
Vietnam Podcast: Culture, Community & Conversations
Host Niall Mackay takes you on a journey through the vibrant and diverse culture of modern Vietnam.
Niall focuses on personal stories and experiences of both himself and guests, sharing insights into the everyday life of people connected to Vietnam.
From artists and entrepreneurs, locals and Viet Kieu, expats and Vietnamese worldwide and members of the LGBTQ community, this podcast offers a unique perspective on this rapidly developing country.
With engaging discussions and thought-provoking insights, A Vietnam Podcast is a must-listen for anyone interested in exploring the rich culture of modern Vietnam.
Vietnam Podcast: Culture, Community & Conversations
Bridging Worlds: Identity, Legacy, and Coming Home | S14 E02 Annie Vo (Part 1)
"I think I grew up more sheltered. I didn't have the typical New York upbringing." - Annie Vo
This episode was special in so many ways — not just because it marked six years of A Vietnam Podcast, but because of Annie’s story. Her journey from Saigon to Yale, and then full circle back to Vietnam, embodies what this podcast is all about: identity, resilience, and connection.
Hearing how Annie navigated culture shock, built a successful career, and now helps others feel seen and supported — that hit home. Her warmth and authenticity reminded me why I started this podcast. These are the conversations that matter. They’re real, honest, and grounded in experience. I feel lucky to have shared the mic with her on such a meaningful day.
Key Takeaways:
- Gossip Girl was based on her high school
- Learning English as a child immigrant
- Reverse culture shock moving back to Vietnam
- What was supposed to be a short stay became 8 years
- Her children are growing up bilingual and connected
Chapters and Time-stamps:
03:00 - Annie’s Background & Career Overview
04:00 - Gossip Girl & High School Life in NYC
07:00 - Immigrating to the U.S. at Age 5
13:00 - Learning English & Adjusting to American Life
20:00 - Returning to Vietnam & Reverse Culture Shock
28:00 - Why She Stayed in Vietnam
30:00 - Building a Life and Business in Saigon
33:00 - Family, Legacy, and Raising Kids Bilingually
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Niall: [00:00:00] Your high school class is the basis for a very, very famous TV show, and you are actually the basis for one of those characters? Correct?
Annie: My high school class of 2005 the Spence uh, school in New York is the basis for it. And one of the characters in it is an Asian girl.
Between sort of Where I was at home I was more Vietnamese and then, uh, outside I was more American, really. Um, I think New York is great. It's very diverse, so I never felt specifically sort of discriminated, um, against, um, as an Asian or as a Vietnamese.
To this day I think, I seek out those on the edges of social circles and
Niall: trying to
bring
them
in
because I
was
once
one
of
those.
Niall: Welcome to a Vietnam podcast with me, your host, Neil Mackay. I've now been hosting this podcast since 2019, and today is actually a really special day. Today is six years to the day, since the very first episode of a Vietnam podcast.
I.
Annie: Oh, wow. Congratulations.
Niall: Thank
you very much. It was called a [00:01:00] Saigon podcast back then, the full name was 7 million Bikes, a Saigon podcast, and it is now simply a Vietnam podcast. We are in the top 5% of podcasts worldwide. We've interviewed over 200 people, hundreds of episodes, over 300 episodes. Uh, I now start the 7 million Bike Podcast, a podcast production agency.
We've worked with over 70 podcasts, help with millions of downloads, thousands of episodes, help podcasts get to the top of the charts, and absolutely none of this would've been possible without you listening to this, making it such a successful podcast. So thank you so much. But I do have to give a big, big special thank you to Louis Wright who composed the music for this podcast that still gets the most compliments today, way more than the actual podcast itself, but it's completely deserved.
But more than that, Lewis taught me everything I know about microphones and audio and everything in the beginning, and even still to this day, helps me so much. So thank you so much to Lewis. But most of all, obviously if you listen to this podcast, you know that I talk about every episode, my wife, Adrie Lopez Mackay, [00:02:00] literally what you're listening to right now through all this equipment, through all this, uh, motivation through all this energy would not be possible without her support and love and everything she's done over the years to make this podcast possible.
So a massive, massive thank you to her. For making a Vietnam podcast and 7 million Bikes podcast possible. So we get into today's episode, I'm always really excited and I'm especially excited today. My guest today, she is Vietnamese American. She's the COO of Premier Dental who are the sponsors of Season 14 of Vietnam podcast and an unbelievable dental surgery.
Uh, they're actually my dentist. I've been going there for a couple of years. Um, they're incredible at getting your wisdom teeth out. If you want to get your wisdom teeth out, it's fucking painful. But they are amazing. So I, I would recommend going to Premier Dental and, and she is a lecturer. And she is a university lecturer and community builder.
So most people might know my guest today through the numerous networking events and lunches that she does all over Saigon, which I have been to many times and they [00:03:00] are incredible. So go check them out. So today we're gonna be talking about her life as uh, an immigrant in New York City, a Vietnamese immigrant in New York City, and what it was like to grow up there, then coming back to Vietnam and why she came back, and the linguistic and cultural challenges of operating a business in Vietnam.
My guest today is Annie Vo. Annie, thank you so much for joining me on a Vietnam podcast. But before we get started, I have actually something really exciting. Before we get started, I have something really interesting I need to ask you. Yes. So your college class was the basis for a very famous TV show, and you are actually the basis for a character in that TV show.
