
ASIAN AMERICA: THE KEN FONG PODCAST
Ken Fong
Show overview
ASIAN AMERICA: THE KEN FONG PODCAST has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 112 episodes. That works out to roughly 100 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence, with the show now in its 11th season.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 47 min and 56 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Society & Culture show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 1 weeks ago, with 30 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 56 episodes published. Published by Ken Fong.
From the publisher
Ken Fong gets to the heart of Asian American culture, history, and spirituality. Through interviews with culture-makers and -shapers in the Asian American community -- some you know, others you've never heard of before -- prepare to laugh, cry, and be amazed.
Latest Episodes
View all 112 episodesEP 600: Dr. Jonar de Guzman On Permanently Reversing Insulin Resistance
EP 599: The Two Kens On White American Culture and the Illusion of Loss
EP 598: Gloria Kim on the Rash of Home Burglaries Targeting Older Working AANHPIs
EP 597: Media Mogul & Trailblazer Yue-Sai Kan On How She Changed the Media (and Beauty Standards) of 400 Million People
EP 596: Sneha Villalva On Cutting To The Essence Of Who Truly You Are
EP 594: Writer/Director Jing Ai Ng On What It's Taken To Bring "Forge"--Her First Feature Film--To Theaters
EP 594: Alex Xander Luu On Performing His Autobiographical Solo Performance "Three Lives"
EP 593: Actors Trieu Tran and Iris Liu On Bringing the Story of Chinese Rocket Scientist Qian Xuesen to the Stage
EP 592: Johnny Itliong On the Leadership & Legacy of His Father Larry Itliong
EP 591: Nicole Dowd On the Smithsonian's 4th Annual IlluminAsia Arts & Culture Festival_May 2026
EP 590: State Treasurer Fiona Ma On Why She's Running to Be California's Next Lieutenant Governor
EP 589: Rev. Rae Huang On Faith, Housing, and the Future of Los Angeles

S11 Ep 588EP 588: Sacramento DA Thien Ho On How They Finally Captured and Convicted the Golden State Killer
Sacramento County's District Attorney Thien Ho's book, The People vs. the Golden State Killer, is highly recommended for readers interested in true crime, legal history, and stories of human resilience. As the lead prosecutor in the case, Ho provides an "insider" account that differs significantly from previous narratives about Joseph DeAngelo. This is the first official record of the investigation, capture, and prosecution of the Golden State Killer written by the lead prosecutor. Unlike many true-crime books that sensationalize the killer, Ho's narrative centers on the survivors and the law enforcement teams who pursued justice for over 30 years. Ho's book includes hundreds of new facts, insights into interrogation room interactions, and behind-the-scenes legal strategies that were never released to the public. It also features the authorized perspectives of survivors who turned their trauma into activism, offering a powerful testament to the "resiliency of the human spirit". Ho also shares his own story as a Vietnamese refugee who arrived in America knowing no English and eventually became one of only ten Asian American district attorneys in the country. A portion of the proceeds from the book goes toward Phyllis's Garden, a nonprofit founded by a Golden State Killer survivor to support victims' rights.

S11 Ep 587EP 587: David Henry Hwang On His Unexpected Journey As a Playwright & His Latest Revision of "Flower Drum Song"
David Henry Hwang is a Tony Award-winning playwright, screenwriter, and the most-produced living opera librettist in America. A three-time Pulitzer Prize finalist and member of the Theater Hall of Fame, Hwang is best known for his masterpiece M. Butterfly and the critically acclaimed Yellow Face. In 2026, Hwang returns to Rodgers & Hammerstein's Flower Drum Song for a landmark production at East West Players, marking the "grand finale" of their 60th Anniversary Diamond Legacy season. #eastwestplayers #flowerdrumsong #asianamerican #chineseamerican #musical #theater @eastwestplayers

S11 Ep 585EP 585: Lily Tung Crystal On Directing the 2026 Revival Of "Flower Drum Song" @EastWestPlayers
We're going behind the curtain at East West Players for a two-episode event! Today, in Part 1, we're sitting down with Lily Tung Crystal. Not only is she the Artistic Director guiding EWP into its 60th anniversary season, she is also personally directing their massive upcoming revival of Flower Drum Song. We're diving into her creative process and why this story matters in 2026—all to get you ready for Part 2 with the iconic David Henry Hwang. www.eastwestplayers.org

S11 Ep 586EP 586: The Two Kens On Whether America's Commander-in-Chief Has Dementia
In this latest in the collaborative The Two Kens podcast series, Fong and Kemp focus on the now month-old war with Iran, wondering whether President Trump has a deterioriating form of dementia, and how that might have played a part in his leading us into this unwarrented war in the Middle East.

S11 Ep 584EP 584: Carol Lin On Her Journey From the Anchor Desk to a Life Defined By Family, Healing, and a Redefined Sense of Purpose
In Carol Lin's memoir, When News Breaks: A Memoir of Love and War, the jade bracelet on the cover is a powerful symbol of her cultural identity, her relationship with her mother, and the "breaking" of her own life. While the book primarily chronicles her career as a CNN anchor (including being the first to break the news of 9/11), the bracelet represents the personal narrative beneath the headlines. @carollinnow

S11 Ep 583EP 583: Jane Marie Chen On Her Journey of Resilience & Her Path Toward Deep Cleansing & Healing
World-renowned social entrepreneur Jane Marie Chen is also an author, speaker, and leadership coach. Her best-selling memoir Like a Wave We Break is a frank and moving account of growing up as a success-driven child of immigrant parents , but how that eventually broke her in every possible way. #domesticviolence #aanhpi #socialentrepreneur #cleansing #healing www.janemariechen.com

S11 Ep 582EP 582: Ted Kim On Writing & Directing His Short Film "I Missed You"
Ted Taekeun Kim is a Korean American filmmaker and a director/producer. He is currently a graduate student at the USC School of Cinematic Arts in the Peter Stark Producing Program. He is a rising filmmaker who explores narratives that resonate with the Asian American experience. His short films have screened at the Cannes Film Festival and Vancouver International Film Festival, and have won awards at BIFAN and the Asian American International Film Festival. He is currently nearing completion on a short film titled "I Missed You" that utilizes Virtual Reality as a therapeutic tool. Before attending USC, he worked at Authentic Literary & Talent Management. He also co-founded Souvenir Media, a music video and commercials company based in Brooklyn and Seoul, with work featured on Nowness Asia and Director's Library. Ted is passionate about cultivating new Asian American voices and arthouse cinema. IG: @IMissedYouShortFilm https://seedandspark.com/fund/i-missed-you

S11 Ep 581EP 581: Julie Thomas Achettu On Creating a Clothing Line That Affirms the Dual Identity of South Asian American Women
Julie Thomas Achettu, already a well-respected Asian American literature educator in Chicago, recently co-founded "House of Jaya," a women's apparel line that blends traditional South Asian fabrics with the fashion sense of today's South Asian American women. www.houseofjaya.com