asian Americans and YouTube?

It should be mentioned that the sentiments expressed in the video are not at all bad.  Homeless people are people, and not just mindless alcoholics or junkies as many assume.  Stereotyping is wrong, and the video makes that clear.  These sentiments, perhaps including guilt over how people have felt about the homeless, have pushed the views on the video into past 32 million.

That being said, even the noblest of ideas lose power when people sense that they are made under false pretenses.   Those saying the video is staged point out logical inconsistencies, like why Thomas would pass up a closer and cheaper market and go to a more expensive and farther away liquor store to buy food.   One witness is claiming that he saw Lin drive Thomas to the liquor store and another says that he was in the liquor store prior to Thomas arriving.  A man has surfaced saying that he is the brother of “Thomas” says that “Thomas” is really named Kevin and is actually owed an inheritance.

Why would Lin do this? 

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David Henry Hwang was in a punk band in college; his punk name was “Maggot Wong”

http://youtu.be/W1shHkKfiO0

8A-2015-01-23-DHH-JohnVomitIt figures that playwright David Henry Hwang would be so multitalented. He was reminiscing to a friend about a college punk rock band he played in, and she found the single online. In his words, “The internet is amazing and frightening.”

According to Ryan Richardson of BreakMyFace:

John Vomit & The Leatherscabs was yet another “joke band” who — perhaps by pure accident — created some classic punk tunes. The “band” was formed at Stanford University and led by a regular of the Stanford humor magazine, Chaparral. The man who would come to be called Mr. Vomit felt “punk rock” offered fertile ground for lampooning and an easy outlet for wise cracks. With no more than one practice under their belt, John Vomit & The Leatherscabs’ first and possibly last gig was an opening act for a screening of The Rocky Horror Picture Show on campus. The band lovingly supplied the crowd with tomatoes and bananas before the show and so the audience pelted the unpracticed members as they cranked through the first number.

DHH himself confirms that his punk name in that band was indeed “Maggot Wong” and that in true punk spirit,” he doesn’t even own a copy of the record.

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Asian Americans in the First Lady’s Box at the 2015 State of the Union Address

8A-2015-01-22-SOTUAccording to the White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (WHIAAPI), President Obama’s guest list for this week’s State of the Union address included 23 people, who had the privilege of sitting alongside First Lady Michelle Obama, Dr. Jill Biden, and Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett.

Among the 23 guests were Kathy Pham and Dr. Pranav Shetty.

8A-2015-01-22-SOTU-KathyPhamKathy Pham is a computer scientist, and has used technology throughout her career to tackle pressing challenges. From Google to IBM to Harris Healthcare Solutions, she’s designed health care interoperability software, studied disease trends with data analytics, and built data warehouses for hospital. Now, she’s a part of the U.S. Digital Service, where her technology background unites with her passion for public service.

8A-2015-01-22-SOTU-PranavShettyDr. Pranav Shetty is the Global Emergency Health Coordinator for the International Medical Corps, a critical partner in the American-led fight against Ebola in West Africa. His experience in public health emergencies is invaluable, having responded to crises in Haiti, Libya, South Sudan, Jordan, Iraq, and the Philippines.

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The band St. Lenox, with Andy Choi, is featured on NPR’s “Songs We Love”

8A-2015-01-21-AndyChoi-StLenoxA music project called St. Lenox had their album and song “Just Friends” featured on NPR’s Songs We Love last week:

It’s hard to believe that Andy Choi, the gigantic voice behind St. Lenox, was an award-winning teenage violinist. That was back in the mid-’90s, a time the New York songwriter romanticizes to charming effect throughout his debut album, Ten Songs About Memory And Hope.

“Just Friends” is a soaring song that poignantly chronicles all the irreparable differences that added up to a pair of broken hearts. Choi spends the song trying to make sense of what went wrong: “You never could be on time and / I never was much of a lover and / I never could stand to lose an argument at a party.” But Choi isn’t navel-gazing here: He belts out his regrets with uncanny melisma, like John Darnielle channeling Tony Clifton. As odd as it sounds, it’s a genuinely affecting affect.

The comparison to John Darnielle, the creative force behind The Mountain Goats, resulted in a public praise by Darnielle himself— calling St. Lenox “a lyricist of the highest order.”

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