Is that correct? Yeah.
Annie: Uh, one correction. Yeah. My high school
Niall: class,
let me redo that. I wrote down high school class and then I changed it to college. Hold on. Now if something very, very interesting to ask you, I'm really, really excited to ask you about this. Now, your high school class is the basis for a very, very famous TV show, and you are actually the basis for one of those characters, correct?
Annie: Correct. The inspiration, I
Niall: guess.
Tell me
about
that.
Annie: So the,
uh, TV show that we're talking about is Gossip Girls, uh, Serena Vander, um, oh, sorry.
The
TV show that we're talking about is Gossip Girls. And, um, my high school class of 2005, the Spence uh, school in New York is the basis for it. Um, and one of the characters in it is an Asian girl who got into Yale early.
And uh, I think that's where the [00:04:00] similarity ends really with me and that character in the
Niall: show
though. So what did you think when you found this out? Like
that's mental.
Annie: yeah, I was blown away. Actually, I didn't know before I started watching the series, but there were so, so many similarities with, uh, the show and my classmates.
Of course, some of the facts were, you know, switched around a bit and, um, embellished. But it, uh, was a little uncanny how it reflected, you know, our school
life and my
Niall: friends.
I'm thinking now, if my life was a, became a, was a, if there was a TV show based off of my life, what would it be? I want to hear from other people as well.
Let me know in the comments, whatever, wherever it is. If there was a TV show based on your life, what would it be? You wouldn't know. Still game is like a, a glaswegian comedy show based on two old guys. I feel like if that was maybe the closest to my life, maybe I'll show you that another time. Still game, but, so tell me, then you went to Yale, la how old were you when you went to Yale?
Are you one of these child
Annie: prodigies?
No. [00:05:00] Normal college age. I went through, Um,
finish high school at a normal age, and I started Yale
Niall: 18.
And
that's
early.
I'm
sorry.
And that's early. You said you started, the character got admitted
to
Annie: you
early. early as an early action. Early action as in, um, instead of the normal regular admission cycle, you apply earlier on in the fall and you get your admissions decision, uh, around
Niall: December.
Uh, and
then, and the
Annie: character
was
the
exact same. Exact
same,
Niall: yes. Exactly.
So you've never figured out who wrote the show, right? Oh, sorry. We obviously know who wrote the show. You've never figured out the connection between the show
and
your
Annie: class?
No. So the show is based on a series of books and we know who the author is. But, um, I don't know the, the author's connection
Niall: to,
to
my
high
school.
There's no obvious connection. It's not somebody's parent or
a
Annie: teacher or
something
like that.
I haven't investigated it, but no
Niall: obvious
connection
that
we
know of.
Alright, we gotta look into
that one.
So, New York City. I've lived in New York City. I actually lived there from, for five months. From 2007 to 2008.
I lived in Brooklyn for a little bit. Uh, I lived in the Upper East Side, worked in
Annie: PJ
Clark, you know
PJ
Niall: Clarks. yeah.
yeah.
Famous Burger [00:06:00] Joint,
right? Yeah. It was famous 'cause a lot of famous people went there. And, uh, one of the famous people at the time was Johnny Depp. Everyone talked about Johnny Depp
came
in, never met him, never saw him.
And then, uh, I left and then I went back for one night to have a burger. 'cause I think you weren't allowed
to eat there if
you worked there. But I'd finished. I went back to have a burger, and of course they were like, oh, Johnny Depp was here last night. He was sitting right there. I was like, are you fucking kidding me?
The, the day I leave or the week I leave, Johnny Depp comes in. So that was pretty cool. But it's funny. So New York is a, a special place. It's unique, right?
I I
I,
think it's, I. So I remember talking about being, doing this podcast for six years. First guest on here was JK Hobson, who was from New York. I remember asking him the question,
at
what age
did
you realize
you were from New York?
'cause it is the center of the universe in a way. And if you're from New York, you think it's the center of the universe. So what was your upbringing like
in New
York
City?
Where
were
you?
Annie: Um,
I started off in Greenwich Village, then the Lower East Side before
it
became hip.
Then the Upper East side, um, to be closer to my school, which I got to into on scholarship through this amazing, uh, program called Prep for Prep. So, um, maybe not a lot of people know this, but my family was not well off back then, and I, I actually could say that we were perhaps poor.
Um, and we were also an, an immigrant family, um, trying to make our way through. Um, when I moved to the US at the age of five, I didn't go straight to New York City, but I lived with different relatives in Chicago and LA and then moved to New York in fourth grade. Um,
but
um,
we were not well off. And so, um, we were also an immigrant family and.
You
know, I had to, um, really try to fit in, uh, especially moving to my high school, which was sort of another socioeconomic level. Um, I didn't have a lot, uh, in common with my, my classmates who were lovely people outside of the classroom. Um, and so I really mostly focus on, you know, my studies and,
um,
um, I had great relationships with my, my, um, professors, but I, I blossomed academically.
Um, but, uh,
I'm
sorry.
Okay. Can
we
take
a
pause?
Sure.
I
don't know.
Um, this is why I need to be prepared. Um,
what
did
you
want
me
Niall: to
just
say?
