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Hilarious Asian Trivia with Reel Asian Podcast


Angela Lin 0:21
Today we have two special guests with us. We have Raymond and Rene from The Reel Asian podcast what’s up?

Rene 0:31
Thanks so much for having us.

Raymond 0:33
Good morning. Very good morning. It’s 6am – five in the morning. No, just kidding. It’s only 9am. Not that early. Not that early.


Full Transcript (Note: Transcribed via AI, may contain errors)


Angela Lin 0:49
Funny, okay. All right. Well, we actually have a really fun, special different kind of episode format for everyone today. But before we go into that, we want to make sure to introduce who Raymind and Rene are so throwning it to you guys. Introduce yourselves however you want and maybe give us a little sense for what Reel Asian podcast is about for our listeners.

Raymond 1:12
Sounds good. Okay. Hi, everyone. I am Raymond Luu. I am born and raised in the Bay Area, primarily in the South Bay Area. Currently, I live in Sunnyvale. I am the one of the cohosts and also producer for Reel Asian podcast. And basically the show is about taking a look at Asian American culture of pop culture, through the lens of cinema and movies. Typically the format of the show, we put a movie at the centerpiece of discussion, and then we just kind of myself and the other co hosts, talk about it in various angles, whether the movie in itself, the themes, characters plot, etc. Or and then we got to go into like maybe the macro sense of it, like what is this? How does this fit in the Asian American film canon? Aside from that I work at a university, I do a lot of nonprofit stuff. My two nonprofits at the moment is Project by Project and Hate is a Virus. I keep myself pretty busy. I wish I hadn’t. But that’s just my life at the moment. And yeah, I’m I’m so honored and privileged to be on this pod with you all. So I’ll pass it over to Rene.

Rene 2:18
Hey, thank you so much, Ray, for that wonderful introduction. You know, so basically, for myself, I am a California and bred and born from Fresno moved to the Bay Area when I was in my mid teens. And I am Hmong American. And I come from, you know, just kind of like humble beginnings. I’m one generation removed from, you know, families living in huts and villages in the jungles of Laos. And so coming to the Bay Area, and pursuing a career in technology, where I’ve been doing that for the last 17 years, is something I’m basically my ancestors, wildest dreams. And I really appreciate being able to, to be in the position where I can – to be able to do that. And so I’m a mother of two and, and a wife, but I’m also a Gamer Girl. And I’ve been working in the video game industry for the last 17 years, and have created my own studio called Tiger Byte Studios back in 2015. And, you know, the main focus there is to be able to, you know, create stories that reflect the community. And so one of my favorite kind of, and most like, important thing to me is actually creating this program called celebrate Hmong, where the main focus on that is being able to uplift you Hmong, Hmong community, in the visual arts, literary arts, performing arts and filmmaking. And so we’ve been doing that for the last three years. So being that not only is about like doing events, but also being able to give back scholarships and money capital back to the community, because one of the things that I wish I had was the encouragement of someone just saying, like, I believe in you. So –

Raymond 4:27
I believe in you.

Rene 4:28
Thank you. And so I’m so grateful to kind of have this opportunity to be a part of Reel Asian podcast, because it combines the things that I really love, which is like the, you know, Asians in the entertainment industry, and then also being able to sometimes talk shit about some of the video films that come out from it, you know, but also like really hard hitting facts. So I really love being able to kind of just be in front of you all and so thank you for this opportunity.

Angela Lin 4:55
Wow, I was awesome. Um, okay, well, Rene, I feel Like you already pretty much answered but where are you really from? So I’ll let you unless you have anything additional to add. I might throw it back to Raymond who we didn’t get a chance to ask that to yet.

Raymond 5:10
So where am I really from? How philosophical and deep do I really want to go? How much time do we have? I’m just kidding. I’m half Chinese, half Vietnamese. My mom’s Chinese family side. And then my dad is from Vietnam. But they met over here. But I’m a first generation American as American as apple pie, I guess. I guess you could say that’s that’s my really from moment there. And definitely you know, the the title of your show I every time I think about it, it’s like yeah, I think about all the different times I’ve been asked that growing up, but were you like really from like, I’m American. Yeah, but were you really from? The hell that’s supposed to mean so I just I just think it’s a very very important phrase almost comical in its in its own right, but yeah, I think it’s really great what y’all are doing with this show?

