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Cultureful

De : Jess Lin
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Season 3 launches late January 2026!


What was it like for a Colombian lawyer growing up in a small town and then immigrating to the U.S.? How did a Jewish New Yorker put her kids in Jewish school and why? What was it like to have three weddings as a Bengali American?

These are the kinds of personal interviews on Cultureful. Living, breathing, everyday you and me culture. It's a kind of traveling and getting past the surface. People from around the world sharing personal experiences in their own words.

Host Jess Lin (she, her), is a multilingual Taiwanese American who has spent many years abroad, off the beaten-path. On Cultureful, she interviews friends and other guests about major life events and stages like childhood, dating, weddings, parenting, and immigration journeys. She is also curious about the everyday- what people cook, what they do for fun, what friendship is like for them. Hope you enjoy meeting the people she connects with.

Follow on instagram @thecultureful

© 2026 Cultureful
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    Épisodes
    • Jin, Part 3: Family Restaurants, Ping Pong, & Life Lessons
      Feb 24 2026

      In the final chapter of our journey with Jin, we step behind the counter of the family restaurant and into the world of competitive ping pong. This episode explores childhood as a restaurant kid and treasured moments of quality family time in between whirlwind schedules for parents and children alike. From her parents’ challenging backgrounds, we see the family they were able to build and the people their children grow up to be. And how, though remarkably challenging for immigrant families, Jin was able to build an adult friendship with her parents.

      In This Episode, We Explore:

      • The Restaurant Kid Subculture: A look at balancing school and extracurriculars while helping out with the family business, and developing a special awareness of their parents’ sacrifice and hard work.
      • Ping Pong and Life Lessons: How Jin stumbled into effectively free ping pong lessons that taught her resilience, focus, and skills she would apply to the rest of her life.
      • Parent-Child Relationships: A look at the child-centric values of Jin’s parents—what they sought to mold in their children versus the moments they sought their children's opinions.
      • Intergenerational Friendships: The rare and moving transition from the traditional parent-child hierarchy to becoming genuine friends with her parents in adulthood.

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      Explore the Cultureful Heritage Collections:

      ✊🏾Black Voices Collection – Celebrating leadership, advocacy, and lived experience. The Collection on Spotify and YouTube

      🏮Chinese and Taiwanese Voices Collection – Diversity of the diaspora and relating to family and identity. The Collection on Spotify and YouTube

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      Read the Blog Post: Here

      Join the Email List: Here

      Support Our Mission: Become a Season 3 Supporter If you believe in our vision of a connected global neighborhood where no one is an outsider, please consider becoming a Season 3 Supporter. Your contribution keeps these co-created memoirs independent, accessible, and powered by neighbors. Become a Supporter today: https://ko-fi.com/cultureful

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      Watch on YouTube: Link coming later today

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      Episode Credits

      Host, Producer, Research & Sound Design: Jess Lin

      Advising and Production Support: Ruben Gnanaruban

      Founding Supporter Shout-outs: Special thanks this week to Matt and Nhi, Huiyuan, and Rachel C. — Your support powers the show!

      Support the show

      Connect with us on Instagram: @thecultureful

      Website: https://linktr.ee/cultureful

      Cultureful—Culture-F-U-L like beautiful.

      Thanks for being here!

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      1 h et 1 min
    • Jin, Part 2: A Blind Date in Chinatown and 150 Pounds of Rice
      Feb 10 2026

      In Part Two of our journey with Jin, we move from the harrowing escape routes of the 1970s to the vibrant, complex grid of 1980s San Francisco Chinatown. This episode explores the different timelines of the Chinese diaspora—where four-generation American families collided with a new wave of Southeast Asian refugees. We trace a crazy meet-cute that involves a blind date gone wrong, the high costs of long-distance longing, and a relentless pursuit involving 150-pound bags of rice.

      In This Episode, We Explore:

      • Chinatown’s Linguistic Map: Why 1980s San Francisco was a complex grid of mutually unintelligible dialects, from the Toisanese "Old Guard" to the prestige of Hong Kong Cantonese.
      • The "Linguistic Chameleon": The double-silence faced by Teochew, Hokkien, and Hakka refugees who had to mask their origins to find work in garment factories and kitchens.
      • The Logic of Lineage: A deep dive into the Confucian family structure and the strategic practice of child transfer (ti) to preserve family altars.
      • The Gaokao Ceiling: How China’s high-stakes national exam served as a 5% gateway to social mobility—and how missing the cutoff changed the trajectory of Jin's mother’s life.