Share your story. Remember, it's all about your stories. It's just a conversation that you can't be prepared for this. It's, it's your life story.
Like, it's Literally
just
say
what
don't you? That's why when you kept asking me about it, I was like, you can't really be prepared for this like this. This is, um, we just did an episode with RMIT and being
over
propelled
is
worth Yeah.
Because they wanted to
read
off of
a
script.
Mm-hmm.
They
wanted
to
make sure
it was world perfect.
Yeah. And this isn't what Perfect. So let me ask you again. Yeah. And then just start again. Sure. Just tell me your story, uh, because I mean, if you listen to this podcast, we just share stories of people connected to Vietnam.
So like, we just did the episode with Anne, really interesting hearing about how dad ended up in Germany as with a scholarship, as a PhD,
and
then
they
followed him and
things
like that.
So
let's
just
scrap
all of that and we'll go
back
to that.
Annie: Mm.
Niall: So tell me what it was like, uh, growing up in New
York
and
Annie: how
did
your
family
end
up
there?
Uh, it's a sort of unique story. We weren't refugees. Um,
we.
My mom majored in English, uh, back in Vietnam, and she worked as an interpreter, tr interpreter for
um,
international
organization.
Sorry. No, it's
alright. it's
not you.
I'm
just
gonna move this. Yeah. Slightly move it down.
No,
we need
to keep
it
closer. Oh,
That's perfect.
Yes.
Okay, good. Wait,
wait.
you're moving?
No, because so you can
hear
a
little
bit
when
Niall: like
Annie: further
away.
Yeah.
Niall: Yeah.
But
now,
it better.
Yeah. Yeah. It's
Annie: better,
Lemme
Niall: just
ask that again. Okay. So
how
did
your
family
Annie: end
up in
New
York?
Right. So it's a interesting story. We weren't, didn't come as refugees. [00:07:00] We, my mom worked as a translator for international organizations, um, an interpreter rather for international organizations in Vietnam.
And through those connections, she, uh, met an NYU law professor who was so impressed with her English. It was a different world back then. And,
um.
Uh, the professor offered her a scholarship to go study at NYU Law School. Now, the road from that offer to my mom coming to the US and starting her law studies was a, a long one, but I followed her as a dependent.
So we came on a plane. Um, my mom, during her
Niall: uh,
Annie: years at NYU Law School initially couldn't take care of me. So that's why I lived in Chicago and LA initially with relatives, and then I moved
Niall: to
New
York
in
fourth
grade
with
her.
Wow. So you, you were five years old when you moved from
Annie: to America.
Niall: That's right.
Five
and
a half
years
old.
Wow.
So
what
are your
memories?
Annie: What
year was that?[00:08:00]
Uh, I think that was
Niall: early.
That
was in
1992. So
what were your memories then, of Vietnam before you left? I know nobody really remembers much before five
years
Annie: but
what,
what
do
Niall: you
remember?
Annie: Oh, I have
actually
a
lot
of
memories
from
my time in Vietnam.
Yeah. And my family was still, um, poor, struggling a little bit. It was not too long after the war
ended.
Um, I remember living in a multi-generational household with my maternal grandparents. I remember, um, my grandfather, um, being half paralyzed, um, from going to sort of reeducation camp a few years after, and my grandmother taking care of him.
I remember my dad having a small OC dental chair, uh, on the first floor
Niall: of
our
home
Annie: on
Ho Ho Hung street. Wow.
And, um, I also remember my extended family, um, my great-grandmother on my maternal grandmother's
side,
uh, visiting my great, uh, grandparents and my grandmother's siblings. Um, a lot of [00:09:00] our. We had a lot of extended family.
I remember how precious, um, certain things were, like just a small piece of chocolate or a small piece of cheese, um, or a little bit of ice cream. It was really precious. And even, um, you didn't get a ton of presents for, uh, for your birthday. Just a few. Um, but they were
Niall: so
sort
of
valuable.
Hmm. And
were you
based in Saigon?
Yes,
Annie: I was.
And
Niall: in
Saigon?
Annie: Uh, right
in
district one. My family had a, a small house, um, on Hoho Hung Street, which is a small street near, really near Benton. Um, and it was bought, uh, by the family, sort
Niall: of,
uh,
pooling money
together.
What
do
you
remember
Saigon
being
like back then
Annie: when
you
were younger?
Um, Saigon more broadly speaking. I,
I think
Niall: I
was
too
small
to
Annie: remember
that.
you
mean your
world
Yeah. But, but it was, it was a different world. It was, [00:10:00] um, a slower pace of life, more peaceful, um,
Niall: um. Um,
Annie: a lot more bicycles. Um, cars were rare. Um, I remember taking the sit low
to
get
to
and fro within
the city
Niall: Wow.
my grandmother.
Yeah. So
I
would
be
sitting
on, you
know,
someone's
lap.
One
of
the things that
I laugh about and it frustrates me is, uh,
if
you've
seen
the sea clues going about the city
these days.
Yes. Your
face
just
Annie: sums
up.
Why
did
you make
that
face?
Well, um,
they're
always carrying tourists,
Niall: like Yeah.
And
it's
not a
mode of
transportation
anymore.
No. What
what makes
me laugh
is
they're basically driving through traffic.
