Self Evident: Asian America's Stories

Self Evident Media

  • 44 minutes 4 seconds
    Self Evident Presents: "Carol & The Los Angeles Uprising, Pt 1" (by Inheriting)

    Carol Kwang Park was 12 years old, working as a cashier at her family’s gas station in Compton, California, when the 1992 LA Uprising forever changed her life. Her mom was at the gas station that day and Carol was unsure if she’d even make it home. At the time, she didn’t understand why tensions came to a head in Los Angeles, following the acquittal of the officers who beat Rodney King. She also never understood why her mother insisted on keeping the business going, especially after the Uprising. As an adult, a personal crisis prompts Carol to finally start processing that event and her place in history. 

    Hear more from Inheriting at laist.com/podcasts/inheriting.

    Content Warning: This episode contains racial slurs and discusses police brutality.

    7 June 2024, 4:00 am
  • 48 minutes 9 seconds
    Self Evident Presents: “Live! Making Before Me With Lisa Phu” (by The Vietnamese Boat People podcast)

    Our friend Tracey Nguyen Mang, host of the Vietnamese Boat People Podcast, goes behind the scenes with Lisa Phu in this conversation — about how to document the lives of our parents, when that process can feel overwhelming.

    This episode, recorded live online, is the Season 6 Premiere of The Vietnamese Boat People, a podcast and nonprofit project that preserves the story of the Vietnamese diaspora community — and provides spaces where people can share their experiences. This latest season of their podcast follows the theme, “Ba, Mẹ ơi” (which roughly translates to "Dear Dad and Mom"). You can listen to more stories from the season by searching for “Vietnamese Boat People” where you get podcasts, or on their website.

    1 June 2023, 4:45 pm
  • 38 minutes 9 seconds
    Self Evident Presents: “How to Wash Your Brain” (by Boen Wang and Feet in 2 Worlds)

    Boen’s mom thinks he’s brainwashed by the New York Times. Boen thinks his mom is brainwashed by the Chinese Communist Party. But when Boen starts listening more deeply to his mom’s stories of growing up in China and then immigrating to the U.S., he spots the signs of his own political conditioning — and unravels the threads of Chinese and American history that led to the very fabrication of “brainwashing” as a concept.

     

    This story comes from our friends at Feet in 2 Worlds, originally airing on their podcast, A Better Life? — and was written and produced by Boen Wang. Full transcript, credits, and show notes available on our website.

    25 April 2023, 8:04 pm
  • 44 minutes 22 seconds
    Self Evident Presents: "Exploring Ancestral Grief" (by Grief, Collected)
    America! The land of opportunity! And also, for so many, the ambiguous loss of immigration and uprooting a life and a history comes with a complex web of emotions. In this episode of Grief, Collected by The Mash-Up Americans, hosts Amy S. Choi and Rebecca Lehrer speak with trauma therapist and educator Linda Thai — about ancestral grief, and how unmetabolized grief, particularly in "Mash-Up" families, is passed down through generations. We dive into how important understanding historical context is for grief and healing, and ask: What happens to a family structure if we don’t grieve?

    Full episode transcript available on the Grief, Collected website.

    Episode Credits 

    • Grief, Collected is a production of The Mash-Up Americans
    • Executive produced by Amy S. Choi and Rebecca Lehrer
    • Senior editor and producer is Sara Pellegrini
    • Development Producer is Dupe Oyebolu
    • Production manager Shelby Sandlin
    • Original music composed by The Brothers Tang
    • Sound design support by Pedro Rafael Rosado
    • Website design by Rebecca Parks Fernandez
    • Grief, Collected was supported in part by a grant from The Pop Culture Collaborative
    18 January 2023, 10:00 am
  • 32 minutes 22 seconds
    Self Evident Presents: "Arrival" (by VPM's Resettled)

    The LahPai family’s arrival to Virginia from Myanmar was highly anticipated: the local resettlement agency prepped their home; the local religious community was ready to provide support; the family’s U.S connection lived just minutes down the street. Even with these support systems, resettlement was (and still is) not a straightforward, clean-cut process.

    Why is that? In this debut episode from Resettled — a series by Virginia Public Media about the real experiences of refugees after they arrive to the U.S. — you'll meet the people helping the LahPais during their early days of resettlement... and explore some of the unexpected difficulties that arise when moving to a new country, a new culture and a new life.

