Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Brené with Domee Shi on Creativity, Curiosity, and Turning Red
Episode Date: May 4, 2022I’m smiling from ear to ear about this conversation with Domee Shi, a Chinese-born, Academy Award–winning Canadian animator, storyboard artist, and director for Pixar. With Bao, Domee became the f...irst woman to direct a short film for Pixar, and with Turning Red — which was released on Disney+ in March 2022 — Domee became the first woman to direct a feature-length project for the animation studio. It was so fun to connect with her about creativity, learning, curiosity, and her incredible, groundbreaking work. Also, she may have inspired my new life motto. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone. I'm Brene Brown, and this is Unlocking Us.
Oh, my God, I have the best conversation for y'all today.
I'm smiling from ear to ear.
I am talking with Domi Shi,
who is a Chinese-born Canadian animator,
a storyboard artist, and a director for Pixar.
I'm talking about her creativity, her work,
and this film is so great.
Her directorial debut on Turning Red.
And if you have not ever done a deep dive into the Pixar shorts, like the short animated, you know, seven-minute films, you got to do that.
You can thank me later.
But she also directed Bao. And when she did that,
she became the first woman to direct a short film for Pixar. Bao won an Academy Award for Best
Animated Short Film and a ton of other awards too. So I am talking to Domi today about creativity,
about learning, about curiosity, and about her film turning red.
So good.
I'm glad y'all are here.
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Before we jump in, let me tell you a little bit about Domi. She began as a story intern at Pixar Animation Studios in June 2011 and was soon hired as a story artist on the Academy Award-winning
feature film Inside Out. You know, come on, me and Inside Out. That's just enough said, right? Since then,
she has worked on the feature films The Good Dinosaur, Incredibles 2, and the Academy Award
winning Toy Story 4. In 2015, she began pitching ideas for short films and soon was greenlit to
write and direct Bao, which won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. In her role as a creative VP,
Domi is involved in key creative decision-making at the studio
and consults on films in both development and production.
She most recently made her feature film directorial debut on Turning Red,
which was released on Disney Plus in March of 2022.
Domi graduated from the animation program at Sheridan College,
where she was fueled by her
love of anime, Disney, and Asian cinema influences that can be seen in her work today.
I just, I'm so glad that y'all are here for this conversation. It's amazing. I mean, Domi was born
in Changqing, China. She resided in Toronto, Canada for most of her life. She lives in Oakland now.
And she also tells us that her love of animation is only rivaled by her love of cats.
Here we go.
Okay, Domi, welcome to Unlocking Us.
Good to be here.
Hi.
Hi.
You are just one of my newest, most favorite storytellers.
Oh, thank you.
That's a huge compliment coming from you.
Yeah, I mean, you know, I love a good story.
I love a really good act too with a lot of vulnerability.
Aw.
So no one does that in the same way you do it.
You've got a really singular voice around some things
and I want to get into it,
but I want to start with, tell us your story. Do you mind? No, of course not. Yeah. So I've
always loved drawing ever since I was little. My dad, he's a painter himself and he taught art
in China before we immigrated to Canada when I was two. So I've always been surrounded by
paints and canvas and charcoal. And he was like my first art teacher, but he didn't want me to
get into art because he struggled a lot to kind of find his footing and his career in Canada in
the West. But then I discovered animation. The very first VHS my family ever owned ever was Aladdin.
Oh, you're kidding.
No. And I just rewatched that tape over and over again. And I was just amazed at how these
drawings can come to life and be so funny and emotional. And I was also weirdly attracted to Aladdin too. It was a lot of
questions, a lot of confusion, but I was just very excited. I just wanted to do that after
watching the movie. And there throughout elementary school and middle school and high school, like I
was always the shy kid, but drawing was my way of connecting with people. That was how I made friends.
For boys, they would pay me a dollar
to draw their favorite Pokemon.
And for girls, they would pay me a dollar
to draw them with their crush
and I would sneak them the drawing in class.
You're kidding.
No, that was my first taste of,
oh, I could get paid to do this.
And I wanted to kind of chase that feeling of connecting
with people, with art. And I found out that there was this really great animation school
that was just outside of Toronto, Canada, where I lived, shared in college, and I applied. Me and
my dad worked on my portfolio together. We go to life drawing classes together almost every week.
Father and daughter, drawing naked people for hours.
Yeah, but he didn't give up on me.
And I worked really hard on my portfolio and I got into Sheridan.
And yeah, I've just been kind of chasing that passion of just wanting to draw for
a living somehow and getting paid to draw for a living. And I think it's kind of led me to
this point where I get to do that. So tell me what your experience was like at Sheridan.
