Thank you @theacademy for immediate sobs this morning 🙏 CONGRATS to the hundreds of artists around the globe who worked to create our beautiful movie!!! I am so proud to be a part of this team, and to know that Over the Moon will help people to heal and fly forever ❤️ . #oscars #oscars2021 #theacademy #academyawards #bestanimatedfeature #animatedfilm #overthemoon #overthemoonnetflix #overthemoonmovie #netflix #glenkeane #pearlstudio #voiceover #asianrepresentation #asianamerican #asianart #representationmatters #aapi
Me and my girl Bungee watching the Golden Globes tonight in PJs 😍 Sending all my love to our Over the Moon team (if only we could hug!), Netflix, and Pearl Studio. I can never thank you enough for making this beautiful story a part of my life. 🥲 . . . #goldenglobes #overthemoonnetflix #overthemoon #overthemoonmovie #animation #animatedfilm #bestanimatedfeature #quarantine #awardshow #netflix #netflixfilm #film #pearlstudio #glenkeane #voiceover
Feeling so grateful to know @rudinj @joshrahm @agentchrislee have my back ❤️ Thank you @icmpartners and @authenticmgmt for joining me on this crazy journey – the future is brighter together 💫 . Thank you @deadline and @andreabraff for spreading the brilliant news 🙏🙏🙏 . . . #work #working #team #actress #actor #voiceover #film #tv #theatre #letsgo
Best bday present was the chance to EAT MYSELF AS A DESSERT LOL – thank you fam for these @mama.roclee.bakes OVER THE MOON themed COOKIES!!!! 😍 She shipped them to me overnight as a special order and they are so DELICIOUS! And soon they will be gone 😈 #yummy #nomnom #cookies #bakery #overthemoon #overthemoonnetflix #overthemoonmovie #cannibal #dessert #sweet
Best bday present was the chance to EAT MYSELF AS A DESSERT LOL – thank you fam for these @mama.roclee.bakes OVER THE MOON themed COOKIES!!!! 😍 She shipped them to me overnight as a special order and they are so DELICIOUS! And soon they will be gone 😈 #yummy #nomnom #cookies #bakery #overthemoon #overthemoonnetflix #overthemoonmovie #cannibal #dessert #sweet
Best bday present was the chance to EAT MYSELF AS A DESSERT LOL – thank you fam for these @mama.roclee.bakes OVER THE MOON themed COOKIES!!!! 😍 She shipped them to me overnight as a special order and they are so DELICIOUS! And soon they will be gone 😈 #yummy #nomnom #cookies #bakery #overthemoon #overthemoonnetflix #overthemoonmovie #cannibal #dessert #sweet
Best bday present was the chance to EAT MYSELF AS A DESSERT LOL – thank you fam for these @mama.roclee.bakes OVER THE MOON themed COOKIES!!!! 😍 She shipped them to me overnight as a special order and they are so DELICIOUS! And soon they will be gone 😈 #yummy #nomnom #cookies #bakery #overthemoon #overthemoonnetflix #overthemoonmovie #cannibal #dessert #sweet
A few Asian women who always look out for me, who I promise to look out for, who’ve made waves. ❤️ (And yes our album drop would be 🔥) . 📸: @patmanang , Sunmer 2019 . #aapi #startasianlove #stopaapihate #stopasianhate #asianamerican #asian #asianpersuasion #slaysian #asianpride
A few Asian women who always look out for me, who I promise to look out for, who’ve made waves. ❤️ (And yes our album drop would be 🔥) . 📸: @patmanang , Sunmer 2019 . #aapi #startasianlove #stopaapihate #stopasianhate #asianamerican #asian #asianpersuasion #slaysian #asianpride
新年快乐,恭禧发财! Whether you’re new to Lunar New Year or not, join in on the 15-day party! Put on your fiercest red clothes, clean your house, eat lucky food, and send warm wishes to your family ❤️ Happy Year of the Ox✌️ . . . #lunarnewyear #yearoftheox #redenvelope #firecracker #liondance #firecracker #reuniondinner #qipao #orange #dumplings #noodles #fivespice #tangyuan #steamedfish #asianpersuasion #chinesenewyear
Prepping my Lunar New Year Celebration set for Purdue 🧨🐲🧧 I don’t care that you’ve heard it a billion times, I actually got a clean riff in there LOL! Can’t wait to share a bunch of these 😚 . . #driverslicense #cover #music #musicmonday #sing #singer #top40 #pop #popmusic #oliviarodrigo #purdue #setlist #lunarnewyear #homestudio
Lunar New Year ends with the Spring Lantern Festival – we only have IKEA lanterns, but we’re still wishing you a Happy (quarantined) New Year! 🧧🥟🍊🧨 Be safe my friends. I’ll be celebrating my Asian heritage till the rest of the world can love it too✌️ Lantern Festival: Traditionally, there are riddles sharing some bits of wisdom, or messages of good fortune and love written on the lanterns. I hope that a family reunion can come soon ❤️ . . . #springfestival #lunarnewyear #lanternfestival #happynewyear #yearoftheox #quarantine #staysafe #asian #asianamerican
The news is overwhelming, but I’m trying to keep you close 💔 Thank you everyone for sharing your stories, and reminding me that I’m not alone. My love and awe for the AAPI community continues to deepen and grow, always. 💛 . #startasianlove #stopasianhate #respectasianwomen #hateisavirus
My brilliant agent @rudinj sent me her book, “Confessions of a Casting Director,” to help me with audition season! It’s full of knowledge gained from her years as a casting director. I am eating it up between self-tapes (and sometimes realising mistakes I just made LOL) 😍 Love you Jen, and I love your book 🙏 . . . #jenrudincasting #jenrudin #confessionsofacastingdirector #audition #auditionseason #pilotseason #tv #film #voiceover #auditioning #acting #actor #actress #selftape
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”
My heart is aching for the AAPI community, especially back home in the Bay Area. I wanted to share this post from @goldhouseco and @bingchen about the uptick in hate crimes: “I’ve been at a loss the past few days. I hate feeling like I can’t do anything but talk. I love how so many are amplifying the stories of Vicha Ratanapakdee, the Vietnamese American Community Center, Jeffery Fang’s children, Mrs. Duong, Noel Quintana, and more but am at a loss about “then what”? Being Asian and American sometimes feels like an impossible duality: between two nations, cultures, generations of correcting our elders and wondering if they were right, supporting your own and allying—it’s this undulative tug that any of us have yet to get right. I’ve had dozens of conversations over the weekend with friends, allies, leaders, news stations and too many are only speaking out of one side of their mouths publicly. They’re too scared to say the other. This isn’t one of those simple “just have courage” and the medicine goes down things. We are trying to balance our own lives with the lives of others—and we all know how we got to this rock and hard place. Persisting as a minority is a game of carrot and stick: affirming incentive and punitive correction, showing the world what’s possible and correcting it when it isn’t. I have supreme conviction that @GoldHouseCo is that carrot—from our full film system that makes box office history to reshape public opinion to our steady founder efforts to increase our commercial influence in C-Suites—but it’s not enough. It’s only half the battle. So I often wonder: where is the stick? I hate just talking but the best I have is: -Stay aware through the incredible @NextShark, @Jackfrootx, @AsiansWithAttitudes, and many API icons who are speaking up -Better and more accurate incident reporting -Reporting that results in action instead of floating into the ether—whether it’s collaboration with local community groups and centers or legislatures -Action that doesn’t vilify or further disenfranchise any other community -Investment in new systems without the baggage of old ones that pitted us against each other in the first place”