loader from loading.io

Jeff Chang on Bruce Lee and the emergence of Asian American pride

California Sun Podcast

Release Date: 09/18/2025

Jeff Chang on Bruce Lee and the emergence of Asian American pride show art Jeff Chang on Bruce Lee and the emergence of Asian American pride

California Sun Podcast

Jeff Chang, in his new biography " ," explores how the short of life of Bruce Lee helped make Asian America. Born in San Francisco's Chinatown, Lee was denied the lead role in Warner Bros.'s 1970s TV series "Kung Fu," which was given instead to David Carradine in yellowface. Lee's collision with Hollywood rejection became a catalyst for his rise at a time of emergent Asian American political consciousness. Chang discusses how Lee became a global symbol of Asian American dignity, and how his legend has only grown in the decades since his death.

info_outline
Satsuki Ina on echoes of Japanese incarceration show art Satsuki Ina on echoes of Japanese incarceration

California Sun Podcast

Satsuki Ina was born behind barbed wire at Tule Lake, where she became one of roughly 120,000 Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II. Her parents, both U.S. citizens, lost their freedom and faith in America, leaving a legacy of silence and trauma. Today, as immigrant families are again separated and detained, Ina’s memoir "" chronicles her family's journey through California's network of assembly centers and permanent camps. It's a reminder, she says, that what happened then is not just history — it’s a warning about how easily such chapters of fear and racism repeat...

info_outline
Peter Jones explores privilege and vulnerability at a school for sons of the Los Angeles elite show art Peter Jones explores privilege and vulnerability at a school for sons of the Los Angeles elite

California Sun Podcast

Peter Jones turned his camera on his former classmates from the Harvard School for Boys, a former military academy for boys in Los Angeles, for his new documentary "," chronicling the lives of the 1974 graduating class through their 50th reunion. What started as pandemic Zoom calls became surprisingly honest conversations about addiction, suicide, and the pressure of living up to successful fathers. Jones discovered that wealth can't shield against every hardship, and that the men now in their 60s were finally ready to drop the macho act and talk about what really happened.

info_outline
Eve Quesnel on how nature always shows up show art Eve Quesnel on how nature always shows up

California Sun Podcast

Eve Quesnel, author of  the new book "" joins us from her home in Truckee. For more than two decades, she's been paying close attention to the Sierra Nevada, finding evidence that "nature will show up" everywhere — even in urban cracks and sidewalks. Quesnel discusses making a conscious effort to step outside our digital distractions, the importance of knowing your neighborhood ecosystem, and how simple daily walks can transform our understanding of the natural world around us.

info_outline
Scott Alan Lucas on San Francisco, misinformation, and the killing of Bob Lee show art Scott Alan Lucas on San Francisco, misinformation, and the killing of Bob Lee

California Sun Podcast

info_outline
Jim Newton on freedom, community, Jerry Garcia, and the Grateful Dead show art Jim Newton on freedom, community, Jerry Garcia, and the Grateful Dead

California Sun Podcast

Jim Newton joins us to discuss his new book "," exploring how Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead emerged from 1960s California to become unlikely architects of America's counterculture. Newton reveals Garcia as a reluctant icon who feared leadership yet created a multigenerational community that thrives decades after his death. We explore the Dead's anti-commercial ethos, their role as cultural catalysts rather than political activists, and how their California values of freedom and authenticity continue to influence everything from music to tech culture.

info_outline
Sam Yebri on L.A.'s decline and a path forward show art Sam Yebri on L.A.'s decline and a path forward

California Sun Podcast

Sam Yebri, a young Yale-educated labor attorney and board president of the civic organization Thrive LA, offers a stark assessment of Los Angeles's decline. Yerbi arrived as a refugee from Iran to L.A., where he has embodied the American dream in a city that has served as a beacon for immigrants and dreamers. But he paints a not-so hopeful picture of crime, homelessness, and corruption overwhelming the city. Yebri believes change is possible but requires new leadership and greater civic engagement.

info_outline
Matt Ritter and Michael Kauffmann on California's iconic native trees show art Matt Ritter and Michael Kauffmann on California's iconic native trees

California Sun Podcast

Matt Ritter, a botany professor at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, and Michael Kauffmann, a research plant ecologist, have written a new definitive guide to California's 95 native tree species, "." The authors discuss their field work across the state, from the rare conifers of the Klamath Mountains to the Joshua trees of the Southern California desert. They reveal how citizen science and new mapping techniques are documenting biodiversity hotspots, and how climate change and wildfires are rapidly reshaping California's forests.

info_outline
Gene Seroka: At the helm of America's busiest port show art Gene Seroka: At the helm of America's busiest port

California Sun Podcast

Gene Seroka, executive director of the Port of Los Angeles, oversees a gateway that handles 20% of America's incoming cargo and powers one in nine jobs in Southern California. In this conversation, he reveals how the 7,500-acre complex serves as an economic bellwether, highlighting trends months before consumers feel them. From automation debates to tariff-induced cargo swings, Seroka explains how what happens at the port ripples through California's economy and shapes global trade.

info_outline
Christopher Beam on how AI safety birthed a killing spree show art Christopher Beam on how AI safety birthed a killing spree

California Sun Podcast

Christopher Beam, in a recent , reveals how a group of brilliant minds from Google, NASA, and the rationalist movement in Berkeley became part of a murderous cult-like group known as the "Zizians." He story recounts six deaths, from a blood-soaked Vallejo property to a fatal Vermont shootout. Unlike Charles Manson's dropouts, these tech elites weaponized artificial intelligence fears and rational thinking into deadly extremism, which was enabled by California’s tolerance for radical ideas.

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Jeff Chang, in his new biography "Water Mirror Echo," explores how the short of life of Bruce Lee helped make Asian America. Born in San Francisco's Chinatown, Lee was denied the lead role in Warner Bros.'s 1970s TV series "Kung Fu," which was given instead to David Carradine in yellowface. Lee's collision with Hollywood rejection became a catalyst for his rise at a time of emergent Asian American political consciousness. Chang discusses how Lee became a global symbol of Asian American dignity, and how his legend has only grown in the decades since his death.