Angela Lin 6:07
Thank you.

Raymond 6:09
Does that answer your question, or do you want to go metaphysical where am I really from?

Angela Lin 6:15
What that’s fine, you can answer however you want?

Raymond 6:21
I don’t know. I don’t know my astrology or I know I’m a Taurus. That’s where I really pop.

Angela Lin 6:26
We’re from the stars. We’re all just stardust. That’s fine.

Raymond 6:31
Okay. Also, I just learned the phrase Mercury is in retrograde yesterday. I don’t know what that means. Does that does that mean anything?

Rene 6:40
You’re so cute, because that’s like the very introduction phrase when you’re getting your queer baby card is you know what mercury in retrograde is. Ray, welcome.

Raymond 6:56
I was with friends and they’re like, we’re doing something and they’re like, mercury, mercury’s in retrograde. And I was like, what? Like, I never heard that phrase before. And apparently there’s a Twitter account out there that’s literally just is merged mercury in retrograde and everyday is just either yes or no yes or no yes or no?

Angela Lin 7:21
Okay, well, now we know who you are. Let’s get into the fun stuff. So as you guys heard their podcast is centered around cinema and Asian American pop culture, how those things tie in together. We – Jesse and I are no experts in film and TV by any means. So our –

Raymond 7:41
Same here

Angela Lin 7:41

  • well , we’re not as of film buffs as you guys. So our spin on this topic was we wanted to do a trivia game around the topics of kind of like TV, film, actors, actresses, whatever, but within the Asian American community, and each podcast is kind of hosting different categories. And we’ll be asking questions to each other to try to stump each other on some of these categories. And Ray asked earlier, what are we? What are we fighting for? We’re just fighting for glory here.

Raymond 8:21
What are we fighting for?

Angela Lin 8:22
We all have no podcast budget to have real prizes so it’s all for glory. Okay. I’m gonna kick it off, because I’m so excited. Okay, so the category our first category is, guess what type of Asian celebrity they are versus what type of Asian they’ve played, or what type of Asian everyone like thinks they are. Let’s start off with one that may be approach more approachable, okay. All of the actors who play the Huang family and Fresh Off the Boat are actually Taiwanese or Chinese American, true or false?

Raymond 9:02
Okay. Are we going around to lock in our answers?

Angela Lin 9:09
Yeah, do what you do?

Rene 9:12
Oh, false. No, no, no, no, no, no, it’s false. Okay, number one, Randall Park – he’s Korean!

Now this category secret Asian man Asian man if we had a soundboard right now we you would hear the opening riff to secret agent man. We can definitely edit that in. This 90s TV heartthrob with blonde hair is actually half Asian.

Angela Lin 11:07
I know who it is. I don’t know his name. It’s the guy from –

Rene 11:11
just say the beginning of the name of the TV show

Angela Lin 11:14

  • Saved by the Bell.

Rene 11:17
That’s right.

Raymond 11:20
The guy who plays Zack Morrison?

Rene 11:21
That’s right. The guy who plays Zack Morris is German, Dutch and Indonesian – his mom is Indonesian. TV heartthrob Zack Morris is half-Indonesian. And so they actually had to bleach his hair blonde. Wow. It’s crazy. But I really wish they had leaned into the fact that he was like half, like not just like half Chinese. He’s freaking like South Asian, Indonesian you know?

Angela Lin 11:51
Yeah that’s special in Hollywood.

Rene 11:53
Yeah, totally. Right. Exactly. So I feel I feel come completely erased from the 90s. Right. No representation on screen that really mattered. And he was such like a huge thing. I really felt like they should have leaned in on that a little bit. But Oh, well.

Jesse Lin 12:11
Okay, I will do, okay, this obscure one. Kal Penn had a one episode appearance as Prajeeb in which of these TV shows? Sabrina, the Teenage Witch – the original 90s, early 2000 version, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, or Dawson’s Creek?

Rene 12:32
Oh, shit. Okay, hold on. So Kal Penn was was hot shit at the beginning of 2000.

Raymond 12:41
Harold and Kumar was when he like really broke into the scene.

Jesse Lin 12:45
Investigative work in process.

Angela Lin 12:47
Look at this deduction.

Rene 12:49
And when Obama went into office…

Raymond 12:56
Right. And I believe mercury was in retrograde. Every day, um, got it. Yeah. I’m gonna go with Dawson’s Creek final answer. That’s mine.

