“It feels like…existential whiplash.” Joel Kim Booster on becoming a star in ‘Sunnyside”

“It feels like…existential whiplash.” Joel Kim Booster on becoming a star in ‘Sunnyside”

Joel Kim Booster as Jun Ho — (Photo by: Ron Batzdorff/NBC)

Joel Kim Booster has arrived…even if he’s late.

“I’m so sorry I had to push,” he apologizes. “It was for truly the most obnoxious gay reason!”

We ask if Booster had a Grindr overload. He clarifies: he was booking a New Year’s vacation with friends.

He has a reason to celebrate. The Illinois native spent years doing guest spots and small roles on television, as well as touring as a stand-up comic, in which he often made fun of his life as a gay, Asian man. The years of work paid off: earlier this season, Joel Kim Booster landed a role on the ensemble sitcom Sunnyside for NBC. In the show–which follows a disgraced politician (played by series co-creator Kal Penn) coaching a group of immigrants to get their citizenship–Booster plays Jun Ho, a spoiled millennial joined at the hip to his sister, Mei Lin (played by queer actress Poppy Liu). The origins of Mei Lin & Jun Ho remain purposely murky throughout the show…though they seem to come from enormous wealth, and possibly have a despotic dictator as a father.

Sunnyside originally aired as part of NBC’s fall lineup before moving to a digital release on Hulu & NBC.com. New episodes stream every Thursday.

Queerty connected with Joel Kim Booster to chat about his transition to stardom, the somewhat controversial reception of the show, and the perils of trying to make it in Hollywood as a gay, Asian man.

So what’s the state of your life at the moment?

I don’t know; it’s sort of hard to gauge. I think it all feels mostly the same. I will say, I feel a bit more financially stable than I ever have before in my entire life. It’s weird to go from a couple years ago not knowing how exactly I would make rent to now putting, you know, a vacation home on my credit card. It feels like a little bit of existential whiplash.

Joel Kim Booster as Jun Ho, Poppy Liu as Mei Lin — (Photo by: Gilles Mingasson/NBC)

Yeah?

It’s so strange. This is never a place I thought I would be growing up or even a couple years ago. It’s nice to have a level of relative success where I don’t feel on edge all the time the way I was when I lived in New York.

Great. And it’s been some time coming: you’ve been doing a lot of stand-up and working for a few years doing smaller acting gigs. Guest spots, voiceover work.

And working in writer’s rooms too. The odd thing about sort of being a multi-hyphenate comedian is that I was never quite sure in what form success would come. I was spinning a lot of plates in the industry. I was touring a lot doing clubs and colleges for people who didn’t know who I was. That’s kind of a slog. Then, working in the writer’s room on other people’s shows, trying to sell my own shows as a writer. Then auditioning. I feel like I’ve been doing pilot season for so many years that it became a weird tradition of going through the motions.

Ok.

But this year—every year I feel like in years past, every time I’ve gotten close to something. It always felt like this is it. This could change my life. But this year, I felt ok. My life felt ok. I thought if it happens, then great. If not, I’ll be ok. I had other things I could focus on. I feel like that’s always the case when something big happens.

Sure.

So I booked [Sunnyside] and it was fun to go to all of the later auditions sort of like I’m arriving here. I wasn’t a mess of nerves. I think that’s part of the reason I got the part.

Really?

Yeah, I think, like most people in this industry, I tend to get inside my head and second guess myself. I always auditioned before sort of playing to what I thought the other person wanted. Like, how can I be the kind of archetype they want? But this part, the way it was described from the get-go, from the very first audition in the breakdown that [casting director] Allison Jones sent my reps, was this guy is a finance douche bag. He’s a bit like Donald Trump, Jr. That’s the direction we’re going. And I was like I can’t do that.

[Laughter]

I had just literally gotten off doing stand-up on a cruise, I think, a day before the audition. I was exhausted, I was sick. This was like my 11th pilot season audition, so I was sort of like I’m going in there and being myself. That is, to be funny in the way I know how to be funny. Ultimately, I guess they liked it. Every time I went in for callbacks, and then the [screen] test, I was like I’m going to go in there and do this the way I know how to do it. It was the first time I’ve ever done that, as opposed to giving them what I thought they wanted.

That’s terrific. So how has the approach to the character changed? You mention that this part wasn’t written for you, that this was a character you weren’t really big on when you saw the initial concept. What have you brought to it? How have the writers changed their approach now that they know they’re writing for you?

