A Local Boy Riding the Wave: Kainalu "Kai" Moya & Becoming Ollie Akana in Power Rangers Dino Fury

“Something I always experienced was like, I tell them where I’m from, and they just say, ‘Oh, dude, you’re Hawaiian’. Well, yeah, I’m Hawaiian, but this isn’t really what a pure Hawaiian looks like, I’m not an accurate representation of that, because I’m so many different things. But people automatically think, ‘Oh, [he’s] from Hawai‘i, [so he’s] Hawaiian.’ But then they missed the whole point of like, ‘he’s also Japanese, Chinese, Filipino, and he actually has some white in him too.”

In anticipation of the upcoming Power Rangers television series, MixedLife interviewed actor, and future Blue Power Ranger Kainalu Moya about culture shock, mixed casting, and the power of kid’s television.”

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SPOTLIGHTAddison LeeComment
Mixed Blood by Tiffany Wernik

“I remember trying as hard as I could to push down my culture so I could be palatable to the pretty white girls I hung out with. Now I’ve realized that being mixed is quite literally in my blood and whenever I look in the mirror I see that…”

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MediaAddison LeeComment
Winter Tan by Andrea Chow

“…she asked me, how are you so tan? it’s winter. I thought to myself, I am tan because when amber drips down a tree it hardens dark. I am tan because when you crack open the sunburned shell of the coconut sweet water spills out and you sink your teeth into its meat grateful for the jungle and its saccharine sustenance….”

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WritingAddison LeeComment
Creating Space for Mixed Trans Folks: Tony Zosherafatain & His Upcoming Docu-Series Trans in Trumpland

“When you have experienced ‘isms’ yourself, you can really shape those stories better I think and more authentically”. Diving into the world of filmmaker Tony Zosherafatain, MixedLife Media was able to discuss, celebrate, and learn more about navigating life from the perspectives of being both mixed and trans in a very white and cisgender film industry.

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SPOTLIGHTAddison Lee
Language: A Poem and Statement By Beka Bowkett

“My granny spent her childhood feeling the thorough effects of the Raj. Her grandmother would tell her to speak Konkani. My granny speaks English. It’s no source of shame to her, to my knowledge. She said that all the women in her family, her whole family in Mangalore would speak Konkani to her & she would reply in her mother tongue, English.” Beka Bowkett tackles the tightrope between language and ancestral responsibilities in this striking poem and statement, click to read more!

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WritingAddison LeeComment
The Future of Mixed Music: an Interview with Gab The Sandbox

“I think that even when I ended up finding Tyler, the creator, I always liked music of that nature because they really express how they are also the outcast kids, you know, artists that look like me and like him. I think that inspired me so heavily. To a point where I feel like I needed to do that in my life, you know, because growing up in a place where you don't really have, representation of yourself, you’re pushed to be that representation, which is dope.”

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Ethnicity Vs Race: A Reflection By Valerie Hernandez-Vallejo

“Many other Latinos are also mixed, whether it be with Indigenous, Spanish, African, or a multitude of other races. However, due to colonization, a lot of mixed people, or mestizos, feel a disconnect between their Native culture and the one of the colonizers. They may not feel comfortable with identifying as White or Native because of that disconnect. I myself, feel this disconnect sometimes as well…”

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What’s In a Name?: An Introduction By Katherine Montana

“As my ancestors resisted colonization by asserting their culture, should I follow in their footsteps by reclaiming the name Montaño that was taken away from me, or is it not true resistance since it may really be the name given to my ancestors by colonizing Spaniards? It’s complicated, but, as a mixed person, there is nothing new about that…”

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Addison Lee