    Episode Credits:

    • Resettled is a production of VPM
    • Produced by Gilda di Carli and edited by Kelly Jones, with oversight from Angela Massino and Nate Tobey
    • Hosted by Ahmed Badr
    • Production management by Gavin Wright
    • Steve Humble is VPM’s Chief Content Officer
    • Music for this episode by Sandhill and Blue Dot Sessions.

    Special thanks from VPM:

    • Thanks to Catherine Komp, Zar Wahidi, Yasmine Jumaa and interns Safiya Ahmed and Helen Zein Eddine, along with the folks at NPR’s Story Lab for helping kickstart the podcast.
    • Thanks to Leslie Bretz, Louise Keeton and Michael Hayes for web and digital support.

    More photos and stories available at vpm.org/resettled.

    11 January 2023, 10:00 am
  • 41 minutes 2 seconds
    Self Evident Presents: "Before They Were Your Parents" (by Immigrantly)

    Today, we're sharing some work by our friends at Immigrantly, a weekly podcast that features deeply personal conversations about race, identity, and the immigrant experience. This episode features a conversation between host Saadia Khan and reporter Neda Toloui-Semnani, who wrote a book called THEY SAID THEY WANTED REVOLUTION: A Memoir of My Parents.

    To finish that book, Neda went through a whole journey to learn about the life her parents lived before she was born, understand why they moved from the U.S. to Iran to join the revolution taking place there in 1979, and unpack what kind of legacy they had left for her in the process. You can listen to Immigrantly wherever you get your podcasts, or learn more at immigrantlypod.com.

    Immigrantly Episode Credits:

    • Host & Producer: Saadia Khan 
    • Content Writer: Ashley Lanuza & Saadia Khan
    • Editorial Review: Yudi Li 
    • Sound Designer & Editor: Manni Simon
    • Immigrantly Theme Music: Evan Ray Suzuki 
    • Other Music: Epidemic Sound
    5 January 2023, 6:58 pm
  • 1 minute
    Help us by taking our listener survey!

    Please take our listener survey to tell us what you think of Before Me! The survey is anonymous, takes 5 minutes, and is incredibly important for helping us take our next steps as an independent studio for stories by and about Asian Americans. We use your answers to better understand your needs as a listener — but we also use your feedback to show how we’re making an impact as we raise funds for our next new podcast season or storytelling program.

    3 January 2023, 10:00 am
  • 17 minutes 5 seconds
    Before Me, Part 5: Birthday Card

    Just before I gave birth to my daughter Acacia, I turned 36. And on my birthday my mom sent me a birthday card that was full of heartfelt words — more than she’d ever written to me before. On the last night of her visit to help me take care of Acacia, as she read the card aloud, I realized how I was — and still am — a part of the lives that came before me.

    Full show notes, photos, credits, and transcript on our web site.

    27 December 2022, 10:00 am
  • 31 minutes 46 seconds
    Before Me, Part 4: Head of the House

    At the moment my mom steps onto a small fishing boat off the coast of Cambodia, headed for a refugee camp in Thailand under cover of night, she becomes the head of our family. It takes her less than a year to make it safely to her new home in New York, give birth to me, and learn how to be a single parent in the U.S. But it will end up taking her decades to process what she’s overcome, what she’s become, and what she’s left behind on the beaches of Cambodia.

    Full show notes, photos, credits, and transcript on our web site.

    20 December 2022, 10:00 am
  • 28 minutes 38 seconds
    Before Me, Part 3: Beautiful Country

    Reunited with my cousin Lynn, my mom becomes a gold dealer to support her growing family — and realizes that the charmed childhood she had in Cambodia is nowhere to be found for her own kids. She recounts the joyful memories that helped her hold on for more than five years as a refugee in Vietnam, before making the decision to leave both countries for good.

    Full show notes, photos, credits, and transcript on our web site.

    13 December 2022, 10:00 am
  • 36 minutes 27 seconds
    Before Me, Part 2: Photograph

    As the genocidal regime of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge takes hold of Cambodia, my mom and dad run for their lives — separated from my cousin, Lynn, who is then faced with keeping her siblings alive in a forced labor camp.

    Full show notes, photos, credits, and transcript on our web site.

    6 December 2022, 4:14 pm
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