Annie: Yeah. Yeah.
Niall: It's like you see these tourists in the back of these sea clothes and it's generally kind of older men and it's good.
They, they got a job and they, they, that's fine. They're giving them employment. There's nothing about that. But it's very inauthentic for one 'cause. Uh, when
do
you think
ccls
stop being
used as a
motor
of
transportation in
Annie: Saigon? One
Niall: Wow.
Annie: before
Niall: I
move back
here.
Um,
seven,
eight years
ago.
Yeah. I mean, I mean, I've been here nearly 10 [00:11:00] years.
I've never seen nobody You don't get grab ccl. That's right. You know what I mean? So I, I always just laugh and I see these tourists getting on the back of a sea l and they're normally in a tour of like tour group of about 10 in a row, and they'll be going down like wan or m and it's just traffic. And I'm like, you're just breathing in pollution right now and you're going by office buildings.
It's not anything exciting. And have you seen these old, really old pictures and maybe in Vietnam?
I think it was,
I saw them
in the, maybe Burma in African country
where
expats white people used to get picked up on the back of people, like, and
locals and
Annie: be
carry
Niall: literally
on their backs.
Maybe. I've seen a
photo
or
two.
Yeah. I, I can't imagine if that was a tourist thing. Imagine if the tourist showed up and they're like, okay, can you carry me on your back? Like, we don't do that. So
the sea clothes,
they always make
me laugh.
The one that,
um.
Annie: um,
Niall: It's interesting
you're saying about
ice
cream
and
things like
this.
Do, do you
Annie: you remember
having
Niall: first Coca-Cola?
I
don't,
no. The reason I ask is yet, we [00:12:00] recently had the, you know, 50 years of reunification in Vietnam and we saw this news report online, I think it was NBC or something like that in America. And this woman was interviewing, uh, an older Vietnamese man, uh, who'd been healed during the war. And you know, it's obviously western centric from America.
And you know, the end of the war here, it's very different. It's kind of not the end of the war. It's
a reunification
of
the north
and south when America, it's
very different.
But anyway, in this report she handed him a Coca-Cola. He took it, the report continued, but the voiceover
said,
this
is his
first Coca-Cola in 40
years.
Annie: Well,
Niall: I
was like, what? Well, couple of questions. Why?
So he had Coca-Cola 10 years after
the world and four years after
Revo.
Also Coca-Cola is widely available, available
in Vietnam.
And it has been for, well, I
mean
I've
been
here
10
years.
When
did Coke
start
becoming available
in
Vietnam
Annie: before
Niall: I
can
remember.
Yeah.
right. Like it's been available forever. She was just a very funny news report. I thought it was so condescending to be like, this man is not a [00:13:00] Coca-Cola.
40
years,
and
she hands
him
a Vietnamese can
of
Coca-Cola. That's
like,
Annie: they
Niall: sell that out the
front
of
his,
the
front
of
his shop. Right,
Right,
So then you left Vietnam, uh, when you're
five
years
old.
What
Annie: was
it
like then
getting to
America? Was it
just
crazy?
It was actually, um, a bit of a lonely experience. I was leaving everything that I was familiar with here in Vietnam. Um, family, um, grandparents, relatives, language culture, um, moving to a different country, different language, different family.
Even. As I said, I was living with uncles and aunts in Chicago than another, um, different uncles and aunts in la so, um, the readjustment was a little bit rough, but oddly enough, I only have
sort
of
snippets
of.
Um, memories before I knew English. So like first day of school, my, my aunt just drops me off with my cousins and I
don't know where
to go.
Um, being a little bewildered and [00:14:00] not being able to even ask where the restroom is. Um, so difficulties like that. But then it seemed like
Niall: within
a
few
weeks,
um,
I
had
sort
of
picked
up
the
language
that it always blows me away.
I
think
that's
incredible.
I'm
just remembering
when
I
was
five years
old,
I
changed
primary school and it was terrifying.
I spoke the language. I could ask where the toilet
is.
How
do
Annie: you,
I
don't
understand
how
you
cope
with
that,
I
guess '
cause
you
have
to.
Yeah, I think, I think it's sort of what made part of what, uh, makes me who I am today. Uh, being able to reach out to people, um, adjust to new environments and just be friendly.
Um, and to this day I think I, seek out those on the edges of social circles and
Niall: trying to
bring
them
in
because I
was,
um,
once
one
of
those.
Wow.
Well,
well
done.
Annie: So
Niall: at
what age
you
moved to
New
York
when
you
were
in ninth
grade?
Uh, nine years. Sorry, nine years old, fourth grade, nine years old. Uh, and you were in
the Lower East
side
before
it
was hip.
And so what
was
that like back
then? 'cause
New
[00:15:00] York,
I think now it's much, it's gentrified like everywhere
else.
Right.
But
New York had
a rough reputation
back,
back
in
the
day.
And what the nice areas would be like Fifth Avenue,
the
Upper
East Side, the
Annie: Upper
West
Side,
things
like
this,
but
Lower
East
Side.
What
was
that
like?
Yeah, so we started off in Greenwich Village, which was already somewhat gentrified with NYU owning a lot of the buildings down there.
But,
um,
lower East Side was a, was rougher. Um, I think I grew up more sheltered. I didn't, I didn't have the, um, typical New York, uh, upbringing. I think, um, I would sort of.