Okay, I was gonna say Charmed, but okay.

Angela Lin 13:13
But that’s not one of the –

Jesse Lin 13:14

  • that wasn’t one of the answers.

Raymond 13:16
Oh, not Charmed. I’m sorry. Yeah, Dawson’s Creek, that sounds good. The answer is Sabrina The Teenage Witch.

Angela Lin 13:24
Well, Jesse I’m gonna correct you. It’s Sabrina THE teenage – she is the teenage which. Sabrina and the separate teenage witch

Jesse Lin 13:36
It’s definitely earlier where you guys are but I’m somehow like five times more sleepy, even though it’s like noon-thirty right now.

Angela Lin 13:48
Since y’all didn’t get that one. I’m gonna take it back to the category of Asians, like what ethnicity they actually are versus what people think they are for this one. Okay, so a little bit of a twist kind of question. How many of the four members of popular Kpop girl group Black Pink are Korean born Koreans. And I have multiple choice at this point. You can just choose me there are four members – I wrote 4,3,2,0?

Raymond 14:34
Okay, man, I don’t know Kpop at all.

Angela Lin 14:39
I barely know Kpop. But I watched the documentary that.

Raymond 14:43
I see. I see. Okay, so how many of them are actually Korean born Koreans.

Angela Lin 14:49
That’s right.

Rene 14:50
I don’t know anything about Kpop. So I would have to be shooting in the dark.

Angela Lin 14:55
Shoot in the dark.

Raymond 14:57
0 is a choice. I feel like yeah, zero. would be a surprising answer enough to be like this is surprisingly true, you know? So I’m gonna go with zero and say none of them are Korean born Koreans.

Angela Lin 15:14
Okay, Rene?

Rene 15:16
Um, Ray tends to be right. So I’m going to go ahead and –

Raymond 15:20

  • I was wrong the last few questions!

Rene 15:25
Okay, I’m going to go with two – half and half.

Angela Lin 15:28
Rene great guess – it’s two!

Rene 15:31
I’m raising the roof over here.

Angela Lin 15:34
I learned this from the documentary. And I thought it was so like, it was kind of shocking to me to learn this. So the most surprising one is Lisa, who’s most known as one of the main like rappers of the group. She’s actually Thai. And she didn’t know any Korean until she moved to Korea to join this, like the training camps to become a Kpop trainee. So she was just like, can’t speak with any of you and like, don’t know what’s happening. And then is now super famous and knows how to speak fluent Korean. So that’s crazy.

Raymond 16:06
So you’re saying it’s too late for me is what you’re saying. I can still go to Kpop training camp

Angela Lin 16:10
That’s maybe half true. They all start when they’re like 12. So maybe you’re a little late on that one.

Raymond 16:17
Yeah. You know, never mind, you never give up on your dreams. That’s what I tell myself

Angela Lin 16:24
That’s right. That’s right. Okay, so Lisa is one of them. That’s not and then Rose was she’s Korean. The rest of them are Korean like ethnically but Rose was born in New Zealand and grew up in Australia. So she’s like, comparable to us, right like the first gen type peeps and then went back and became super famous. And then the other two were at least born in Korea, but only one of them is like born in Korea grew up in Korea, the rest of them had international like English speaking, you know, lengths of time abroad. So I found that super interesting.

Raymond 17:00
Is this on Netflix? Their documentary? I kind of want to watch it now.

Angela Lin 17:06
It’s a wild world to look at just because yeah, they groom. Groom is a bad word. That’s not that’s not what I mean. But like they they train them up since you know when they’re kids. So it’s weird.

Raymond 17:17
Maybe it’s bad word, but maybe accurate. Who knows?

Rene 17:22
They get paid lots of money to train 12 hour days and die you know from exhausting..

Jesse Lin 17:27
Not grooming they were guided by a strong hand.

Angela Lin 17:30
A strong male hand

Rene 17:35
While Mercury’s in retrograde Mercury’s in retrograde correct. All right. All right. Okay. Since I won, this 1990s supermodel – everything’s 90s okay, apparently for me, this 1990s supermodel has major beef with Tyra Banks.

Like still still from the 90s, to today?

Jesse Lin 18:03
Naomi Campbell.