You know, I think it’s the chemistry with Poppy [Liu, who plays his sister Mei Lin]. Both of us have talked about how they didn’t audition us together. I think they just struck gold in a lot of ways by having to cast two people that got on well. But I think we both have done a lot to figure out how the characters are different. I think, also, bringing some amount of depth and likability to a character that just could be a shallow joke machine. The writers do a really good job. There’s so much in every script that works for us. For me, it’s a balance between how much of it is stupidity, and how much of it is entitled naivete. There is, already famously on the network, a stupid Asian guy: Manny Jacinto’s character on The Good Place.

Joel Kim Booster as Jun Ho, Poppy Liu as Mei Lin — (Photo by: Gilles Mingasson/NBC)

Of course.

I didn’t want to go into doing what he does on that show. For Mei Lin and Jun Ho, and for me and Poppy specifically, it’s not that these characters are stupid. It’s that they’ve been insulated so much by their wealth that they see themselves in a completely different way. Finding those balances and making it not straight stupidity has been very fun for us.

I’m glad you mention that idea. One major source of humor in the series is the different perspectives and entitlements that all these characters have. They take what we would consider some odd things for granted, but then other concepts are totally foreign to them. It’s that clash that generates the humor.

Mmmhmm.

Do you think that the reception to the show on network, prior to the Hulu move, is sort of a reaction to the irreverence of the subject matter? In other words, do you think that a show that is about—and makes fun of—the American obsession with immigration, maybe cuts too close to the bone? And I don’t mean that at all as a dig at the show.

No, no, no.

I mean that more as a way of reading the public.

For sure. This question has been asked in different iterations before. I wouldn’t say our intention is to really make fun the obsession with immigration. What I think that it is—it’s more a backdrop of a hangout comedy. Community has a study group. Always Sunny in Philadelphia has the bar. For us, I think it’s just a more textured version of that.

Related: Joel Kim Booster on developing Fire Island rom-com: “I’m making my friends wear Speedos”

Interesting.

It’s giving context to why these people are hanging out. For our show, it just has to be that. Especially as you get past Episode 3 of the show, it really does evolve beyond the initial premise of the pilot. It becomes less and less about the immigrant experience and more about hard jokes and these characters and their idiosyncrasies. So that’s how we see it.

Yeah.

And I hope people can look past the initial trappings of the premise and see the comedy in it. Poppy and I have talked about this. We see the immigrant experience sort of play out as trauma porn in dramas. For us, the thing that’s so appealing about the show, is that it does sort of allow, in a heightened, sometimes absurd way, to see that in the background as part of a character’s story in the same way Chandler [on Friends] worked at a marketing firm. It’s incidental.

Poppy Liu as Mei Lin, Joel Kim Booster as Jun Ho — (Photo by: Ron Batzdorff/NBC)

Speaking of comedy… Do you prefer to think of yourself as an actor or a comic? So many performers have really surprising answers.

I always think of myself as a comedian. No matter what I’m approaching I have that part of my brain working. It’s the hardest wrought part of my creative identity. I’m very apt to hold onto it in a weird way. I’m really good at acting. But I will always, no matter what I’m doing, even when I go into drama auditions, there’s always the undertone comedy. In a lot of ways it’s just as truthful.

You also discuss your family life, your race, your adoption, your sexuality. How do other comics respond to that? I’m continually horrified by some of the answers I get when I talk to comics about the bigotry in the comedy scene.

That’s interesting. I’ve been thinking about that a lot, this year especially. It’s been a question turning in my brain because as my platform has grown and I’ve been introduced to a wider audience, I started getting critical responses from my peers or people who haven’t laid eyes on me before. I guess for me, it’s sort of the same answer I had about the immigration experience on the show. I don’t ever look at my material, my notebook and say “Here’s where the gay jokes are and here’s where the Asian jokes are.” I approach it in the same way I think most comedians do, which is what is the most interesting thing that has happened to me today to write about? I find some kernel of absurdity or universal truth. I sort of vacillate between those two, whichever I find more interesting.

Interesting.

The standard for relatability is a little bit higher for me because of my identity than it is for other comics, usually like straight, sometimes male, sometimes white comics. I get knocked a lot by people who look at my material and say “This isn’t relatable to me because he’s just talking about being gay or being Asian or whatever.” It’s so strange. I’m not going to name names, but any sort of mainstream, headlining, straight, male comedian that is sort of the Face Of The Art Form, I’m supposed to look at his life as a father or dating women or any of those things and say “Yes, that is a universal experience. I recognize the universal in that and therefore I can laugh at it.”

I know what you mean.

I’ve been asked to do that. Queer audiences are asked to do that. And yet a straight person can’t sit down at my show and try and put themselves in that position too? It’s a little frustrating. Nevertheless, I persist. I will talk about whatever I want to talk about or find interesting.

Well done.

Does that answer your question?