Was it what you expected? No, but it was even better. I feel like I found my tribe almost at
Sheridan. Really? Yeah. For the first time, it wasn't just me and one or two other people that were really into anime and animation.
In high school, it was like me and a handful of other kids.
And we formed the anime club at school that no one ever went to, even though we put up posters all over the hallways at school.
No one showed up.
No one showed up. But at
Sheridan, everybody was interested in animation. Everybody loved comics and yeah, animation and
anime. And all of a sudden I was surrounded by people that liked all the things that I liked
and got all nerdy and passionate about the same stuff that I was passionate about. So that was
awesome. I didn't expect that. So a sense of belonging,
a sense of community. Yes. How did your craft change or did it during those years?
It changed a lot. I think with every stage in my life, like I'm going to Sheridan,
we're also coming to Pixar. At Sheridan for the first time, I felt like for a while in high
school and middle school, I was like that big fish in a small pond. Yeah.
I was that kid in school who could draw and there weren't a lot of us around.
But then all of a sudden I'm thrust into this program where everybody was that kid who could draw in middle school and high school.
And all of a sudden I'm in a big ocean.
And it was intimidating because there were so many amazing artists who are my age or younger.
And there was this sense for the first time that I was out of my comfort zone in a good way. But I was like, oh, man, I have to really step up my game because everyone here is really, really good.
And immediately I put a lot of pressure on myself, but in a good way.
And I think that's how I grew so fast in that environment too.
So then you go from Sheridan to?
To Pixar. From Sheridan all the way to Pixar.
Yeah. Well, you can't skip over this. Tell me, was that like, oh my gosh, I really hope I end
up at Pixar and you did, or was it a long shot or was it like, of course, the next step is Pixar? Oh man. Yeah. In third year,
I applied for the internship program at Pixar. They have an internship program every summer
for a bunch of different departments, like art, animation, story. So I applied for story
and I made the short list, but I didn't get picked for the final group and I was so
disappointed because I just felt so close I was like why did they even tell me that I made the
short list it just feels even more that's almost worse yeah I know we should have just said sorry
you weren't even in the running yeah you, you weren't even running. Exactly. And I was super discouraged.
But then I remember kind of using that as fuel to really focus my next year, my last year at Sheridan, into really honing in on my student film and my portfolio.
And I just remember I really worked my butt off. But then one thing that I did differently in going into
my final year too was for almost my entire experience at college, I had this tunnel vision
of I got to succeed. I got to make sure my parents didn't waste their money investing in
their only child going into animation. And I had some friends, but I never had the urge or the interest
to look outside of this tiny little friend group
that I've created.
I didn't go to parties.
I didn't do anything.
But then on my last year,
I don't know, like something switched in me.
I think it's because I got rejected from Pixar
that I was just like, ah, screw it.
I mean, it's my last year.
I got to try stuff and do stuff.
And, but also I have to work on my portfolio as well.
It was funny.
I knew these people, these classmates for three, four years already at the time,
but I didn't know them know them.
So I actually started making more friends and talking to people and going to parties.
Yeah.
All that stuff.
And somehow I think I tried again.
I worked on my portfolio again.
This time I really tried to focus on honing it in.
But at the same time, I showed it around.
I asked for advice and I got in.
So I got the Pixar internship in my fourth year at Sheridan.
And that was pretty amazing.
Wow.
Congratulations.
Yeah, it's a big deal.
Thank you.
Can I ask a weird question?
I don't know if I'm going to word it the right way, but I know that you'll track.
Do you think there was a connection between opening your heart and opening yourself to experiences and building connection and that project that you sent that got you that internship?
Oh, definitely. I feel like I learned so much, even practically too,
because we're all hanging out and working in this one big kind of like studio space. Each student
gets their own desk where you're working on assignments, but there's also computers and
everyone's kind of working in there on their own stuff, but they're working beside each other.
And at some point I was like, oh my gosh, I don't know how to use this program. And then I remember a classmate going like, oh,
ask so-and-so. He knows he is an expert at this editing software. And then for the first time,
I was like, oh, hey, I'm Domi. Could you help? Could you show me how to use this? And
that's honestly how I was able to finish my assignment because the school only teaches you so much.
But a lot of the important skills that I learned, it was through talking with and getting help from other students and also helping them too.
And that was how I was able to finish that short.
It was such a crazy year.
It's almost like you were in your own act too.
Yeah, it was totally that. Man, there'd be nights because we have to pull all-nighters
at the studio and stuff to finish our work where people be like, hey, we're going on a convenience
store run because there's one convenience store that's open 24-7 that was close to the school.
