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- I've gotten plenty of 'thank you, come again.'
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- You know, it's not...
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It's not real.
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- Probably a step back, probably a step back for Indians.
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- I grew up in India, I am Indian, and in this video,
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we are going to be talking about fictional Indian characters
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in Western television and film.
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- The main gripe I have is that really it's just
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so underrepresented.
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- I think it's changed a lot over the past few years.
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- We're not in the perfect moment, you know,
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but I think we're, you know, we're coming along.
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- I was thinking of dressing up as Indiana Jones'
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mocha-skinned lovechild. (laughing)
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Indian Jones.
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- Alright, this is Raj Koothrappali
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from The Big Bang Theory.
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- White writers, they always make an Indian name
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for the character that even Indians can't pronounce.
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- Great character.
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I mean, I love Raj Koothrappali from the show.
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I think he's written really well.
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- Probably the worst character on TV right now
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for brown people.
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- Raj kind of feels like a blend
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of a lot of different stereotypes.
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- But as an Indian,
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I sort of have a love hate relationship with him.
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- Really intelligent, he has a job in the field of science,
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he comes from a rich background.
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- Why does the Indian guy have to be the biggest loser
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out of all these four geeks?
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- I love theater myself.
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My whole life's basically one long Vagina Monologue.
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- So, this is Mindy Lahiri from Mindy Project.
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Mindy Lahiri is a really awesome character.
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Mindy Kaling really created a character
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that we haven't seen before with South Asian females.
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She's humorous, she's really ambitious.
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- I think it's a step forward to having Indians represented
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in leading roles, which I think is very good.
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I don't know if the show necessarily does the best job
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of exploring her culture that often
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given that she tries to ignore it for most of the show.
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- Mindy Lahiri has had some criticism,
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and I have some of my own criticism
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as well about the character.
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One of the main things
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is that she only dates hot white guys.
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- Oh, man, I was a little worried.
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Some of my friends have racist grandmas.
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- Oh, I see.
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You assumed I was a racist just because I'm old.
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- Well, now the tables have turned.
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I'm sorry.
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- So, this is Dev Shah from Master of None.
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This was a really groundbreaking show, I think,
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for the South Asian community.
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- Easily the most relatable character,
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Indian character, on a TV show.
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He's just him, you know?
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People view him for what he is, not because he's Indian.
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- Dev Shah is a pretty accurate representation of
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what a lot of Indians would experience in America today.
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- He talks a little bit more about relationships and dating
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and career stuff through the South Asian lens.
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- There is, again,
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disproportionate amount of white girls in this show.
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Still want a brown girl here and there, you know?
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Just saying.
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Throw in a Basanti for every Britney.
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- You know, Ben Kingsley did an accent in Gandhi
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and he won the Oscar for it, so...
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- But he didn't win the Oscar just for doing the accent.
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I mean, it wasn't an Oscar for Best Indian Accent.
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- Casting people would always
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ask brown people to do an accent,
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and I think this episode
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made them feel a little bit bad about it.
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- You're getting money
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for a role that you might be perpetuating the same ideas
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about what a culture might be.
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- While I find that enough of a turn on to get into this car
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and do what we just did, in the long run,
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definitely not my type.
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- This is the lovely Priyanka Chopra
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playing the role of Alex Parrish from Quantico.
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- The fact that she's playing this role is awesome.
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- Priyanka Chopra is actually...
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Was born and raised in India.
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So, for her to be kind of this sex symbol
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and kissing another person on screen
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is actually a really big thing
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in Bollywood and Indian community
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where you really don't see actors and actresses
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having that kind of physical relationship.
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- That is interesting.
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That's not a thing that Indian culture would've allowed,
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but in this American show, it's a very natural thing.
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- It's kind of refreshing to see this big step be taken
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in this particular scene.
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- Again, it's a white guy.
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The more I see these clips, the more I'm realizing it.
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Yeah, I guess you can not have
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a brown brown relationship on screen.
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Is that, like, not financially feasible?
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I don't know.
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- Do you have any idea what it's like
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knowing my real brother and mother
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spend every day of their lives looking for me?
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- Yeah, this is Saroo from the movie Lion.
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- Saroo, I think, is a really interesting
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person to talk about when talking about representation
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because he was adopted
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and grew up in a mostly white community
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wanting to find this identity.
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I really actually kind of identified with Saroo.
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A lot of, I think, second generation Indian people
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really feel this balancing tightrope
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where you're trying to juggle the community,
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like the American community, but also your Indian community.
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- Hollywood loves casting Indians as street boys.
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It's either you're an orphan or a doctor.
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It's just the highest level of sort of a sector
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or you have no parents.
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- I mean, they are realities in our country,
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but there is, of course, a lot more to our country
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than just the slums.
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- I'm gonna cry.
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What I also love about this scene
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is seeing the entire village come together
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to really exemplify that sense of community.
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That is something that we focus on so much in India.
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It's a small little detail,
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but to see everyone kind of crowd around this reunion,
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it feels very real.
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- (sniffs) Jiminy Cricket.
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Expired ham.
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- Uh oh (laughs)
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- Apu, apu, apu, apu.
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- This is Apu, not gonna pronounce his last name,
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from The Simpsons.
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- This guy is just...
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Created such a bad impression for Indians worldwide.
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- Here's the thing.
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He was the only Indian entity in my life on TV
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until I was 13, 14.
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So, while I was growing up as a kid,
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he's the only Indian I've ever seen.
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- The problem with Apu is just that
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he has been the only character, prominent Indian character,
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on American television for the longest time.
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So, if someone has never met an Indian person before
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and they've seen The Simpsons,
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you're gonna think I talk like that, but I don't.
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- Everything that we call out as a stereotype today
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exists in Apu.
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- It is a case of ignorance as opposed to malice.
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They just did not know enough about the culture
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to accurately portray it on screen.
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- Obviously there are Indian people
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that run convenience stores and gas stations
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and drive taxis.
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We're not saying that that doesn't exist, but again,
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you're just showing one side of their character,
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and you're making fun of it.
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- He is intended to be laughed at.
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His Indian-ness is something that
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is supposed to be laughed at and supposed to be made fun of.
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So, in that sense, I would say Apu is definitely offensive.
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- Jess, Bend It Like Beckham.
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Jess is a fuckin' badass.
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Stereotypes that you kind of generally see
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about Indian women are very...
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They're quiet, they're conservative,
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they're very marriage obsessed,
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and Jess isn't like any of them.
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- This is a very good story with good characters.
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Maybe the mom was a little caricature.
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She's like 'get married now,' maybe that was a little much.
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- She is a really cool character
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because she wanted to play soccer,
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but she also wanted to please and support her parents.
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- Some Indian girls and boys do go through
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that sort of feeling where they're stuck in between
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trying to keep their parents happy,
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but also they want to find their individuality.
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- They did so much risk to get here.
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They want you to also be safe,
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and they want you to be well-off.
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- A movie like this actually, I think,
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has helped to broaden our society back home.
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- We're in a much further place even from 10 years ago.
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I think people like Mindy Kaling, Aziz Ansari,
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these types of people really helped push the envelope
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and really create opportunities
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for more South Asian representation
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and kind of breaking away from the stereotypes.
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(upbeat music)
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- Hey, Unsolved is on a new channel.
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And now your part. - Subscribe here.
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- That was my part.