I'm not familiar with his acting work; but he seems funny. My favorite parts pertained to ethnic parents.
I'm not familiar with his acting work; but he seems funny. My favorite parts pertained to ethnic parents.
I was a huge fan of the Daily Show back in the day and always liked Aasif Mandvi on the show. This was a great read, mostly about his experience finding his place in the world as an Indian Muslim living first in England as a child, then as a teenager when his family moved to Florida and as an adult in NYC. There were many poignant scenes and some laugh out loud moments too.
Urine-drinking was one of those things that, as an Indian kid, you hope your friends never find out about your culture--bathing in the Ganges and cows in the middle of the highway are already difficult enough to explain to your western friends.
Despite my poor display my family was supportive. Even though my grandmother didn't understand what it all meant, my less-than-average homage to Michael Jackson brought a smile to her face. For the rest of their visit she would walk into my bedroom every day and sing "Billy Jesus not my lawyer."
I read this as a substitution for Born a Crime on my #marchmadness bracket. Compared to Noah's memoir, it was pretty light. Mandvi narrates the audio and the book tells about his life from childhood in England and the US. He does discuss his experience as both an Indian and Muslim person in both countries and how his background impacted his life & career. But it's more funny anecdotes than in depth analysis unlike Noah's book. Pretty funny overall