And then does anyone want anything and I
just I just got more involved like I felt like it became more of a communal yes like a community in
fourth year I think first year second year you're kind of like your own little island and stuff
third year it was crazy as a whole nother thing but then fourth year is kind of like you're all working on
your own films but you're all kind of like I don't know there's just something about that environment
that made us all start to kind of lean on each other and help each other because we're like ah
we're all in this together god and we're all of this together is when I watch it's a big theme for you in the stories you write, in the stories that you animate.
Yeah.
Tell me about Pixar.
Yeah, that's funny you mentioned. Yeah, that feeling definitely carried through when I went
to Pixar. We're all in this together. Yeah, when I first got hired at Pixar that was in 2011 and I was a storyboard artist on Inside Out. That was
my first time working on a feature film, working in a big studio. Yeah, I just felt so lucky to be
able to work with Pete Docter and Ronnie Del Carmen on the movie about going into the mind of
a 13-year-old girl. I was like, yes, I don't know anything. I've never watched Star Wars, but I
know what it's like to be a 15 year old girl. That's the only expertise I have coming into the
industry when I'm 22. And it was such an inviting, friendly environment where I felt comfortable
raising my hand in a room and suggesting stuff.
And I really owe it to the leadership on that show that kind of created that environment for me.
And I think at the time too, even though I was working on such an amazing project,
I still had that feeling, that itch of wanting to make something and do something on my own.
And that's when I started working on a little project on the side that eventually became Bow.
Stop it. Stop it. Let's just take a pause for a moment. I want you to listen to the podcast,
but if you have not seen Domi Short Bow, you need to stop. Push pause right now. Get a hot tea, sit down and watch it because, oh,
Bears, did you cry? Yeah. My sisters and I cried and cried. I was the mom. I was the dumpling. I
was the kid. I was the girlfriend. Bow. Okay. So did you just say, hey, I'm going to keep working
on this stuff with all of you on this team, but I'd like to run a side project of my own work. How does that work?
Well, at the time I was just thinking, oh, I'll just make Bao kind of on my own as just a side
project. I just wanted to keep being creative and kind of working that muscle as I worked on
Inside Out and other feature films full time during the day. But then as I started
working on it, I realized, oh, I kind of want to recreate that feeling that I had in Ed Sheridan,
that feeling that you have in school where everyone around you is kind of making something
cool or like you're just feeling motivated by everyone's energy. So I started sharing
just the small little doodles that I had, the outline, the super rough outline that I had for Bao.
I started pitching it to people, to fellow story artists,
other artists, just to get their feedback.
So like, how can I make it better?
But also, oh, maybe this is something
that they'd be interested in
and they'd want to help me make for free on the side.
And I remember the very first collaborator I found was Rona Liu,
who ended up being the production designer for Bao, but also turning red. But it was just,
we came into Pixar around the same age. We had similar taste in movies and animation.
And she was working at the time as just a sketch artist, but I knew that she also wanted to do something creative as well.
So I shared with her the story and she got really excited about it.
And I was like, great, you should production design it.
I don't know how we're going to make it, but it's just a cool thing to work on outside of our day jobs.
And we even went on little field trips to Chinatown together.
We bought dumplings.
We took photos of it.
We were both so proactive into making it even before it was an official project.
But that was really cool because getting other people involved gave me that motivation to keep working on it.
And then at some point, Pixar, they don't do this anymore, but they put out this open call for pitches for the next theatrical short.
So any employee at the studio could sign up, pitch free ideas for a theatrical short, and then kind of go through the gauntlet of directors, producers, execs until finally one person's idea is chosen. So I immediately signed up for that.
And I pitched Bao along with two other ideas for a short film.
And I remember when I was working on my pitch to pitch to Pixar,
I had gotten maybe just one or two pieces of feedback
that made me doubt the ending of Bao.
Where, spoiler alert, the mom yeah yeah yeah yeah
and so I chickened out I changed the ending before I pitched to Pixar and I rewrote it and I re
threw the boards it was a happy ending it was or it was just a kind of a random ending that now
that I look back it doesn't even mean anything anymore. It's just a cute little ending where the dumpling runs away and then the mom's really sad. And then in the morning she wakes up and more dumplings have come to life and she's happy because she's like, oh, now I have a house full of dumplings. I pitched that version to the creative brain trust at the time.
And they were like, oh, that's cute.
But then I remember Pete doctor stood up and he was like, Hey,
that's not the version you pitched to me a couple of weeks ago. Cause I had pitched to him an earlier.
Yeah.
The original version.
Shit.
Yeah.
Because at the time I was like, oh, I just want Pete doctor's input.