      --------------------

      Explore the Cultureful Heritage Collections:

      ✊🏾Black Voices Collection – Celebrating leadership, advocacy, and lived experience. The Collection on Spotify and YouTube

      🏮Chinese and Taiwanese Voices Collection – Diversity of the diaspora and relating to family and identity. The Collection on Spotify and YouTube

      --------------------

      Support Our Mission: Become a Season 3 Supporter If you believe in our vision of a connected global neighborhood where no one is an outsider, please consider becoming a Season 3 Supporter. Your contribution keeps these co-created memoirs independent, accessible, and powered by neighbors. Become a Supporter today: https://ko-fi.com/cultureful

      --------------------

      Watch on YouTube: Link coming later today

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      Historical References & Context

      To maintain the integrity of our storytelling, we utilize peer-reviewed historical data and archival records. Key context for this episode includes:

      • The Siyi Network: Documentation on the Toisanese (Taishanese) pioneers and their century-long influence on San Francisco property and commerce.
      • Post-1965 Immigration: Records on the shift of Cantonese as the "prestige language" of business and media following the Hong Kong wave.
      • The Gaokao System: Historical data on the 1977 reinstatement of the National College Entrance Exam and its role in defining the professional class.
      • Confucian Hierarchy: Research on Filial Piety and the roles of the Da Xi Fu (Eldest Daughter-in-Law) within Teochew merchant family structures.

      --------------------

      Episode Credits

      Host, Producer, Research & Sound Design: Jess Lin

      Advising and Production Support: Ruben Gnanaruban

      Founding Supporter Shout-outs: Special thanks this week to the Zhou Family, HS, and James and Je

      Support the show

      Connect with us on Instagram: @thecultureful

      Website: https://linktr.ee/cultureful

      Cultureful—Culture-F-U-L like beautiful.

      Thanks for being here!

      Afficher plus Afficher moins
      41 min
    • Jin, Part 1: The Serial Entrepreneurship of Survival | 1960s China & Vietnam
      Jan 29 2026

      “In a world that often feels divided, Cultureful is about the intersections—where we put ourselves in each other’s shoes.”

      In the Season 3 premiere, we sit down with Jin - a 37 year old, Teochew Chinese American tech product manager from Peoria, IL- to trace a family lineage that spans the specialized merchant guilds of Southeastern China to the high-stakes escape from the outskirts of Saigon. This episode isn't just a survival story; it’s a deep dive into the historical backdrops of the 1970s—from the "Planned Economy" (jìhuà jīngjì) of the Cultural Revolution to the existential risk faced by the Vietnamese refugees after the Vietnam War.


      In This Episode, We Explore:

      • The Teochew Diaspora: How a 30-million-strong ethnic group came to dominate the rice and medicine trades across Southeast Asia.
      • Survival by Rations: Life under China's Cultural Revolution coupon system and the preciousness of a single morsel of pork.
      • Saigon Conditions: The different challenges in urban Saigon versus rural outskirts during the Vietnam War.
      • The Gulf of Thailand: The harrowing reality of systematic pirate encounters and the informal economy of the Pulau Bidong refugee camp.

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      Support Our Season 3 Fundraiser- STILL OPEN!

      We are in the final days of our fundraiser to build a platform for cross-cultural storytelling that builds empathy across generations. Our goal is to find a few more Founding Supporters.

      If you believe in our vision of a connected global neighborhood where no one is an outsider, please consider a donation today: https://ko-fi.com/cultureful

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      Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/ni3HPWHS-Rg

      -------------------
      Historical References & Sources

      To maintain the integrity of our storytelling, we utilize peer-reviewed historical data and archival records. Key sources for this episode include:

      • The Vietnam Refugee Crisis: Statistics on the 1978–1980 exodus via the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) archives.
      • China’s Planned Economy: Documentation on the Jìhuà Jīngjì and the 1960s and 70s rationing systems via the Journal of Chinese Political Science.
      • Pulau Bidong: Records on the 1979 population density peak via the Malaysian Red Crescent Society.
      • Teochew Merchant History: Research on the Cholon district commerce via The Overseas Chinese and South East Asia historical surveys.

      -------------------
      Episode Credits

      • Host, Producer, Research & Sound Design: Jess Lin
      • Advising and Production Support: Ruben Gnanaruban

      Support the show

      Connect with us on Instagram: @thecultureful

      Website: https://linktr.ee/cultureful

      Cultureful—Culture-F-U-L like beautiful.

      Thanks for being here!

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      38 min
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