Rene 18:04
What is her name? But also what is her ethnicity? Yeah, what’s the other so she’s half black half –

Jesse Lin 18:11
Chinese. Naomi Campbell

Rene 18:13
Is that everyone?

Angela Lin 18:14
I’m punting it. Yeah, Jesse got the answer.

Rene 18:17
Okay. Damn, he’s on it. Yes, Naomi Campell is half Jamaican and half Chinese.

Jesse Lin 18:22
I have this question on my side

Rene 18:24
Oh my God you cheater no wonder

Raymond 18:30
But they still got beef, Tyra Banks and Naomi Campbell?

Rene 18:33
Oh, yeah.

Angela Lin 18:34
Lifelong.

Rene 18:35
Oh my god. Yah.

Jesse Lin 18:37
Okay, so I’m going to move the category to fun facts behind famous Asian movies. And my question is Parasite was originally conceived as a TV series, short film, play, or musical?

Musical. That would be great to see.

Rene 19:00
Oh my god

Jesse Lin 19:01
It would be really great as a musical.

Angela Lin 19:03
I would watch it. I would watch it.

Raymond 19:05
Okay, whoever is listening out there needs to turn Parasite into a musical. Okay. It’s pretty long. So I my gut feeling would be a TV series

Jesse Lin 19:19
Rene?

Raymond 19:20
Yeah, I mean, yeah, I’ll go ahead with TV series. I thought oh, you know, another one could be like a theatrical play, but..

Jesse Lin 19:29
It was originally conceived as a play.

Angela Lin 19:32
Rene, first guess!

Raymond 19:34
Don’t listen to me Rene. Don’t listen to me. Whatever I say say the opposite.

Rene 19:44
So apparently Rene only wins and Ray does not.

Raymond 19:49
Rene’s showing that she’s the true film buff of the office. I’m just there to be a voice

Rene 19:57
Ray’s just the beautiful face, but unfortunately it’s a podcast so you guys don’t see it.

Raymond 20:05
I’ve got the perfect face for podcasting. That’s why I got into it.

Rene 20:12
Okay, all right, I’m gonna turn it over to you Ray.

Raymond 20:14
Okay, okay alrighty. We’ll do another plot synopsis. So this one may be a little bit more – less obvious

Angela Lin 20:21
Jesse pick up your game .

Raymond 20:22
Okay. A Chinese American surgeon living in Manhattan is shocked when her single mother shows up on her doorstep pregnant. To help her mom save face and avoid the taboo in the Chinese community of an unmarried woman pregnant, the doctor helps her mom find Mr. Right. Cultures clash in this film that explores culture shock.

Angela Lin 20:47
No choices? Damn it. Come on, guys.

Raymond 20:49
No choices, it’s a movie.

Rene 20:54
This one is like way more obscure.

Raymond 20:59
Do you know it Rene?

Rene 21:00
No, I don’t, I’m like racking my brain like what the hell what?

Angela Lin 21:05
I don’t, I tap out

Raymond 21:08
Should I read one more time, would that help?

Rene 21:11
Jennifer Lopez’s Gigli.

Raymond 21:17
Got it! Do you want me to read it one more time? Or just give the answer?

Jesse Lin 21:22
I don’t think we’re gonna get it.

Angela Lin 21:23
I’ve never heard it.

Raymond 21:26
I was hoping in the middle was was the clue to help her mom save face. Saving saving face.

Angela Lin 21:36
I never heard – it’s a believable movie title that I’ve never heard of.

Raymond 21:42
It’s from Alice Wu go check it out. It’s great. One of the early on Asian American LGBTQ plus movies. Yeah, it was a it was a cult classic.

Rene 21:51
Alright, I’ll go ahead and go next then. This Wong Kar-Wai film, My Blueberry Nights, stars this Grammy winning actresses first time filming. What is her name? And what is her heritage?

Raymond 22:17
Oh, man. So do we get two points for guessing her heritage?

Rene 22:21
Yes, you do, actually.

Raymond 22:24
What about half a point if it’s just the name?

Rene 22:26
Okay, fine. Just the name and then I’ll go ahead and tell you what her heritage is.

Raymond 22:32
I know, I know the person. I don’t know. I don’t know the heritage.

Rene 22:38
All right. Well, we’re on the same team. So just wait.

Jesse Lin 22:45
I do not know this.