Base mostly at home and, and school and things like that. But you learn to be street smart.
Niall: Um,
you
Annie: to look
purposeful
when
you're
walking down the
street. Is
that
a
New
York
thing?
Niall: Yeah,
for
sure.
Annie: And then you
learn
different
Niall: self-defense
tricks,
like
holding
Annie: your
keys.
Oh, really? Yeah.
And then,
you know,
it
was that
rough?
was
that
bad.
I mean,
I, I
think
it
was just a precaution.
Um, [00:16:00] nothing
ever happened to me, thankfully.
Yeah. But,
Niall: uh,
you,
you
learn
to
become
street
smart
in
New York
Wow. Just sure
things
don't happen.
So what, what would be the opposite, right? You're walking down the street and you don't look purposeful.
You're
kind
of
like
daydreaming. Like
Annie: what?
Someone's
gonna just
rub
you or
pass you, or,
Niall: or,
um,
well
first
you
might
Annie: annoy
New
Yorkers
walking
behind
you,
Niall: That's a
Annie: you stereotype,
right?
No, I mean, I think it's true. Uh, I, there are lanes even in the sidewalks. Okay. Stay in your lane
so that
someone can
bypass You
should,
Niall: they
will need
to,
Annie: but.
Niall: Um,
I'm
Annie: I'm just
thinking,
what's
that
famous
movie?
He's like
I'm
walking
here. I'm walking
here,
Niall: I'm walking here.
Annie: Uh, yeah, I don't know which movie that is, but, uh, it is true. Um, from the New Yorker's perspective, um, looking, not looking per purposeful
Niall: sort
of
ling might
get
you
noticed
by
the
wrong
folks,
I
think. Um,
so
then
being this
young
Vietnamese American,
at what
[00:17:00] point
did
you
say
to yourself,
I'm
not Vietnamese,
I'm
Vietnamese American.
'cause
you
were
born here,
spoke Vietnamese
growing
up,
then
learned
English.
Annie: Was
there a
point
in
your
head you
were
like, I'm
Vietnamese
American?
No, I
think
I was too young when I came over
to
really reflect on that spec
specifically,
I always felt like I was both and, um, maybe it was more bifurcated. Um.
Between sort of where I was at home, I was more Vietnamese and then, uh, outside I was more American, really. Um, I think New York is great. It's very diverse, so I never felt specifically sort of discriminated, um, against, um, as an Asian or as a Vietnamese. Um, it was just in the context of my school, it, it wasn't super diverse.
Um,
especially so
socioeconomically
in
addition to,
um,
ethnically,
Niall: Hmm.
Annie: uh, but I think [00:18:00] I've always, as far as I can remember, mostly viewed myself just as
Niall: Vietnamese
American
and
back
in Vietnam. I just sort of
didn't
think
of in
those
terms.
Annie: What
was it
like
then the
first
time
you
came
back to
Vietnam?
The first
time
I came back
to
Vietnam,
um,
that was in 10th
grade.
That was, uh,
actually.
I left when I was five. I came back the year after, a year or two after for one visit. But then after that, it was a year, a period of four or five years that I didn't return
to Vietnam,
uh, because of
my family
financial situation.
Um,
my dad
had come to the US for a few years, but he had to leave, um, when I was in fifth grade to come back.
His visa had expired and, um, he needed to be back here, uh, professionally and, and otherwise. So I came back in 10th grade and that was a momentous sort of occasion for myself personally, for my family. Seeing my dad again after a few years. Of course, we had kept in touch, but it wasn't the [00:19:00] same. And, um, it was reconnecting with him and, um, reconnecting with my birthplace, going back to Fang Grand to visit my, my paternal grandparents.
Niall: Um,
uh,
yeah, it
was a,
a
sort
of
homecoming.
Was it
Annie: a
reverse
culture
shock or,
or just
a culture
shock
coming
back
after
being
in
the States?
Uh,
not on that trip because I stayed within the bosom of my family, but, uh, coming back eight years ago, almost now, there was a reverse culture shock. Um, despite being relatively fluent conversationally in Vietnamese or so, I thought, and relatively connected to my family, my grandmother, um, and the Vietnamese community over there and the Vietnamese students Association in college that did not prepare me for coming back here, especially sort of living and managing a business.
So, um, I had become very Americanized or, um, or so I, I realized And
um,
Niall: so
should
I
share some things about maybe
managing
the
business
here
or,
well, I've
got
I've
got a
question.
Yeah.
Well
the perfect,
so
you came back
eight
[00:20:00] years ago,
um,
and
you had reverse culture shock. Explain a little bit about what was that reverse culture shock? Did
you
feel
like you were
coming back
a
completely
different
Annie: person to
who
you'd
been
before?
You mentioned
now
being
Americanized.
it
had been such a long time. I mean, I felt, um, I felt, I thought I was Vietnamese American and half and half, but came, coming back. I felt more American than Vietnamese. And so, um, one was
the,
uh,
linguistic, um,
language
barrier.
I
had never taken any courses
in
Vietnamese.
I only had conversations at home in Vietnamese and with my grandmother in Vietnamese. So, um, I really had to, to work on that
and
sort of
jump in the deep end, um, in terms of, of language and conversing and um, uh, picking up the language, you know,
in terms
of typing. So,
um.
