Tag: nuancespod
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S4 E08: Gideon – a quadrilingual high schooler with two awesome moms.
Gideon is a quadrilingual highschooler with two awesome moms. We talk about growing up in Calgary, attending a Mandarin-immersion school, learning different languages, why failure is a necessity to improve, and how older folks often underestimate his generation.
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S4 E06: Dr. Sachi Schmidt-Hori on U.S. vs Japan culture, parenting, social norms, & why gender pronouns aren’t an issue in Japan
Sachi Schmidt-Hori refused to work with people who only tolerated her. Now a professor of Japanese literature, she is thriving in academia. We have a great convo about American vs Japanese language, culture, parenting, business etiquette and more in this fun podcast interview!
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S4 E04: Ed Pokropski talks about his Emmy nominations, his comedy show about adoption, and doing his best even if he doesn’t always get it right.
If you enjoy this show and would like to help me spread the word about it, or support it financially, you can find out more at nuancespod.com/support GUEST BIO Edward Yoo Pokropski is one of the Executive Producers of the Asian Comedy Fest and Emmy Nominated Senior Writer/Producer at NBCUniversal. He is also a comedian…
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S4 E03: Ryan Alexander Holmes reminds us the importance of art to connect us with our humanity, and that Asians don’t all look alike.
“It’s not that I don’t look Asian, you just haven’t seen an Asian like me before” – Ryan Alexander Holmes shares his journey embracing both his Black and Chinese roots, and his passion for creating art that speaks to people.
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S4 E2: Dr. Paul Song on why medicare-for-all would help both patients and doctors. Also: Natural Killer cells & Alzheimer’s
Dr. Paul Y. Song on groundbreaking treatment for Alzheimers, healthcare advocacy, and how his work as an oncologist made him a universal healthcare proponent.
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S4 E1: Soo Jin Lee was never she was undocumented, but she somehow knew. Also: therapy isn’t the only way to heal.
Soo Jin Lee was never told she’s undocumented, but she somehow knew. The licensed therapist and author also shares how healing trauma does not have to come from western methods of achieving health & wellness.
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S3 E13: Samantha Ong on the need for representation in toys, colorism in Asian culture, and how her culturally accurate dolls sold out on launch day.
Samantha Ong is a photographer turned CEO of her own toy company. She talks about growing up in Australia, living in Canada, becoming a mom, and wanting her kids to have the representation she didn’t have when she was growing up.