I think so, but it does beg the follow-up: what kind of impact has that had on your career? Have you been limited to the kind of gigs you book or auditions you’re called in for?

Hmm. I think it has. I think that there will always big a segment of my audience that considers me an “XY comedian.” A gay, Asian comedian, or what have you. I will always be fighting that to some degree. However, I don’t know—it’s so hard. I tour all over the country and play the Midwest, the South, the Northeast—all these places. My material does work, and most of my audiences are not predominantly gay. They’re not mostly Asian.

Right.

Especially when I’m going places like St. Louis. It’s not that. And yet, I make it work, and think there is something universally funny in my material. I care less and less though about relatability. I feel like relatability is such a scourge for us, in that it makes people like me move to where people are. Comedians that are straight and male don’t do that. They’re not doing that for me. Louis CK isn’t looking at his material and thinking “How will a gay person relate to this? How will an Asian person relate to this?” He’s not doing that. He doesn’t give a sh*t.

Kal Penn as Garrett, Joel Kim Booster as Ju Ho, Poppy Liu as Mei Lin — (Photo by: Tina Thorpe/NBC)

That makes sense.

Honestly, now, I used to care very deeply about oh my God, an eating *ss joke. Will that play in the Midwest? Is it too alienating? Will it gross-out a guy in the front row? Now I think I’ve been doing this long enough that I don’t give a sh*t. I know that the structure is there. There’s a setup and there’s a punchline and it is recognizable as a joke to audiences no matter who they might be or where they might come from. So I’m going to do it, and not be afraid or water down who I am so I can seem relatable to someone I don’t even care about.

Sunnyside streams to NBC.com and Hulu every Thursday.

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Nancy Pelosi Shades Trump Directly, Schooling Him on ‘Exculpatory,’ Says President Has ‘Admitted to Bribery’ — WATCH

Nancy Pelosi Shades Trump Directly, Schooling Him on ‘Exculpatory,’ Says President Has ‘Admitted to Bribery’ — WATCH

Nancy Pelosi spoke to reporters on Thursday, addressing Donald Trump directly and explaining that the president has admitted to bribery.

Said Pelosi: “The devastating testimony corroborated evidence of bribery uncovered in the inquiry and that the president abused power and violated his oath by threatening to withhold military aid and a White House meeting in exchange for an investigation into a political rival,” Pelosi told reporters at her weekly press conference. … you know we’re talking Latin around here — e pluribus unum, from anyone, quid pro quo, bribery, and that is in the Constitution, attached to the impeachment proceeding. … The bribe is to grant or withhold military assistance in return for a public statement of a fake investigation into the elections — that’s bribery.”

Watch: Nancy Pelosi describes Trump’s Ukraine actions.

“What the president has admitted to… it’s bribery.”pic.twitter.com/khX7nHFwND

— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) November 14, 2019

Pelosi also delivered some real shade as only she can do:

Epic shade as Speaker Pelosi takes Trump to school:

PELOSI: “If the president has anything exculpatory …”

Pauses and looks directly at camera.

PELOSI: “Mr. President, that means if you have anything that shows your innocence.” pic.twitter.com/zMxwSNeLK5

— Karl Frisch (@KarlFrisch) November 14, 2019

The post Nancy Pelosi Shades Trump Directly, Schooling Him on ‘Exculpatory,’ Says President Has ‘Admitted to Bribery’ — WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Nancy Pelosi Shades Trump Directly, Schooling Him on ‘Exculpatory,’ Says President Has ‘Admitted to Bribery’ — WATCH

Sir Ian schemes, lesbians sing and Dolly Parton tugs our ‘Strings:’ What to Watch this week

Sir Ian schemes, lesbians sing and Dolly Parton tugs our ‘Strings:’ What to Watch this week

High School Musical: The Musical – The Series

Stepping out on a movie date this weekend? Netflix and chillin? Whatever your entertainment needs, we got your back (and hopefully your mind) with Queerty’s weekly “Culture Club” column with some of the highlights of new releases, streaming shows, classics worth revisiting, and what to drink while you watch.

The Step-Out: The Good Liar

Acting gods Helen Mirren & Ian McKellen star in this new thriller, from Oscar-winner Bill Condon. The Good Liar follows a con-Juan named Roy (McKellen) who romances a wealthy older woman named Betty (Mirren) with hopes of stealing her money. Things take a complicated turn when Betty’s hunky grandson (Russell Tovey) begins to suspect Roy’s ulterior motives, and Roy begins to develop real feelings for Betty. The Good Liar throws more than a few gasp-inducing twists at its audience, building to a climax both disturbing and delicious and guided by two terrific performances from McKellen & Mirren.

In cinemas November 15.