This was before I was going to pitch it to
Pixar as an official theatrical short. And so I changed it. I pitched it to the team. And then
Pete was like, hey, I really liked your original ending. And then he turns to the brain trust
group and he's like, her original ending is really cool and weird and crazy. Can she come back next
week and pitch the original version? And I was like,
oh yeah, just give me a couple of days and yes, I'll come back and I'll pitch it. And they're
like, okay. And I did, I went back and I brought back the original ending, the shocking ending
that now the short is known for. And I pitched it and then it got chosen, that version. And it was because of Pete,
but also because I luckily pitched to him
the earlier, weirder version a while ago
that just stuck in his head.
So phew, thank goodness I did.
Yeah, but how smart of you to,
you know, it's so often for myself as a creative,
but other creatives, everything stays tight.
Everything stays right next to me.
Everything stays tight.
I'm not pitching.
I'm not looking for advice.
I don't want your input.
This is sacred.
I won't change a thing.
And then you don't have the moment like you had where someone says, I love that original thing that you pitched.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm like you most of the time to keep things pretty close, but
then I realized you have to remember why you got excited about this idea in the first place,
because you can go down such a crazy path with notes and feedback and you just, and then you
start to lose track of, oh yeah, like why was I excited about this story? And it really was
because I wanted to shock people with the ending. That was one of the first images that popped into my head
because it was based on my real life experience of my mom, even to this day, holding me and being
like, oh, I wish I could put you back inside my stomach. So I knew where you were at all times.
I know, I'm telling you, I was the dumpling, but I was also the mother.
I mean, it's so beautiful and hard and good and real. The ending is real. If I could just,
I would. I know. I know. Yeah. I have that feeling with anything cute too. I have this
feeling of violence bubbling up in me where I just want to like, ow, I just want to take a bite.
I know.
The other day I saw this baby and its thighs had the 45 dimples.
And I was like, ooh, I could just eat that.
And the mom was kind of scared a little bit because I didn't look like, oh, that's cute.
I looked like hungry.
So I get, I mean, it's just, okay.
So about, I need everybody to watch it.
It's just incredible. Turning red.
Yep. That was a natural progression.
Okay. Tell me.
After bow.
We got to talk so much about it.
Yeah. I'm so grateful that I got the experience to make Bao because I think it really helped me step into this feature film director role with Turning Red.
And the whole experience, too, with changing the ending before I pitched it, but then getting a second chance to pitch the original ending and really helped build my confidence, I think, too, in believing in and standing by my quirky and weird ideas.
Yeah.
So I think I brought that into Turning Red, into pitching a feature film, because at that point,
I was like, okay, I'm just going to go weird, as weird and as authentic as possible. And I
can always reel it back, but I will never censor myself before I get feedback. Like, I'm never going to try to guess
what people are going to react to.
I'm just going to go for it.
Yes.
Oh my God.
The guessing what they want
and trying to do that is the devil's work.
It is.
Yeah.
And so I kind of had that mentality
when I pitched Turning Red
because I knew I wanted to do a coming of age story
with a teen girl.
Again, I pitched three ideas to Pixar,
but Turning Red was the most personal. And I think the weirdest too, it was always this Chinese
Canadian girl thinks she has her life together and then boom, magical puberty hits. And she
poofs into a giant red panda, which is totally an allegory for her getting her period and puberty and everything
i all of that was in the original pitch and all of that i think was the reason why they picked it
was because it was so it was honest so honest specific but also universal at the same time
because i think in that really specific story everyone on the brain trust could see, they could relate to that experience at one point of waking up one day and
not recognizing the body that they're in, that they're covered in hair, that their emotions are
all over the place. Everyone has gone through awkward puberty. So that was kind of my way in.
And it's been a crazy four years. So it took you between four and five years to make it.
Is that right?
Yeah.
So I pitched it in October 31st, 2017.
That's when it was picked.
And then it wrapped, I think, November 2021.
So yeah, four years.
Give us a high level. I've been lucky enough to be inside Pixar and
kind of see how it works and a little bit, but give us a high level understanding of that process.
Yeah. Do you draw every frame? How does that work? Oh no. Animation takes a village, a mighty and amazing village at Pixar. Animation is like
filmmaking in slow motion, basically. You start with any live action film. You start with the
script. And then from there, you storyboard it out. So you get a team of storyboard artists,
and they put up the whole movie in storyboard form because that's the cheapest and fastest way to
iterate, make adjustments, try out ideas. You have an edit team that cuts all the boards together
with temporary music and sound effects and temporary dialogue. And then you just kind of
work on that for a long time. So at Pixar, we have at least eight screenings throughout the entire production cycle.