Angela Lin 22:47
I don’t know anything about this, but I’m going to guess at least the ethnicity. I feel like it’s a shocker, but I’m just gonna guess a generic one – Chinese!

Rene 22:58
Okay. Her name is Norah Jones.

Angela Lin 23:02
Oh my God, Nora Jones?

Rene 23:04
And she’s actually and she’s have European heritage and half Bengali.

Jesse Lin 23:09
Whoa, wow.

Rene 23:13
Yeah, so she is the main protagonist in My Blueberry Nights directed by Wong Kar-Wai.

Jesse Lin 23:19
Whoa, I didn’t even know she was in a movie.

Rene 23:22
Yeah, it’s her debut as an actress and she costars with Jude Law.

Angela Lin 23:34
Yeah, when he was still hot.

Rene 23:36
Yeah, I mean, like he still has his hair.

Angela Lin 23:38
Yeah, that’s right, pre-balding.

Jesse Lin 23:43
We’re just going to drag Jude Law today.

Raymond 23:45
Jude, I still love you, no matter how you look

Rene 23:54
I would definitely say it’s not one of Wong Kar-Wai’s best films. If you are in the mood for Wong Karr-Wai, In the Mood for Love is definitely the one that you should go and watch if you haven’t.

Angela Lin 24:06
Okay, I’m taking it back and I’m gonna stick with fun facts behind famous Asian movies. Okay, how long did it take to film the movie Searching starring john Cho. Here are your choices. One year? Three months? 13 days or five days?

Raymond 24:28
You said filming correct?

Angela Lin 24:30
Yeah.

Raymond 24:31
Okay, just filming. I will say five. Five days whatever the last one is.

Angela Lin 24:41
That was five. Yes.

Raymond 24:42
Yeah, five days. Okay.

Rene 24:45
I feel bad because I want a sorry dead air. I feel bad because I want to go with Ray because we did record an episode and I wasn’t on it. If Ray’s wrong then I’m gonna be wrong. I’m like, I’m gonna just shake my head at him just like SMBH. Yeah, and I’m gonna go with Ray I’m gonna say five and probably closer to three months ago.

Angela Lin 25:12
Rene, you got to stop listening to Ray.

Raymond 25:14
No, oh man!

Angela Lin 25:17
It’s 13 days, 13 days!

Raymond 25:20
Okay, I was like is it 5? Or I felt I knew that it was really short. I knew the length of how long I knew how long it took them to edit the movie, which was almost two years. I know the shooting time was varies a little. So I just went with a minimal, not very – Damn you. Why did you throw that five in there?

Angela Lin 25:41
To trick you obviously!

Rene 25:44
That’s why I don’t want to give you guys like multiple choice because then it’s your own your own self doubt. But if you get multiple choice, then you’re like, dammit, they’re leading me with this question.

Raymond 25:54
But that’s just me thinking way too deeply into multiple choice. That’s how I am in school too. I’ve answered D a lot. Maybe it’s B this time.

Angela Lin 26:04
It’s usually C.

So we’re moving to our closing Fortune Cookie section that’s what we call it because we always like to end on a sweet treat.

Raymond 26:55
Love it.

Angela Lin 26:56
And the topic we wanted to discuss unless it sucks and you have a different topic you want to discuss is our favorite slash worst basically the worst whitewashed Asian role.

Rene 27:11
Oh shoot, okay, I mean, I think what I was gonna say was like, either like the Mandarin in the Marvel’s Iron Man 3 or something along those lines or like or any like the other one is like the Ancient in Doctor Strange that was played by Tilda Swinton – that was like a really controversial one. I mean, everyone knows is super controversial about like Ghost in the Shells’ with ScarJo’s character that she plays.

Raymond 27:43
I was also gonna add Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball. I watched I watched a snippet of that and I was like, this is so trash. This is the worst thing I’ve ever seen. I can watch the whole Dragon Ball. Dragon Dragon Ball Z like they made a live action version of Dragon.

Jesse Lin 28:01
No they did not!

Raymond 28:01
White. Yeah, they casted a white guy as Goku.

Rene 28:05
It was terrible. Oh, boy. Yeah, there was also another one. They they took an anime and made it live action as well called The Notebook, no not The Notebook – Deathnote!

Angela Lin 28:19
You mean Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams.