You know, I came back here and had to manage a, a family business and, um, I tried, I tried to
type, because my,
a lot of my staff don't know English, especially the [00:21:00] back office staff.
And I would sort of type in Vietnamese, but without the accents. And I would sit there and wait and wonder what is going on? Why is it taking 15,
20
minutes for my staff to answer
a
simple question
later on? And I think like five, six months later, I discovered that they were trying to decipher what I was writing.
Niall: So,
um,
you
know,
that's,
that's
sort of
when I
put
Annie: accents back
in and Yeah. The accents.
Niall: You
you're just writing go essentially, right? Yeah.
Especially
with
my,
my
spelling
mistakes I
actually
have a, a, really
I important
question. I've never,
I've never known
the answer
to this.
Right. So
you're talking about typing,
so
we know that each. Uh, letter
could
have
about
eight different
diuretics up,
down, squiggles,
hats, all
of this.
Mm-hmm.
But the keyboards that all Vietnamese
people
use,
from
what
I can see, the keyboards are quirk keyboards.
Right. They're
all, they're all,
in
Roman
Roman
numerals.
Alphabet.
Alphabet. Right.
Roman
alphabet,
not
[00:22:00] numerals. Roman
Annie: alphabet.
How
do
you type
in
a
Roman
alphabet
computer
in
Vietnamese?
Um, so
good question. You
have to download the Vietnamese,
Niall: um,
keyboard.
The, the,
Annie: right,
right.
You
can,
you
can, um,
did
not
even
know
that.
Right.
So
you
have
to
download
that.
Right. I mean, but it still looks
like
a
cordi,
a normal English keyboard.
Yeah. Except
that if
you,
uh,
press
on a,
on
a letter
a
couple of
times
and it'll
give
you
different
options.
Right.
Yeah. And then if you start typing
a word, it will suggest that word as well in Vietnamese. So on, on the phone, on the keyboard. On the phone. I think you, um, you tap on
Niall: a
letter multiple
times
to
have
the
different
accents.
that dia critics show
up
and
then
you can,
yeah.
So
we have, I fucking sound like an idiot here. We have 26 letters in
the
alphabet, right? I think so. Right. Okay. Got that one
right. I was a
bit
unclear there.
26
letters
in
the alphabet.
But
each,
not
each
vow,
I
guess a
EI,
Annie: view mm-hmm.
can
be,
have
the
hats
and di
different
diet critics. You
[00:23:00] don't
have
diet critics on
continent,
right?
No. You don't have, um, so each of those letters, if it has a squiggly line on the n like the O or the U,
Niall: it
becomes
an,
O or o an
O. Um,
those
are
considered
different
letters. Yeah.
So my point is we have 26 letters in the Roman alphabet. Mm-hmm. But then you suddenly add
all these
day critics, then it extends
it to
how
Annie: many,
like Aku keyboard
goes
from
26
Niall: to.
50 60? No,
it it is still
the
normal
cord keyboard.
But I mean conceptually.
yes,
yes.
yes. Like you have to learn now that each key has six different meanings, or not each key, but some keys have six different meanings. So if you wanna
Annie: write,
Niall: uh,
like
Nam
is
the one
I always use the
example
of like,
Nam
has
seven different meanings. Like man five
E Right.
So
if
you
wanna write
Annie: man,
Niall: which
is nam backwards, you
need
to
know
Annie: exactly
what
keys
to
use.
That's
right.
That's right. You have to relearn
the
keyboard
and
it
way
harder.
Niall: It's
easier
than
you
think.
Is it really?
Annie: try and then, and [00:24:00] then
Niall: Then you
get
the kn of
it.
Yeah.
It's
like going to
type,
But
Annie: But
you have
to
learn
Niall: to
type
in
a
different
language
essentially.
That's
right.
What
do
people
in
Thailand
do? '
cause
they
have
a completely
different script.
What, what people do they use and we need to figure that one out. 'cause I went to Thailand.
So
Annie: you
came
back
to
Vietnam,
um,
eight
years
ago.
What made
you then
leave
America
come
back
to
Vietnam?
Uh,
so initially Vietnam was supposed to be a, a sort of a long layover on our way, on my family's way to Australia because my husband is Vietnamese Australian, born
and raised.
And
we
got married
and
I
had
kidnapped him
and
brought him
to
New
York.
And we
had
been
there
together
Niall: for
four
years.
Where Did you meet?
We
met in
Annie: Australia
on
summer
Niall: vacation. Wow, beautiful. On summer vacation,
yes.
Oh,
beautiful
It's like Greece. Some are 11.
Do you
know
that movie?
Yes.
Yeah. Okay. Just to
Annie: make
sure
that
you've
got
my
reference there.
No,
that's
Niall: You
met on holiday.
Do
you
think,
um,
you
know,
watching that show, love is Blind,
you
watch Love
is
Blind.
It's awful.
It's terrible terrible storm,
I have
to
[00:25:00] admit
But what
I've noticed,
right, even when they are, they can't see each other. It kind of, people are attracted to, and I don't mean this to be racist, their own race. You know, people, and even in Vietnamese, Vietnamese people like you and your husband meet each other on the other side of the world.