So we're putting up the movie eight times, at least every couple months. And we're showing it
to people. They give us feedback. We go back to the drawing board and we tweak the script. We
rewrite it. We blow things up. We try new ideas. And we're just refining it and redoing it eight times
until it's the right story. But then at some point, like halfway through, maybe between screening
three and four, we have to start solidifying and locking certain scenes for production.
We have to start making it. So then at some point it just, things are overlapping each other. And
that's when it gets really crazy. Like when you're rewriting the script, but you're also looking at animation,
you're recording voice actors and you're finaling shots. You're working on every single level of the
movie all at once near the end. And not in a linear way, right? No, no. Yeah. By the end,
by the last year, things are all kind of stacked on top of each other.
And I think that was the hardest for me because I work in a very linear,
like tidy kind of way, like do this and then this and then this.
But then by the end, it was like, blah, everything was happening all at once.
Wow.
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on The Vergecast, wherever you get podcasts. Okay, so tell me what part, is it the storyboarding
where you understand what the protagonist looks like, what her friends look like,
what their names are, what the panda's going to look like, what her friends look like, what their names are,
what the panda is going to look like,
how squishy it is?
How does that all work?
Yeah, that's a good question.
It all starts with the script
and then all from there,
you go into story.
And then with the character designs,
that's art.
So that's the whole art department.
They design the world.
They design the characters.
But then you actually have to build it in 3D. So that is another department. It's the characters
department and then the sets department. They actually have to build all of the sets,
like the skydome, like the temple in 3D, like in the computer. And then of course,
there's like other departments too,
like there's lighting.
The movie has such a beautiful color and palette.
It's gorgeous.
All of that is lighting.
That's a whole nother department too.
And then of course, a camera is a whole department as well.
We call that layout in animation.
So they are like our digital cameramen and women.
They'll just go in there with an actual camera and they'll be shooting in the 3D space.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
And it gets even crazier.
There's a simulation department, like hair, clothing, all the panda fur.
That's a whole department.
And that's just a bunch of very, very talented sim artists who I'm so thankful for.
And I made their jobs very, very difficult on this movie because there's a lot of fur.
I mean, there is a lot of fur.
There's a lot of movement of the fur.
Yes.
Okay, let me go back to my little friends.
Did you name them and describe them?
How did you get this little friend group together of these adolescent girls?
Oh. Is that girls? Oh.
Is that you?
Oh, yes. I mean, Mae, the protagonist is definitely me when I was Mae's age. She's
a little bit more confident and over the top than I was, but I was definitely that dorky
perfectionist tween who was really close with her mom, but also fighting with her every day. And her friends are definitely based off of friends that I've had growing up. I think a
lot of us have had growing up. I was like, how did she know those were my friends? I mean,
Priya, is it Priya? Priya. Yeah. Yeah. Priya. I had a friend like that. He was just always like,
nope. Yes. Yeah. Like super deadpan. How did you know these were our friends?
I think a lot of it had to do with working
with a lot of female collaborators in this movie.
There was Julia Cho, our screenwriter,
but also Lindsay Collins, our producer.
A lot of our story sessions are just us kind of sharing memories
from our middle school days. And I think that way you can find a lot of similarity and overlap. And
I think it really helps too that that main character comes from a personal place. I could
draw from personal experience and kind of put that into the movie.
How did you get the panda idea?
Oh, I knew that I really wanted her to turn into a giant red panda because red pandas are just so cute.
Oh God, so cute.
And I thought it could be such a funny and unique metaphor for puberty that I haven't seen yet.
I've seen Teen Wolf.
I've seen The Incredible Hulk.
But then I haven't seen a cute, awkward version
of that type of transformation story,
especially with a female protagonist.
It just popped into my head super early on.
And I knew that was the animal that I wanted her to turn into. Because it's also, it's popped into my head super early on. And I knew that was the animal that
I wanted her to turn into. Because it's also, it's Chinese. Yes. I just thought it was perfect.
But also because the story takes place in Canada too, I thought it was kind of perfect that the
panda's red and white. It's like, oh, this panda can be a mascot for both like China and Canada
in my head. Yeah. It's so funny because I kept thinking to myself,
oh, the whole ancestry story was so beautiful. But then I kept thinking to myself,
oh God, if this mom turns into a panda, it's not going to be a cute panda. I kept thinking, and I kept thinking of the panda as,
the panda was complicated and it was complicated like puberty
and it was complicated like confusion and it was complicated like shame
and it was complicated like perfectionism.
Yeah.
And then, I don't know, I just thought it was so smart.
Yeah. And then, I don't know, I just thought it was so smart. Yeah. I'm so glad you say that because all of that we kind of like found up until the last minute, the story was kind of shifting and evolving and it kind of landed in a really cool place.