Rene 28:22
No, no, Deathnote. Sorry. Sorry. And that’s hilarious. Yeah, so it’s with Ryan Gosling who is actually supposed to be played by Henry Golding. No, I’m sorry. No, yeah, that one was really terrible. Super whitewashed as well. Oh my god. No. Okay, what else like it just like there’s no, there is, um, a long list of grievances that I could share about this, you know?

Raymond 28:46
Yeah, there was one where they did a Bruce Lee movie. I don’t it was based on Bruce Lee is one of the Bruce Lee movies. He has a lot about Bruce Lee. But it was told through like a white man’s narrative. So like Bruce Lee was kind of like, side character and I was like the fuck is this? And then another one is Street Fighter is a really old 90s movie. They made a live action version of Street Fighter the video game. And like everyone knows Street Fighter as Riu is like the guy right? But then they’ve made the movie towards the towards Guile who was played by Jean Claude Van Damme. So he was like the main guy and the and then Riu was kind of like the side character and I was like, what the fuck is this bullshit? Yeah, but I mean, I also love Jean Claude Van Damme so nothing against him. It was about him so I was like, oh, man.

Rene 29:35
I was gonna even throw back to you like way back in the early cinema days with like Charlie Chan and the like the dragon ladies and I was even gonna bring it up to like the 80s talking about how they were trying to add more Asian representation. So you have with a Long Duk Dong, 16 Candles, and Big Trouble, Little China Town were you know, it was – that was actually more speculative so it was interesting. But Gosh, yeah, I don’t know, I guess I have a long list of grievances in regards to this whitewashing or like, or crazy Asian caricatures.

Raymond 30:18
Yeah. Yeah. Very, very much. The there’s a laundry list of stuff.

Angela Lin 30:25
Agreed. Well, I feel like the good news is that Asians are writing their own shit now, like we talked about with Mindy Kaling and never have ever so like, it’s gonna shift. I hope so.

Jesse Lin 30:40
And I think people are bored of seeing these tropes, right? Like, how many times can you watch the same thing before? You’re like, this is boring. Like, why do you do this?

Raymond 30:48
Yeah, yeah, no, that’s a that’s another hot take there. Jesse. Yeah, no, there’s definitely certain tropes that are kind of aging out. And we’re starting to see a little bit more relative and real content, like the little subtleties, little cultural subtleties, that that we would get as like, first generations or second generations, you know, etc, then so and it’s great, because you can tell that the authenticity comes from like the person writing it, and it’s not like some white dude, it’s like, oh, this is what I think Asian people do, you know, so or how they eat or how they dress, you know?

Rene 31:23
Yeah, definitely. And, you know, I think one of the biggest things too, is being able to see more Asians in in like, not only film but also television, right. So as much as Eddie Huang talks shit about Fresh Off the Boat, because they basically watered it down. Also, at the same time, I’d love to see another like Margaret Cho coming back with another TV series or something like that. Right? So, you know, I feel like it is is it the golden era of filming for Asians? You know, I don’t I don’t know I mean, but at the very minimum, it’s really great to be able to actually have more and more content to talk about in in our podcast – Reel Asian podcast. And I’m really grateful to just be able to like talk about it because I don’t feel like there’s enough kind of conversation about it and because I think one of the things for sure, like between Ray and I we like to kind of keep it real keep it real keep it and even still like even though even though we try to do like a good synopsis and kind of an breakdown of characters and things like that, we also love to bring just talking points about like our own experiences with the the film and you know, sometimes it’s it’s you know, popular opinion and sometimes it’s like hot takes, right so I really I really enjoy being able to talk about it.

Angela Lin 32:51
All right, Jesse. You wanna wrap us up?

Jesse Lin 32:55
Yes. All right. Well, thank you both for joining this was really fun. Where can our listeners find you and find your podcast?

Raymond 33:01
Definitely come check us out. You can find us on Instagram Reel Asian podcast that spelled R-E-E-L Asian podcast and you can find us on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google podcasts or wherever you listen to your popular podcasts you can definitely search us up on Reel Asian podcast come check us out.

Jesse Lin 33:21
Well, if you guys have any questions for us, or if you guys have any questions for Reel Asian podcast, please feel free to reach out to those Instagram handles or you can also email us at telluswhereyourefrom@gmail.com let us know any comments, ideas, thoughts you have about recent movies or tv shows you’ve watched. And, as always, we will be back with a fresh new episode for you guys next week.