I. Uh,
black
people
meet black people,
Scottish people meet Scottish people. We,
we
seem
to, even
if
we put this lovers blind,
we put,
well, it's
meant
to
be blind.
We
still
end up
attracting
to
Annie: like,
meet to like,
I
guess
in
a way,
have
you
noticed that
within
the Vietnamese
diaspora
around
the world?
That's
a
big question. I have not done a sociological study, but, um, in general, I think that, um, a lot of Vietnamese people do maybe tend to end up together, or Asians in general. I don't wanna make any, uh, you know, um, generalizations really, I can't speak to it, but for me personally, I actually thought I would end up with someone not Vietnamese or perhaps even not Asian because of just where I was.
[00:26:00] Um, and the environment in which I was. And also being a Christian, uh, not Catholic than
l there were
very few, um, Vietnamese young adults my age who were of the same faith, um, kind of similarly situated where I was growing up and where I was going to school.
Niall: So
that's why I thought I
would, I
always thought
I
would
end
up
with.
You
know,
um,
a
non
Vietnamese
Annie: American.
And
how
did
your
family
feel
then
when
you met
a
Vietnamese
Australian?
Was
it? Oh, he Australian.
or, no.
But the
happy he Vietnamese.
Yes. I think,
I
think
at
the
end
of
the
day, they
were happy, especially my dad. Um, maybe he was more, yes, especially my dad, um, because I think
if I had
not, he would've lost his connection with my family, and especially with my
kids.
Um, and so marrying a Vietnamese who was equally or perhaps more so connected to the Vietnamese
language
and values,
Niall: um, as
I,
uh,
was,
um,
[00:27:00] extremely
beneficial in,
um,
raising
our
kids
With the same
values.
And I was gonna say, so culturally,
do
you
think it's,
it's
more
beneficial,
but
I
guess
you
just
Annie: answered
that
question.
So
you kidnapped
him
to
America.
What
did he think
of
America
as
an
Australian?
I think he appreciated, um, you know, New York for what it offered. Uh, but
I
think he
prefers
Niall: the
pace
and
sort
of
way
of
life
in
Australia
Annie: more
very
different.
Very,
very
different.
And
then how
did
you
convince
him
then
to
move to
Vietnam,
which is
even
more different?
Well, um,
I think that was a joint decision, really, uh, fully a joint decision. I, we, or we, I was pregnant with our second daughter and, uh, my parents were here and so I just wanted their, um,
Niall: their,
maybe
them
to
be
around,
um,
for the
birth
of our second
child
Annie: and
their assistance also after at least my mom's.
Hands dad.
Um, but then there was also, [00:28:00] remember the period of separation I had with my dad when I was younger, which was not insubstantial. Um, and so I wanted a significant period of time, um, with him,
uh, close
to him as well. But we thought it would be maybe a year, a year and a half. And then, um, we would move to Australia where my husband was based is uh, was based,
Niall: but
that extended
to,
to
eight
for
a
lot of
reasons.
Um,
I
mean,
life
here
was
just
turned
out
to
be
so
great.
I love it because we've
had
this conversation just recently
comes up a
lot.
I don't
know anybody who moved here intentionally for the long term, even yourself as Vietnamese. It's just, we are the same.
We came here for six weeks, nine years later, we're still here. You came here for a year. And then,
so
Annie: what
is
it
about
Saigon
and
about Vietnam
that just draws
people
here
and
we just
love
it
and
we stay
and
we're
like,
yeah,
we're
not
leaving.
So I've got, you know, there are the, um, reasons that are generally applicable and then there are the reasons that,
you know, for me
personally, um, are [00:29:00] makes Vietnam
more meaningful, very meaningful.
Niall: Uh,
Annie: For
me personally, it was my family, my relatives,
Niall: um,
Annie: and the family business. So my husband is a dentist Vietnamese Australian dentist, and he joined the practice as a dentist and he, my dad gradually handed over the reins to him and myself together as a unit to manage the business as my dad goes into retirement.
Um, and so that, that's been super rewarding. Um, managing, um, a dental clinic business, the employees, the impact that we have on the culture and the, the, the care that we give, um, the patients. Kind of expanding on my dad, uh, continuing my dad's legacy and expanding on it and making it sort of more international.
Um, professionally it's been really rewarding, especially for my husband.
Um,
having my kids grow up with my, uh, close to my parents. Really great, especially since I, um, for periods of my life, um, when I was younger, I grew up far away from them. [00:30:00] Um,
so.
Niall: Allowing
my
kids
to
have
that
relationship
with
their
grandparents
and
how
much
my,
Annie: my,
my
parents
love
them is
amazing.
I
mean,
they
do
spoil
them
a bit.
Uh,
Niall: that's, that's
Annie: the
job
of
a
grandparent
is
to
spoil
their grandkids,
right?
Yeah.
My mom
was a
bit strict
grow, uh, strict
when
I
Niall: with you, but not the, not the,
Annie: Yeah.
And the kids would
maybe
be
Niall: throwing
a
bit
of
a
tent tantrum
Annie: and
my
mom
would be
like,
oh,
that's
so cute.
And I was like, who is this person?
Niall: Right.
Annie: All Right.
Um.
