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  • Where did you grow up?

  • I grew up in Los Angeles.

  • Here?

  • Yeah.

  • Wow.

  • [CHEERING]

  • What area?

  • I was born and raised in a kind of West LA, kind

  • of a rougher kind of area.

  • Wow.

  • I was a tough kid, got into a lot of fights.

  • Wow.

  • Yeah, I can see that.

  • I think there's a photo of me.

  • Yeah.

  • No, you were definitely a tough kid.

  • Yeah.

  • Really tough kid.

  • Yeah.

  • This is actually of me in high school.

  • But just, like, yeah.

  • You know, I was--

  • growing up in LA, I was into things the other kids--

  • I was really into hip hop.

  • I was like--

  • I was in a break-dancing crew for a while.

  • I heard that.

  • You were a break dancer.

  • Well, this is when I was in, like, elementary school.

  • But that's still pretty cool.

  • That's amazing.

  • Yeah.

  • And your parents must have been thrilled

  • when you went into acting.

  • Really thrilled.

  • Oh yeah.

  • No.

  • They were--

  • What did they want you to do?

  • What does your dad do?

  • My dad-- he actually had a small business.

  • He had a one-hour photo store for a long time.

  • And those don't exist anymore.

  • He was like the last one.

  • Yeah.

  • So he just would sit there by himself.

  • No one is dropping film off anymore.

  • Yeah, exactly.

  • Did your mom work?

  • She actually worked at UCLA, where I ended up going.

  • Where you went?

  • Yeah.

  • UCLA!

  • Bruins.

  • But they have to be proud now.

  • The show is very funny.

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • They're super proud.

  • I mean, you know, for the longest,

  • they were against me being an actor.

  • And then, I think, like the moment

  • they saw me in the Korean newspaper,

  • they were like, he's made it.

  • Yeah.

  • And that was for The Interview, when I did The Interview.

  • Like, playing Kim Jong Un, almost starting World War III.

  • Right, right.

  • They see me in the newspaper, they're like,

  • yes, he's made it.

  • Yeah.

  • Wait, what did they think about all that controversy

  • that you played him?

  • They loved it.

  • Oh, really?

  • Well, they weren't, like, scared for me

  • because I'd see them every day or regularly.

  • And they were proud.

  • Because I guess I'd been doing this for so long.

  • And they were like, oh, he's never going to make it.

  • He's going to fail.

  • And then I started, you know, working and the movie came out.

  • They knew I was safe.

  • Yeah.

  • And now the show.

  • Now the show.

  • Well, tell people what the show is about.

  • The show is about the Huang family,

  • and we move from Washington DC to Orlando in the mid '90s.

  • And it's basically about our, kind of,

  • readjusting to this new world, this predominantly white

  • community that we're living in.

  • And just kind of this fish out of water story.

  • Yeah.

  • It's very funny.

  • The lines are funny, and I think it's great.

  • I think it's a great show.

  • And I think it's great that it's a family that needs to be

  • represented on television.

  • It's the first, like, Asian-American--

  • Yeah, thank you.

  • [CHEERING]

  • We got your bumper stickers to make

  • sure your parents know that they're proud and you're proud.

  • Oh my God.

  • This is great.

  • So you can just put that on your car.

  • Thank you.

  • Yeah.

  • Thank you so much.

  • This is incredible.

  • You're welcome.

  • That'll increase the value of whatever car you drive.

Where did you grow up?

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