But yeah, I think that the metaphor for the panda, I think, evolved as we were writing the story.
I think it started off when I first pitched it as like, yeah, it's a wacky metaphor for puberty. I think it became just a metaphor for
all the messy, all the messiness in life that just gets so complicated when you come of age,
when you start feeling all of these feelings. And it became a really interesting vessel to kind of tell this story of intergenerational trauma in this family.
And kind of just looking at not just my family, but just a lot of immigrant families
and how each generation deals with messiness in a different way. And that when we
were writing the backstory of May's grandma and her aunties as well, and the whole decision at
the end for them to not keep their pandas, but also not for the audience to not pass judgment on that was our attempt to kind of show how they had to deal with their messiness friends and a support system and hopefully a better world
that she can live in and be herself where she doesn't have to do what her mom and her grandma
and her family had to do. So that felt like a really cool and powerful choice for me to make
at the end. I thought the complexity of that was astounding. I thought really, I thought
and no judgment around them choosing to go through, to go through and leave their pandas.
Yeah. Because I thought about my mom for one, and we're white and middle-class Americans. So she had
far left, but her own trauma,
a lot of addiction in her family. And I thought a lot of my choices to keep my panda
are given to me because of the people who couldn't, you know? And so the aunties were like,
come on. I mean, I was like, my sister's laughing. These were not cute characters.
I mean, if you thought they were cute characters, you didn't get it because these were like, if things got bad and there was a street fight,
I'm going with the aunties. Do you know what I mean? Yeah. These were tough, incredible women.
Yeah. Yeah. That was our goal was just to pay tribute to all of the tough opinionated women that raised us.
Who can be harsh sometimes, but then when an emergency happens or when they are needed, they will drop everything to help you, which is what I was really inspired by.
It's the intergenerational trauma.
God, it was such a smart movie.
So beautiful.
And so, but also so furry and good.
I felt all the feels. Yeah. Yeah. You know, and I have a big battery of feels to feel. So
as you can imagine, I felt all of them. Is the intergenerational trauma, not only cultural racism,
is it also how that drives perfectionism?
Is it also shame?
How would you identify the trauma?
Yeah, I think you see a lot of similar experiences with immigrant families,
especially because the parents
or the older generation sacrificed so much
and went through such hardship to come to a new country
to place a lot of pressure on the next generation
to make sure that their sacrifice was not in vain.
Yeah.
But at the same time, this new generation,
they're growing up in a different environment than the older generation.
And that's where there's conflict because it's like, we moved to a new place, but you still want me to think how you guys think,
but I can't help but think and want things, want different things because you're raising me
different than how you were raised. Yeah. So I think that's where a lot of the tension is with
a lot of immigrant parents. Yeah. But also I just think the older generation, a lot of yeah yeah immigrant parents yeah yeah but also i just
think the older generation a lot of them have just been through so much more than i mean we've
been through a lot too like war yeah famine violence yeah depression yeah all kinds of
crazy stuff and that kind of hardened them because that toughened them up
and they had to be that way in order to survive. And they pass those traits on or those life skills
on to the next generation. But then the world is no longer as crazy or as cutthroat as the world
that they used to live in. But then this new generation of kids is inheriting all of these,
maybe outdated or...
The trauma responses.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
That they don't necessarily need anymore.
And that's also, yeah, that's where a lot of those issues lie as well.
So it's all very interesting stuff.
Yeah, but it's also, it's so beautiful.
I mean, the way you tell the story, it's incredible. I have to say that the crushes, the boy bands, the drawings underneath the bed. I know my armpits were sweating.
Yeah, like when she found those, like the merman. I swear to God I drew that.
Yeah. Yeah. did you draw that uh merman yes and mermaids but yes i think like a lot of women a lot of people like have had a like a
mermaid face in their tween yes years i don't know is Is it The Little Mermaid? But I think it goes beyond that too.
But yeah.
Yeah, I'm older than that.
But I do think it was like, I just remember the first boy I had a crush on besides like
Donny Osmond or like a famous person, but it was Leif Garrett, those people that were
on the cover of Tiger Beat magazine.
But he was a lifeguard and I could put his face on anything.
Like, you know, a giant, a merman.
Yeah.
And I had spirals and spirals of it.
And it was so private and kept so far under my bed
and in a shoebox.
And then when she bends down there,
I was like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
I mean, I almost had to turn it off.
I was just, it was, I have to ask this question
because it felt important.
Is it true that all the people in key leadership positions on this film were women?
Yes.
Yeah.
I felt so seen.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think those scenes like that scene and the incident with the pads at school.
