om. mean, i think for a lot of young south asian-americans, i think it shaped our identity.mentbe sometimes aboug who we were. there was an embarrassment of our parents, and there was shame. there was a sense of, this is...ic "we are not ameran. anwe are less american. we don't fit. we have to fight against this constantly." i mech, i think those early dhood experiences alwayshape you, and that was, i think, a thing that shaped a lot of us. -but yet, there's a moment in yr film where you interview your parents, and they're both indian immigrants,th and they say weren't offended by apu. they weren't bothered that the voice was done by a white actor. -right. i mean, i think my mom said that it's not that she wasn't offended.e, it was that, lou know, it wasn't something she really worried about. you know, when ytr're coming to this co and the stakes are so high, you're not really worried about things like,"h am i being seen?" like, you worry about, you know, your bills, but i think as somebody who was born in this country grew up in this country, there's a certain entitlement t