So
having that relationship is great. And then also allowing my kids to grow up as bilingual, um, kids. Uh, if they had grown up in the US or Australia, I think they would, their Vietnamese would be at a very, very basic level, if anything at all. Um, so that's been important for us.
And then overall, Vietnam is just so vibrant and dynamic. It's growing. I think the middle class is growing. The business opportunities, um, are also [00:31:00] here. If you have the requisite experience and credentials and skills and do the hard work. Of course, I think the opportunities are there and the, um, threshold barriers are lower as well.
Um, I've had opportunities to do things here that I wouldn't have had, uh, to do elsewhere. Uh, one, one concrete example is my, um, my teaching, uh, position lecturing, um, as a lecture
at
Kaiser University, Vietnam.
They
approached me just because I had a JD from the us and in order to teach a a topic at Kaiser University, um, Vietnam International Center, you have to have a master's or above in the area that you're teaching.
So I'm teaching business law to college students, Vietnamese college students, but at, um, a US based institution. So in English, um, they approached me and I was not looking to teach. I didn't think I would teach. I, um, hadn't even really thought about it, but it's such a great, I, um, when the opportunity came my way, I thought about it and I [00:32:00] thought there, um, what a great way to share some
Niall: of my
experience
with
Vietnamese
students
here.
And
so
that opened
a
door
for
me
that
I
don't
think
would've
ever
happened
in
the
us.
Amazing. One of the things
Annie: about Premier
Niall: Dental,
sorry,
let me rephrase
that question.
Annie: So
your husband
is
a
dentist
as
well,
and
your
dad
is
a
dentist.
Correct.
So
would
you
agree
then
that
women
marry
their
dad?
It happened
to be
the
case
for me,
perhaps,
but
I
ha But to
be fair,
I
did not
know he
was
a
dentist
when I first
met him. Yes. My, my uncle told him he was a
Niall: maxie in
Vietnam.
You
use
that
term
for
doctors,
medical
professionals,
doctors
and
Annie: dentists.
So
I
was
like, okay.
Xi no, uh, ticks a
box He only said that as
like,
he's a
doctor, like
number
one.
Niall: Yeah.
Um,
but I
didn't
know
he
was
a
dentist,
so
I
wasn't
sort
of
looking
Annie: to marry, you
Niall: you know,
a
dentist
as
[00:33:00] well.
But,
um,
you
know,
that state would
have
a, I think it, it's one just, it's a complete, uh, anecdotal story.
I
think it's
funny
though. It
does,
it
does seem to
happen a lot. I think I see with, uh, myself and Arie's dad, uh, I can see a lot
of similarities. and I like it.
I'm like, yeah, I want to be like a dad or dad. Fucking awesome. So, uh, I think it's something that. It's probably completely anecdotal. There's no, I haven't done a sociological study on it either, but, uh, I just think it's funny, it's interesting that, uh, we, we, I think people, again, we find like attracts like almost,
but then
there's also
that
other
thing
that
opposites attract as
well.
Thank you so much. This has been incredible talking to you and really, really enjoyed it. Finally, I get to put you on the spot 'cause you'll do all these amazing events and networking events.
You really do help bring people together in Saigon. So it's amazing bringing the Vietnamese community together as well. You do a lunch every Tuesday. The Vietnamese overseas lunch, which I went to recently, I was the token white guy. Uh, Annie sent me a message on Facebook. She's like, you gonna come to the event?
I was like, well, I'm not Vietnamese and I'm not overseas Vietnamese either, [00:34:00] but she's like, please come along. So, uh, I call myself token. The token white guy, but you know, it was amazing. And, uh, your networking events on Thursday are brilliant as well. I've actually managed to get clients for my business through that as well, so it's really, really incredible.
Premier Dental is, honestly, it is amazing. I'm not just saying this because I have been there, I've been going for years. Uh, you've reminded me I need to come and get my teeth cleaned soon, actually, as well. But thank you so much. You are also the sponsor of SE season 14 of a Vietnam podcast, so we really appreciate that as well.
So make sure you go check out Premier Dental, whether you're overseas,
Annie: thinking of
coming into Vietnam for
Niall: tourism. I can completely, um, vouch for 'em. They are incredible. And if you're living in Vietnam, you're looking for a dental. If you're living in Vietnam and you're looking for a dentist and go check out Premier Dental
as well.
thank you
Neil.
You are very welcome, Annie. Thank you for joining me on a Vietnam podcast. Thank you for listening on this special episode, six years today since the very first episode of a Vietnam podcast. Recorded in my bedroom on a tiny little [00:35:00] microphone, one piece of equipment now you can't even see, but we have equipment all around us.
Hopefully you can hear the difference as well. So don't forget, please share this episode with somebody else who is passionate about Vietnam, whether they live here or not. Um, rate, review, subscribe, follow all of that stuff. Remember, we are on YouTube now, so if you are watching on YouTube, thank you so much.
Or if you wanna see what me and Annie look like in your listening, then go to YouTube and go check it out. So thank you so, so much for being
Annie: a member, for
Niall: listening to 7 million Bikes of Vietnam podcast. Wait, let me redo that. So thank you so much for listening to this episode of a Vietnam podcast, and I hope you listen to many many more in the future. Annie, thank you so,
so much.
Thank you, bill. I'm
honored.
You're welcome. Cheers.
End of Pt.1