 I mean, of course, I'm grieved because what he said was disgusting and horrible and obscene, but since then, unpacking it, I feel like I have this parasocial relationship with Ali Wong and Stephen Yuen, where I've loved their work in the past. They seem like really great people to me who I would be friends with. There was this disappointment in these public figures that I looked up to that they were actually part of this culture and mob of silence that protects abusers. Unfortunately, this brand of very violent misogynist and anti-black toxic masculinity, when I think about Asian American men, I have seen that in our community before. I think the support comes from this desire to see a prominent Asian American kind of bad boy figure who is pushing against stereotype and walking around with this kind of like braggadocio that is appealing because it refutes a certain long-standing image of Asian men as effeminate and as emasculated. I think two things can be true at the same time. Beef is a really great show and we shouldn't participate in brushing this stuff under the rug for the sake of some larger goal of continuing this momentum of Asian American representation in Hollywood.