Oh God.
Oh God. oh God.
All the cringy moments.
I think because a lot of the key leadership
on the show were women,
any time that any of us was like,
I don't know you guys, is this too much?
We just had a chorus of women going like,
no, go for it.
You remember what it's like, go hard.
We almost encourage each other just to lean into that
because we all just had that feeling.
Yes.
And the feeling with your girlfriends,
it was like, it's just us against the world
and we're going to go see this concert.
Yeah, we're going to be winning.
And screw whatever happens.
I mean, like, this is the girl that goes to the concert.
It's not the woman who leaves.
Like, this was a thing.
Yeah, it was.
And I really wanted to just capture that it is life or death, goes to the concerts, not the woman who leaves. Like this was a thing. Yeah, it was. And they
really wanted to just capture that it is life or death. The stakes in our movie are life or death,
but they're specifically for a teen girl. Oh man. And let me tell you something. My parents
did not turn into pandas, but I was busted one time and it was in front of people. My mother could have been a 400 foot
panda tearing the roof off the Astrodome in front of all of Houston. I don't know. I just want to
say thank you. You know, one of the greatest, people always ask me about shame and kids and
shame and teens. And the thing that I always go back to over and over again
is normalize, normalize, normalize.
The way bodies act, smell, respond,
those crazy feelings that you get,
normalize, normalize.
And this story was so normalizing
in a cringy, relatable, beautiful way. I loved it.
Thank you. Yeah, that was my goal. Because anytime I have memories of, and anytime I would
think back to that time in my life in middle school or high school, I would cringe just so
hard. So, so hard. And I was like, oh man, I can't. If I make everyone cringe with me, maybe it won't feel
as mortifying. It's true. I saw this funny meme on Twitter where someone took May as a panda
and they placed her on top of this serene mountain and the caption read, I am cringe, but I am free.
And I was like, yes, that's what I want. That's how I feel. It's like,
if I could just get all of this out, all this stuff that has been buried in the back of my
subconscious that would come out involuntarily when I'm brushing my teeth or about to go to bed,
we just get it out and encourage everyone to kind of share and cringe. If we could all
cringe together, then we are free and then nothing can ever embarrass us. That's it. That's it. That's it. I am cringe, but I am free. There's
something about a critical mass of cringers makes cringe bankrupt by definition. Yeah.
We take the power away from cringe. We all double over together.
It's true. I mean, it's true. And now my whole thing is at work. I can just like, we all double over together. It's true.
I mean, it's true.
And now my whole thing is at work.
I can just look at my sister and be like, we're minutes away from panda time.
Like minutes.
So whatever we do here, proceed lightly because we're heading that direction.
Nice.
Okay.
Do you have time for some rapid fire questions for us?
Yes.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
Fill in the blank for me. Vulnerability
is? Vulnerability is bravery. Yeah, I love it. Yeah. Okay. You are called to be very brave,
but your fear is real. You can taste it in the back of your throat. What's the very first thing you do?
I'll run towards it without even thinking.
I can see that. I'm just going to go for it and then stumble along the way, but I can't think.
If I think too much about it, yeah, I'm just going to go. I just have to go.
Okay. Last TV show you binged and loved.
Ooh. Succession.
Ooh.
That was crazy.
It was tough, but I loved every moment of it.
It was cringy moments in there for sure.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Okay.
Favorite movie.
Favorite movie?
Spirited Away.
Oh my God.
I referenced that in a lot of my books.
I talk about death by paper cuts.
God, it's so incredible.
So beautiful.
Such a great story.
Why is that such a good story?
Oh, it's so good.
It's so real, but it's also just beautiful.
And just, it's like comfort food.
I love just turning it on, just like watching it. I it'll really sweep you away yeah totally and then every moment too like I could
just jump in at any time and just watch yeah it's poetry it is a concert you'll never forget oh uh outside lands a couple years ago i saw it was my first music festival and i saw a bunch of
artists i bought the three-day ticket oh yeah and it was exhausting i was pressed together against
everybody else but it was awesome i think tom york played. And it was like, oh man, at that moment, I forgot how tired
I was that I was standing for hours. It was just like, this is really, really cool. Transported.
Yeah. Totally transported. That was amazing. Favorite meal. My mom's dumplings.
I know it's very predictable of me, but it so good and she refines it every time too every
time I go back she'll add something a little different but she'll make the dumpling wrappers
from scratch too really yeah and homemade dumpling wrappers I feel like they taste the
best because the dough is a little thicker and she makes them the perfect size. I could just eat it in one, just in one bite.
Yeah.
One bite.
Oh, yum.
Yeah.
Okay.
Weird question.
What's on your nightstand?
Oh, earplugs.
Oh yeah?
Yeah.
Because I started wearing them during the pandemic
because there would be a lot of fireworks
that would go off
in my neighborhood. But now that I've moved, I feel like I still have to wear them because I find
a, I don't know, it's weird, like a comfort in complete silence. No, no one tells you they're
addictive. I started wearing them in hotels, but then I got used to the little warm ears and then
no ambient sounds. It's just, it's like I'm in a cocoon of complete silence.
Yes.
A snapshot of an ordinary moment in your life that gives you real joy.
Oh, this is going to sound silly,
but if I have a good random spontaneous conversation with somebody,
like I'll just bump into them in the hallway and then
it's nice and it's short and I feel like we both got a lot out of it and then we part ways
because I get a little anxious when I talk to people and that was a good moment
I do a little mental high five with myself like yeah that was good yeah boom I did it
connected and got out exactly I was like was like, oh, that was good.
It was great talking to them. I feel really satisfied. I love that. Okay. Tell us one thing
you're deeply grateful for right now. Oh gosh, everything that I got to, and I still get to
tell stories with amazing people for a living. I know we're grateful I still get to tell stories with amazing people for a living.
I know we're grateful that you get to tell stories with amazing people for a living.
Thank you.
All right.
Are you a millennial?
Yes.
Yes?
Yes.
Yes, I think so.
I was looking at your five songs and I was like, mm-hmm.
Okay.
Okay.
We asked for five songs you couldn't live
without. Here's what you gave us. It's Gonna Be Me by NSYNC. Yes. Gold Gun Girls by Metric.
Paper Planes by MIA. The Phantom of the Opera. This was very interesting.
Which version of Phantom of the Opera? Oh, the 2011 version at the Royal Albert Hall.
I think it was the 25th anniversary.
Oh, the big production one.
The big production one with Ramin Karimlu and Sierra Bogus.
Yes.
Bogus, yeah.
Yes, okay.
That's my favorite one.
And then The Sound of Music by Julie Andrews. Yes. That's my favorite one. And then the sound of music by Julie Andrews.
Yes. Like the song song, like the hills are alive. Yeah. Yeah. That's one of my comfort movies.
Actually, if I watch that opening, I get teary eyed. That's so emotional. Yeah. Especially the
second verse where she's, I go to the hills, but my heart is lonely. I'm like, yeah, me too.
Me too, girl.
Same.
I actually walked down the aisle to how do you solve a problem like Maria?
Really?
When I got married.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you've got to tell me, this is going to be a trap, but you're a storyteller.
So you'll be able to do it in one sentence.
Okay.
What do these five songs say about you? Oh, gosh.
Jomie Shee, one sentence. One sentence. What do these songs say about me?
I'm a go-getter, but I'm also very dramatic.
Because I'm like, the first half is, yeah, like energetic, confidence boosting. And then the second half are just sweeping, sweeping, valid, like powerful musical numbers. So yeah, I think
you are a highly orchestrated go-getter. I guess I am.
And we are grateful for what you're going to get.
So thank you so much for your work.
And thanks for being on Unlocking Us with us.
It was such a delight to talk to you.
Yeah, it was great talking to you too.
Thank you.
And thank you.
And wait, wait, wait, what's next?
What's next?
Oh.
Yeah.
Oh, I can't tell you right now.
I didn't think so. But I'm back in development. I'm working on my next? Oh, yeah. Oh, I can't tell right now. I didn't think so,
but I'm back in development. I'm working on my next project now at Pixar. So yeah,
now I know they lock you down over there. Yeah. Even when I came to visit, I was like, dang,
but it will be go getting and dramatic like the playlist. Oh, good. I love that. I'm all about it.
Thank you so much, Domi. I really appreciate
and love your work. You're just such, such a gift. Oh, thank you, Brené. You too. It's great
talking to you. You too. Okay, y'all, my new motto is, I am cringe, but I am free. I mean,
does that say it all? How great does that align with Awkward Braving Kind?
I am cringe, but I am free.
I love her.
I love her films.
I love her honesty, her creativity, her truth-telling.
You can watch Turning Red on Disney Plus
and bow there as well.
We'll have a link to everything we talked about today
on the episode page on brennabrown.com.
I'm so glad you're here for this.
Don't forget, we are cringe, but we are free.
Y'all stay awkward, brave, and kind.
Unlocking Us is produced by Brene Brown Education and Research Group. The music is by Keri Rodriguez
and Gina Chavez. Get new episodes as soon as they're published by following Unlocking Us on
your favorite podcast app. We are part of the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Discover more award-winning shows at podcast.voxmedia.com.
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