How to American Quotes

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How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents by Jimmy O. Yang
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“I take pride in playing immigrant characters. I've come across people who had a negative opinion about playing Asian characters that have an accent. I've even met Asian actors who won't audition for a role that has an Asian accent. They believe these accented characters reinforce the stereotype of an Asian being the constant foreigner. Frankly, I can't relate. I was an immigrant. And no matter how Americanized I become, no matter how much Jay-Z I listen to, I'll always be an immigrant. Just because I don't speak English with an accent anymore doesn't mean that I'm better than the people who do. My job as an actor is not to judge anyone and to portray a character with humanity. There are real people with real Asian accents in the real world. I used to be one of them. And I'm damn proud of it.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“Top Five Chinese Rules
1. Respect your parents, your elders and your teachers. Never talk back or challenge them under any circumstance.
2. Education is the most important thing. It's more important than independence, the pursuit of happiness and sex.
3. Pay back your parents when you are working. We were all born with a student loan debt to our Asian parents. Asian parents' retirement plans are their kids.
4. Always call your elders "Uncle" or "Auntie," even if they are not related to you. Never call them by their first names.
5. Family first, money second, pursue your dreams never.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“From eating at El Pollo Loco salsa bar to the Golden Globes buffet, I managed to stumble through this journey with the perseverance of an immigrant and the mindset of an American. I learned to thrive on being uncomfortable to pursue what I loved. The English language was uncomfortable, so I studied BET until it became my natural tongue. Doing stand-up was uncomfortable, so I hung out at the Comedy Palace until it became my second home. Auditions were uncomfortable, so I spent six hundred bucks a month on acting classes while I slept in some dude's living room for three hundred bucks until acting became my profession. I never looked at these challenges as barriers; I saw them as opportunities to grow. I'd rather try to pursue my dream knowing that I might fail miserably than to have never tried at all. That is How to American.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“As a proper Asian, I chose death over shame.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“We are so busy chasing our goals, sometimes we forget about the thrill of the chase. We only realize the goal wasn’t the prize when we get there.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“Asian ladies will tell you exactly what is wrong with your face, in front of your face, as if they were helping you.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“The most important values in American culture are independence and freedom. The most important values in Chinese culture are family and obedience. And by no choice of my own, I am caught in between the two worlds. Having emigrated from Hong Kong to Los Angeles, I live my life in an often difficult duality. I grew up believing in the Chinese values my parents instilled in me, but I longed for the American value of pursuing what I loved. I have always been jealous of American kids and their freedom to do whatever they want. It’s so simple for them; they don’t have to follow a different set of Chinese rules back home. They get to frolic around the neighborhood streets and play in their tree houses by themselves with no parental supervision.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“Having you as my son is like winning the lottery. Not the mega millions jackpot but like a small $20 price.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“When a Shanghainese person finds another Shanghainese in America, it’s like finding a best friend who has the same birthday and who also happens to be a long lost cousin.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents
“He said that this really is the land of opportunity, but most Americans just don’t see it because they’re simply too used to it. They don’t appreciate it and they don’t take advantage of it as much as people who move here from other countries do.”
Jimmy O. Yang, How to American: An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents