The Paper Plane Podcast

Colin Ehara

The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counternarrative. The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

  1. MAR 29

    Ep 18: 'The 5 Principles' & 'Blood in My Eye' w Virak Saroeun

    Today we’re joined by my dear brother, comrade, and friend, Virak Saroeun. He and I met in 2008 when when his life-partner, Liza and I TA’d a Raza580: Educational Equity Course with Dr. Jeff Duncan-Andrade as grad students at SFSU. When Liza introduced us I immediately knew this was someone I wanted to be friends with, as someone who shared so many of the same loves for music, DJing, Hip-Hop, critical pedagogy, shoes and fashion, books, film, food, beer and spirits, basketball, revolutionary politics and praxis, and so much more. Almost 20 years later, this brilliant Pedagogue, Father, and human remains my beloved and chosen family. In this episode we discuss 'The 5 Principles' (2022) by Khnum "Stic" Ibomu of the revolutionary Hip-Hop group, Dead Prez, and 'Blood in My Eye' (1972) by co-founder of the Black Guerrilla Family, George Jackson.  Virak is the youngest of four children and the only male. He is a child of refugees from Cambodia, first in his family to go to a university and completed an undergraduate degree with double majors in Ethnic Studies and Sociology from UC, Riverside. He also holds a multiple subject teaching credential and a Masters in Education from San Francisco State University. For the last decade and a half, he has been a classroom educator and administrator in the Bay Area and Long Beach, where he resides now with his partner and daughter. When not working towards a more just and balanced world, he enjoys music, djing, roller skating, camping and outdoor adventures with his family. The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    1h 25m
  2. 11/12/2025

    Ep 17: 'Persepolis' w Pamela Chavez

    Today Colin is joined by his dear sister, comrade, and beloved friend, Pamela Chavez. The two met a little more than 2 decades ago at UC Santa Cruz via mutual friends, and came together due to their love for art, music, activism, liberatory education, and being hella f------- silly together as they made the path by walking it. She is someone C has and continues to admire and learn profoundly from, via her contagious courage as a Woman of Color Artist, Youth Advocate, Cultural worker, and community member. Today's guest is someone who is otherworldly talented as it pertains to being her boldest, baddest, biggest, most brilliant self, in the face of all the dehumanizing and oppressive f---ery our society and world has to offer. Today they discuss Marjane Satrapi's groundbreaking Graphic Memoir, Persepolis... Pamela Chavez is a Costa Rican-American animation writer, director and visual storyteller shaping bold narratives at the intersection of culture, justice, and imagination. Her work translates complex ideas into emotionally resonant animated experiences that center underrepresented voices and ignite public dialogue. Pamela’s films have screened at the Ottawa International Animation Festival, OUTFEST, and the 92nd Street Y in New York, and are featured on platforms such as PBS Online, HBO Latino, and YouTube. As a director and collaborator, she has created original work for institutions including the LA Philharmonic, Amazon, and the American Medical Association, blending visual storytelling with social impact and clarity of vision. A graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, Pamela is grounded in traditional animation, oil painting, and stop-motion techniques while pushing the boundaries of narrative form to influence how stories are seen, heard, and understood. The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    1h 10m
  3. 10/01/2025

    Ep 16: 'Exit West' & 'Tikim' w Liza Gesuden

    Today's guest is Colin's dear sister, comrade, and peer mentor of over 15 years. Today's guest and Colin met at San Francisco State University as Graduate student Teaching Assistants for Dr. Jeff Duncan-Andrade in his Raza 580: Educational Equity course. They became fast friends and also fell in platonic love with each other’s partners, Virak and Em shortly after. They formed a powerful friendship quartet that despite a global pandemic and a move from the Bay to Long Beach, continues to grow and stand the test of time. This connection now also includes their children's wonderful bonds to one another. Today's guest and Colin taught together in Richmond, CA while organizing together with People’s Education Movement-Bay Area for many years, prior to her and her family's move back to So Cal.  Liza Gesuden (she/ her/ siya) has been an educator for over 20 years, teaching Ethnic Studies, English, and Social Studies in schools across the Bay Area and Los Angeles. She is currently a Leadership & Ethnic Studies teacher at Jefferson Middle School in Long Beach, CA, where she advises the gardening club to bring young people closer to the land. She has worked within and beyond the Filipinx community as a community and cultural organizer via PEP San Francisco, the Free Minds Free People Conference, and other organizations. She is a certified Breathe 4 Change Yoga instructor and teaches trauma-informed, accessible movement classes to diverse communities. She also makes up one half of @ginataangang, a Pinay duo dedicated to gardening and growing in Long Beach, CA Today, Liza and Colin discuss Mohsin Hamid's magical novel, "Exit West," and Doreen G. Fernandez powerful book of essays on Filipinx food and culture, "Tikim." The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    1h 23m
  4. 08/16/2025

    Ep 15: 'Sacred Lessons' & 'The Seven Circles' w Tadashi Nakamura

    In today's episode, Colin sits down with his brother and award-winning filmmaker and storyteller Tadashi “Tad” Nakamura—someone whose work has given voice to untold histories, specifically from an AAPI perspective, and whose lens has always been guided by both craft and conscience. For this conversation, we’re grounding ourselves in two remarkable books: Mike dela Rocha’s Sacred Lessons: Teaching My Father to Love and Chelsey Luger and Thosh Collins’ The Seven Circles: Indigenous Teachings for Living Well. These aren’t just books to read—they’re invitations. They call us to consider how love can be a political act, how community can be a healer and teacher, and how balance—spiritual, emotional, physical—can be a form of resistance. Today, we explore how the wisdom in these works shows up in his life—as a filmmaker who chronicles stories of cultural resilience, as an artist who builds bridges between histories, and as a father navigating what it means to pass on love and justice to the next generation. Tadashi “Tad” Nakamura is an Emmy-award winning filmmaker and the Director of the Watase Media Arts Center, a production company of the Japanese American National Museum. Tadashi was named CNN's "Young People Who Rock" for being the youngest filmmaker at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. Now with over 20 years of filmmaking experience, his films include NOBUKO MIYAMOTO: A SONG IN MOVEMENT (2024), MELE MURALS (2016), JAKE SHIMABUKURO: LIFE ON FOUR STRINGS (2013), A SONG FOR OURSELVES (2009), and PILGRIMAGE (2006). He is currently closing out touring his most recent film, THIRD ACT, about his pioneering filmmaker father, Robert A. Nakamura, and his discovery and battle with Parkinson's Disease. Tad’s father Robert, known to many as the “Godfather of Asian American Media,” passed away and transitioned into the ancestral realm in June of this year. Colin can attest as an audience member who attended the latest CAAM’s (Center for Asian American Media) Film Festival at the Kabuki Theater in San Francisco’s Nihonmachi/Japantown, there wasn’t a dry eye in the building as we witnessed this powerful work of art and heart.   Tad has an M.A. in Social Documentation from UC Santa Cruz and a B.A. in Asian American Studies from UCLA. He made the DOC NYC '40 Under 40' list in 2019 and was a 2020-2022 Firelight Media Documentary Lab Fellows and a 2022-2023 Sundance Asian American Fellow. He is currently a mentor for the 2024 CAAM Fellowship and recipient of the 2024 Rockwood Documentary Leaders Fellowship. The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    1h 36m
  5. 07/18/2025

    Ep 14: 'Afterparties' w Samantha So-Lamb

    Today’s guest is someone Colin has known for  close to a decade. They were both Teachers and Deans at sibling schools in Richmond, CA; she at Aspire Richmond Technology Academy Elementary, and Colin at Richmond Cal Prep 6-12. The two were also members of an Asian American & Pacific Islander Affinity Group, where they got to know each other and build community with other AAPI Educators in Aspire Public School’s Bay Area Region. Their children attend the same daycare and she is currently the Principal of Richmond Technology Academy, which is also where Colin's eldest daughter’s goes to school. Colin is am beyond honored to be in community with this incredible sister, colleague, and comrade, and today, it is a sincere gift for him to be discussing her late and brilliant brother’s award-winning book of short stories, 'Afterparties'. Samantha So-Lamb is a proud Cambodian American, born and raised in Stockton, California, and now living in the Bay Area. The daughter of refugees who survived the Cambodian genocide, she carries her family’s legacy of resilience into everything she does. She began her career as an elementary school teacher and went on to become a school principal, dedicating her life to empowering students and building inclusive school communities. She’s also a devoted wife and mother of three boys. And yes—she’s the sister of the late Anthony Veasna So, acclaimed author of 'Afterparties' and a New York Times bestseller. Anthony Veasna So (February 20, 1992 – December 8, 2020) was an American writer. His short stories were described by The New York Times as "crackling, kinetic and darkly comedic" and often drew from his upbringing as a child of Cambodian immigrants. So died from an accidental drug overdose in 2020, and his debut book, a short story collection entitled Afterparties, was published in 2021. The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    1h 22m
  6. 06/20/2025

    Ep 13: 'All About Love: New Visions' w Anjali Rodrigues

    Today’s guest is someone Colin had the pleasure of meeting over a decade ago, as a grad student in USF’s Urban Education and Social Justice M.A. Teaching Program. Dr. Patrick Camangian introduced the two and today's guest shortly after became Colin's cooperating and Mentor Teacher at a Leadership 6-12 in Richmond, CA. Since then, they have and continue to bond over teaching, music, and aims to grow our communities, critical consciousness, hearts, and spirits, amidst systems that attempt to stamp each and every one of these out. C adores this dear sister and is honored to have her on 'The Paper Plane' today, to discuss one of the powerful books of our generation, in bell hooks’ “All About Love: New Visions.” Anjali Rodrigues is a first-generation Indian-American, an eldest daughter, an educator, a leadership and community organizing trainer, and a fútbol enthusiast. While studying at UCLA, she worked as a writing counselor in the Community Programs Office, where she discovered the campus’s rich legacy of organizing—particularly the role of the Black Panthers. After graduating, Anjali began her teaching career in Richmond, California, and deepened her political development through the People’s Education Movement and Teachers for Social Justice. In 2015, she earned her master’s in Arts in Education from Harvard, where she also began teaching public narrative and community organizing alongside Dr. Marshall Ganz. From 2014 to 2022, Anjali taught in K–12 schools in Boston and Brownsville, New York, while simultaneously leading workshops on public narrative and organizing for organizations across the country. Her collaborators have included Stand Up Indiana, the Sunrise Movement, March For Our Lives, Vital Voices, re:power, and many more. She also founded the WARMTH Fellowship, a leadership program for young femmes of color (ages 15–29) that centers storytelling, peer coaching, and community care. Currently, Anjali serves as Deputy Director of Fellowships at Leadership for Democracy and Social Justice, where she leads the Social Change Fellowship—a year-long program for undergraduates in the City University of New York system who are interested in pursuing social movement work. The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    1h 22m
  7. 05/30/2025

    Ep 12: 'Spraycan Art,' ‘Baby Baby Please,' & 'Fighting to Belong' w Robert Liu-Trujillo

    Today Colin sits down with someone he met close to 2 decades ago, when a mutual Mentor– S/O Hodari Davis–connected them during the time he was an After School Intervention Program Coordinator for the non-profit, Making Waves in San Rafael, CA. Today's guest taught a DJ’ing enrichment course that their then 3rd to 8th grade students absolutely adored and his cool, calm, collected, and inquisitive demeanor immediately made Colin feel like he’d found an instant friend and comrade. Fast fwd 15+ years, they are both middle aged Papas and have since discovered many connections, be they to mutual friends and passions, or the fact that they attended the same–Fairmont–Elementary school.  Today's guest is someone whose work soars at the intersection of art, education, and community. He’s a visual storyteller, a children’s book illustrator, an independent publisher, a cultural worker — and a proud father.  His art is deeply rooted in family, ancestry, and the beauty of everyday people — particularly Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, whose stories are too often left out of the mainstream. Through his illustrations, murals, and books, he brings to life the richness of identity and the quiet power of representation. He’s also the founder of Come Bien Books, an indie publishing house focused on bilingual and diverse children’s books, and a member of the Trust Your Struggle Collective, a crew of artists who use visual storytelling as a tool for justice and transformation. Rob/Robert/Roberto Trujillo (He, Him, Bruh) is an author and illustrator from Oakland, California and has been an artist most of his life. He started working professionally in the early 2000’s and has worked in murals, public art, arts education, merchandise making, illustration, and kid book publishing. His most recent books are “Fresh Juice/ Jugo Fresco” which he wrote and illustrated, “Art of Rob” a 130 page book of sketches, drawings, etc, and “We Are Yoga/ Somos Yoga” written by Jill Guerra that he illustrated. Rob is represented by Marietta Zacker at Gallt & Zacker. You can email him at info@robdontstop.com The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    57 min
  8. 05/16/2025

    Ep 11: 'Inner Engineering' w Asena Tui'one

    In this episode, Colin sits down with someone he has known for over 2 decades and is absolutely beloved to him. The two met at UC Santa Cruz-Oakes College (OAKES!) in 2000 as freshmen, were Residential Advisors in their Sophomore and Junior years, and became especially close during Senior year, while studying abroad in West Africa, at the University of Ghana-Legon in 2004. They have witnessed up close and from afar, each other’s victories, mistakes, maturations, battles, joys, growth, healing, and transformations. Today's guest is a powerful combination of (1) softness and sensitivity, mixed brilliantly with (2) “don’t play in my face because I’m NOT the one,” type energy; the kind of person Colin wants his daughters to witness model humanity, and someone whose love of Bob Marley is rivaled only by her love of her family, be they blood or chosen. C is deeply honored to be amongst the chosen few!  Asena Lillywater Tui'one, JD, MA (she/her) is a community advocate, policy strategist, and organizer committed to building equity and community power. She serves as Director of the Training Institute at the Center for Justice Innovation, in New York City, where she leads people-centered programs that foster collaboration, growth, and shared leadership. Raised in a Tongan immigrant household, Asena brings deep care, bold vision, and a justice-driven spirit to every space she enters—from education reform in the Bronx to policy advocacy across New York and California. The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Masashi Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by cishet men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counter-narrative.   The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

    57 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

The Paper Plane is a podcast created and hosted by Colin Ehara, where he interviews people he is blessed and honored to share community with, and asks them about a book(s) that have had a transformational impact on their lives. In a society where literacy rates are steadily declining and a growing number of podcasts hosted by men, un/consciously champion expressions of masculinity that come at the expense of women, femmes, and LGBTQIA2S+ (especially BIPOC) folx, this space aims to operate as a counternarrative. The Paper Plane is a space that intends to highlight the dire importance of relationships, community, dialogue, perpetual learning, honest expression as art, art as honest expression, and freedom for literacy and literacy for freedom. It speaks to planes of existence attached to the act of reading, but also as a metaphor for the “flights” we take as we sit in what Ta-Nehisi Coates calls “a one way interface” as readers, and how these “journeys” shape us...

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