Unit 2: Snapshots of BC Culture
Bold and Bright: Sook-Yin Lee
Click play on the following audio player to listen along as you read this section.
Sook-Yin Lee has been called “a cultural Jill of all trades.” This means she can do a little bit of everything. She’s a musician, actor, writer, filmmaker, and broadcaster. Since she was a child, she has loved putting on a show. At the heart of a good show is a good story. She says stories are how she makes sense of a world that’s both strange and wonderful.
Sook-Yin grew up in North Vancouver. Her parents moved to British Columbia from China. They were strict and her mom used to hit her. So Sook-Yin ran away when she was 15. Her sister Dede went, too. Together, they lived on the streets. Dede fell in with a violent gang and died very young.
Sook-Yin turned to the arts for survival. In the late 1980s, she became the lead singer of a Vancouver-based punk band called Bob’s Your Uncle. The owner of MuchMusic heard about her and asked her to try out for a job as a VJ. A VJ is like a DJ for music videos. She landed this dream job. She quickly became known for being smart, funny, and fearless. In 1995, gay people won some basic human rights. Sook-Yin celebrated by kissing another woman on air. And on her last day at MuchMusic, she said goodbye by mooning the camera.
In 2002, she moved to CBC Radio as host of a show called Definitely Not the Opera. The show is about Canadian pop culture. It has also become a place for Canadians to share stories about the sad, joyful, and embarrassing moments of modern life. What makes Sook-Yin different is that she doesn’t hold back. She shares her stories on the air, too.
In 2006, CBC threatened to fire Sook-Yin for starring in a racy film called Shortbus. After the film was shown at the Cannes Film Festival, people stood and clapped for 20 minutes. This act sent a loud message about letting artists express themselves. So CBC didn’t fire her after all.
Since then, Sook-Yin has continued to live by her motto: be bold, shine bright. She shows us how storytelling and the arts can help us find who we are, connect with others, and make it through whatever life has in store for us.
Word Patterns
The suffix –less means “without.”
In this story, for example, fearless means without fear. Other examples (not in this story) include:
- Homeless means without a home.
- Careless means without care.
The suffix –ful means “full of.”
In this story, for example, joyful means full of joy and wonderful means full of wonder. Other examples (not in this story) include:
- Fearful means full of fear.
- Careful means full of care.
- Beautiful means full of beauty.
Vocabulary
The underlined words in this story (listed below) are from the synonyms task you did in Unit 2 of Course Pack 3. If you get stuck on a word from your SYN-Circles, see if the synonyms help you.
- strange
- strict
- violent
- embarrassing
- modern
- racy
- motto
- bold
Media Attributions
- Sook-Yin Lee © Karon Liu is licensed under a CC BY-SA (Attribution ShareAlike) license
- BobsYourUncle © Bugfix1960 is licensed under a CC BY-SA (Attribution ShareAlike) license
- CBC_Vancouver_Studios_(Vancouver_2010) © Bull-Doser is licensed under a Public Domain license
- Shortbus at King’s Cross © Mark Hillary is licensed under a Public Domain license