Ten Things Every Brand Should Know About Asian American Youth
Source: SnapDragon Consultants
- Many Asian-American youth feel excluded and misunderstood by most brands. It’s made worse by the fact that they see advertisers actively wooing the African-American and Hispanic markets.
- Mixed race kids are proudly identifying as Hapa, a once derogatory word in Hawaiian to mean “half.†Hapa is also slang for marijuana in Japanese (spelled Happa). Hapa is supplanting terms like Amerasian, biracial, and blasian.
- Asian-American youth are secret fans of “easy listening†adult contemporary music. Lite FM is a hidden passion.
- There’s a “hero gap†among Asian-American kids, which is being filled for many by activists from other cultures. Martin Luther King is a role model and hero to many young Asian-Americans.
- Most Asian-American kids refer to white people as “white people†the same way African-Americans do.
- Underage gambling is huge. The “new†American poker obsession is nothing new to Asian-American kids and gambling has a long history in Asian culture. Many students Rigg spoke with are avid online gamblers and cardplayers. Many organize private online poker tournaments.
- Asian-American kids want an end to the hyper-nerdy images of themselves on TV and want to see more punked-out skater and graffiti DJ images which reflect a different energy. The feeling is: Enough with the math geeks, future doctors and violinists. Asian-American kids crave street credibility—not just academic accolades.
- Asian-American kids universally hate the question: Where are you from—especially since the answers are usually something like “Westchester†or “Boston.â€
- All things Korean are hot and getting hotter. Fashion. Foods. DJs. Online communities. Korea is the new Japan.
- The 15 minutes of seemingly benign American Idol fame for William Hung had a surprisingly negative effect on Asian-American students. There’s a feeling that Hung perpetuated the worst stereotypes about Asian people and gave non-Asians permission to indulge in two years of racial stereotyping and mocking.
