You are currently browsing all entries tagged with 'Phuc'

Ho’s Unite

  • March 24, 2010 2:27 am

All my life, the number one punch line that people still find funny is my last name. True, Asian last names are kinda weird and funny looking like “PHUC” or “KUM” but there’s many famous people with the name “HO” and I take pride in that. Ho Chi Minh (Vietnam’s famous Communist revolutionary aka Uncle Ho) or Cheng Ho (a Chinese explorer decades before Christopher Columbus, real name Ma Ho) or Chan Ho Park (a trailblazer for Asian baseball players into the major league). But with a name that describes a prostitute or a chant while working by the seven dwarfs or what jolly Saint Nick screams happily, a name like “HO” can be both awesome and cruel.

Movies That Should Have Starred Asians: Meet The Parents

  • February 8, 2010 1:41 am

Sweet and slightly neurotic “ethnic” guy meets and falls in love with blonde WASP beauty. He accompanies her to meet her equally WASP parents where he finds himself under the suspicious eye of her protective and scary father. Things get worse when ethnic guy initiates a series of missteps, which makes an already tense situation worse. This is the plot of the hit 2000 comedy Meet The Parents starring Ben Stiller as Greg “Gaylord” Focker a.k.a. neurotic ethnic guy (Jewish in this case) and Robert DeNiro as scary dad Jack Byrnes, but it could also describe the various times my white girlfriends took me to meet their folks for the first time. So why not Meet The Parents starring an Asian American dude in the Stiller role? It might look something like this:

Yup, if someone like my fellow Offender Roger Fan had stepped into the part, the story would have still worked with minimal changes to the script. In fact, the basic premise of the “outsider” boyfriend meeting his fiancee’s “all-American” family would be even more strengthened if said boyfriend was really “different” i.e. Asian. But couldn’t that character be any person of color–not necessarily Asian? I don’t think so. It wouldn’t have the same impact if the boyfriend were black or Latino even though they could also represent the “outsider.” Why?