The Binge: Dolly Parton’s Heartstrings

Dolly Parton gives her songs the streaming treatment, adapting the stories from her music and life into this new series of minimovies. Heartstrings aims for Hallmark movie territory, and we don’t mean that as a criticism. Much like Hallmark movies, each story has a warm & frothy taste designed as a feel-good panacea of sorts. The big difference: Hearstrings goes for a more grounded and sexually-aware approach, and features a host of acting talent that includes Melissa Leo, Kathleen Turner, Julianne Hough, Andy Mientus, Gennifer Goodwin and Camryn Manheim. Ms. Parton is on hand as well, introducing every episode, showing up for a guest spot performance, or taking on a role herself. It’s also refreshing to see a queer story in the decidedly conservative mix: the comedy 2 Doors Down about a gay son trying to come out to his parents at a wedding. Heartstrings doesn’t want to be hard-hitting, but it sure does know how to, well, tug at the heartstrings.

Streams on Netflix November 15.

The Unexpected: High School Musical: The Musical – The Series

Yes, that’s seriously the title. Anyone yearning for a new entry in the franchise that helped make Zac Efron and Vanessa Hudgens into household names—or for that matter, anyone who still snickers at their Disney Channel roots—take heed: Disney+ has launched this new sitcom which aims to pay homage to and skewer the High School Musical movies. The series takes place at the high school where Disney filmed the original movies, and follows a new group of theatre kids staging a production of High School Musical, in the single-camera comedy style of The Office. As an added bonus, the series includes some out & proud characters, starting with the choreographer Carlos (played by Frankie A. Rodriguez). A show like this has no right to be so smart, or so funny.

Streams on Disney+ with new episodes every Tuesday.

The Throwback: Jawbreaker

To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the cult comedy Jawbreaker, those cinephiles over at the Shout Factory have prepared a new fully-loaded Blu-Ray edition, poised to attract a new audience and satisfy fans of the original. Much in the vein of Heathers, Jawbreaker follows the three bitchiest, most popular girls in school (Rose McGowan, Rebecca Gayheart and Julie Benz) as they try to off the prom queen. Loaded with dark humor and camp, courtesy of the acidic wit of gay writer/director Darren Stein, Jawbreaker makes subsequent teen comedies like Mean Girls look tame by comparison. Added bonus: slick production & costume design give the film a candy-colored look, and a rockin 90s soundtrack keeps the pace upbeat.

On Special Editon Blu-Ray November 19.

The Warm & Fuzzy: Let it Snow

Much like Dolly Parton’s Heartstrings, Netflix aims for a warm & fuzzy vibe with this screwball high school comedy about the holidays. Let it Snow contains a number of plot conceits off the bat that are totally ridiculous. It’s one of those movies where a group of affluent kids decide to stage a crazy party on Christmas Eve…while everyone’s families are out of town. If you’re wondering if any kid has ever attended a teeny bopper kegger on Christmas, you’re not alone. Then again, that’s beside the point. Let it Snow is an idealized fantasy, the kind of story where a headstrong young girl can fall hard for a pop star that happens to land in town, and where a guy harboring a secret crush on his best girlfriend doesn’t get his heartbroken. The movie also deserves notice for including a delightful queer character, Dorrie (played by Liv Hewson), who has an ongoing flirtation with a popular cheerleader. Saccharine & ridiculous by design, Let it Snow offers sentimental entertainment for everyone…including queer folk.

Streams on Netflix

The Head Banger: Nasty Cherry

For a more riotous time, sans sweetness but with a hearty dose of queer rebellion, have a look at Nasty Cherry, the Netflix documentary series about an all-girl rock band aiming for the big time. The riot grrrl punk of Hole, Verruca Salt, the Breeders always had a certain lesbian undercurrent to it. The band Nasty Cherry brings it to the fore, thanks to the queer lead singer Gabby, who looks like a more athletic Lana Del Rey and seems born to stage dive. With the rock scene ever-stagnated, and with girl punk all but erased from radio rotation, thank goodness for Nasty Cherry, a show that gives us ladies—and music—with balls. As it were.

Streams on Netflix November 15.

The Sip: The Jolene

In honor of Ms. Parton and the epynomous ginger vixen of her song (and now, movie), we suggest sipping on this equally gingery sweet vodka martini. It has no shortage of Southern charm, or sexy spice.

  • 1.5 oz Sweet Tea Vodka
  • .5 oz Peach Schnapps
  • 2 oz Ginger Beer
  • Mint Sprig
  • Fresh Peaches

Mix vodka, schnapps & ginger beer over ice in a shaker. Shake and pour in a martini glass. Optional: serve with fresh mint or a peach garnish.

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