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My Son Reacts to Being Asked If His Korean Name Is "안녕하세요"
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- Опубликовано: 16 мар 2018
- Today, our entire family went to explore the farmer's market! For $30 off your first week of HelloFresh, visit bit.ly/2nn46H0 and enter MAZELEE30
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About us:
Joe Lee and Alena Maze, a married couple with a blended family of six children, document their journey to find their purpose in the will of God. While revealing the dynamics of a blended family, the couple expresses their struggles, successes, and failures through film.
Joe Lee | Director of Photography & Street photographer
Alena Maze | Director & Mathematician
Music Credits:
Mr. Thibs- Cadillac
Mr. Thibs- 612_
Parker Thibodeaux
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IG : Mr_thibs
How cute is Azaio with the goggles 🤣
too cute
0:52 ❤️ Azaio is an awesome cook.
After three years , I can finally say “FIRST” in the comment section 😭🙌🏾
MANDE UM OI PARA MIN MAI MEU NOME É CONCEIÇÃ OI DELZA
This whole family is awesome
O mom and Dad I like how you teach your children to do things all of them can do things brave
GOSTARIA MUITO DE SABER O InDUZEM
P0r favor legenda português
Lol
Seventh 😭
SECOND
Third
fourth
All of this emphasis on Korean culture is bit jarring.
Better Korean then our toxic black culture lol.
@@theresaahart167 Very sad but Korea has its share of issues as well. Joe as i understand, was born here in the U.S. and understands very little korean. I am convinced that Alena is suffering from colorism and is pushing for her children to embrace his culture more than her own.
@@TheReneex Joe knows Korean very well, it's just he's out of practice speaking it. The children learn about BOTH of their cultures and live in a predominately African-American Baltimore, Maryland neighborhood. The MazeLee family has a Black mother who makes her children African-American dishes, celebrates African-American holidays, teaches them hair customs, follows Black traditions, and teaches her kids how to act in the Black community. Plus their aunt Akeeba is an Africana Studies major whose an elementary school teacher that helps homeschool the older girls in their history classes(after-school for the little kids). Trust me the kids aren't losing their culture by eating Korean food when they go out/takeout, enrolling them in taekwondo classes, and having them be in a Korean Nursery School or lessons. They're becoming well-rounded children secure in their identity and the cultures in their household. At least the children won’t have an identity crisis from not knowing both ethnicities' cultures (unlike most Mixed-Black kids).
When did it become a crime to learn about their fathers culture. These kids know their black. Had it been black central you wouldn’t have anything to say. Not everyone is colorist just because she has mixed kids. I’m pretty sure a colorist wouldn’t have a full black daughter. I don’t see the blk father sticking around teaching his daughter tho yet the mom is doing her part and it’s a problem.
@@Chels4hair Wow I like that, you have given me a mission for my future kids. I am African and hardly know both my parents cultures because I am a city boy. Now I had to learn all this when I was older because I didn't belong to any. Now I see the importance of teaching kids a balanced role of belonging. Both my parents come from different African countries, with different African languages and we all live in a different country