Hubbry Logo
SuChin PakSuChin PakMain
Open search
SuChin Pak
Community hub
SuChin Pak
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
SuChin Pak
SuChin Pak
from Wikipedia

SuChin Pak (Korean: 박수진, born August 15, 1976) is a South Korean-born American television news correspondent and podcaster, best known from her early days working for MTV News. She joined MTV News as a correspondent in May 2001.[1] Since 2021, she has resumed her role as narrator for MTV Cribs.[2]

Key Information

Life and career

[edit]

Born in Seoul, South Korea, Pak immigrated along with her parents to California when she was five years old. She grew up in Union City, California, a suburb southeast of San Francisco. Her parents own a small restaurant in downtown Oakland, California.

Pak never planned on a career in television. While attending James Logan High School, she volunteered for the YMCA program Youth and Government, an organization aimed at involving and educating young people in the political process. She was also a member of the school's forensics team, in which she did expository speaking. In 1992, she placed 8th in the state of California. She was interviewed for the news by KGO-TV, the ABC affiliate in San Francisco for the show Straight Talk 'N Teens. The program director for another station happened to see the piece and approached her to host the teen-based magazine show First Cut on KRON, the then-NBC (now MyNetwork TV) affiliate in San Francisco. This "after-school job" became Pak's introduction to the entertainment world. Her first big interview for the show was Ice-T.

While attending the University of California, Berkeley as a political science major, Pak was once again discovered, when the producer of a PBS science show called Newton's Apple saw a tape of her. Following graduation, she was approached by ZDTV, a cable network devoted to technology and the Internet. After a year working on Internet Tonight, a daily half-hour show at ZDTV, she was recruited to be a correspondent on KRON. Looking to move on from San Francisco, she sent in a tape to the start-up cable network Oxygen. After a year-long audition process, she was hired as a host for the show Trackers and moved to New York City. From there, MTV spotted her and she was soon the first Asian face of MTV.

Pak speaking at an Asian Pacific American Heritage Month celebration, September 2005

She has covered the MTV Movie Awards, the Sundance Film Festival, and the MTV Video Music Awards. She also co-hosted, with Kurt Loder, MTV's pre-Grammy show. As a correspondent for "MTV Daily News", she has interviewed Mariah Carey, *NSYNC, P. Diddy, George Lucas, Jane's Addiction, Mary J. Blige, Billy Idol, and Fred Durst. On March 6, 2012, she hosted Demi Lovato: Stay Strong — The After Show. Pak hosted her own MTV documentary about multicultural young people called My Life (Translated).[3] She narrated later seasons of MTV Cribs and True Life.

In 2007, she appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show, revealing that she has struggled with confidence and beauty issues for many years. She mainly spoke about her epicanthal folds, and explained how her family and other Asians believe a double eyelid is crucial to beauty. She also mentioned how epicanthoplasty is the top form of plastic surgery being done in Asia.

In 2008, Pak had left MTV News for Planet Green to host G Word, which is co-hosted by Daniel Sieberg. In 2010, Pak returned to MTV News and hosted the VMAs Pre Show. Recently, Pak has been the host for the National Constitution Center's "The Exchange", a program in which high school students discuss their views on relevant constitutional issues.

In 2012, Pak was hired as the new on-air correspondent for DailyCandy, an email newsletter based in New York. In 2016, she co-hosted People's List, a weekly summer primetime infotainment series associated with People magazine on ABC.

In 2019, Pak served as the 'Tell All' host for season 13 of Sister Wives.[4]

In October 2020, it was announced that Pak would be joining Lemonada Media's podcast slate as the co-host[5] of the new show Add to Cart alongside comedian and actress Kulap Vilaysack. The podcast launched on November 17, 2020 and is “a subversive and fun way about talking about consumerism, and how we all participate in it.”[6] In 2021, Pak resumed her role as narrator of MTV Cribs.[7]

Personal life

[edit]

Pak married Mike Bender, co-founder of AwkwardFamilyPhotos, on March 24, 2012. The couple have two children together,[8] their first being a son born in 2012.[9]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
SuChin Pak (born August 15, 1976) is a South Korean-born American television , host, podcaster, and known for her pioneering role as the first Asian American news correspondent for . With over 25 years in the industry, she has reported on major cultural and social issues, hosted events, and contributed to documentaries highlighting immigrant experiences and racial inequities. Born in , , Pak immigrated to the with her family at age five, settling in . She graduated from the , with a degree in and launched her broadcasting career at 16 by hosting First Cut, a teen news magazine show on KRON-TV in . Early roles at KGO-TV (an ABC affiliate) and E! Entertainment followed, leading to her landmark position at in 2001, where she covered music, , and global headlines until 2012. Beyond television, Pak has hosted programs like The Exchange for the National Constitution Center and served as a correspondent for Daily Candy. She co-founded the Hester Street Fair in New York City to promote local artisans and led the Against Our Will campaign against human trafficking. In recent years, she has co-hosted the podcast Add to Cart, exploring consumerism and personal stories, and contributed to the 2022 anthology My Life: Growing Up Asian in America, sharing narratives on racism and identity in media. Her work continues to emphasize Asian American visibility and social justice.

Early life and education

Childhood and family background

SuChin Pak was born on August 15, 1976, in , . At the age of five, around 1981, she immigrated to the with her parents and siblings, settling in , in the , as her family sought greater economic opportunities and a better life away from post-war hardships in Korea. Her parents, conservative and religious Korean immigrants who spoke limited English, embodied the resilience required to start anew, often working long hours to support the family while navigating language barriers and cultural isolation. The Pak household placed a strong emphasis on education, hard work, and traditional career paths such as , , or , reflecting the immigrant ethos of upward mobility through diligence and conformity. Her parents ran a small cafe in nearby Oakland, instilling in SuChin a "survival mentality" shaped by their own experiences of financial strain and societal marginalization as newcomers. This environment fostered values of perseverance, though it also highlighted the generational tensions common in immigrant families, where parental sacrifices often went unspoken. As a Korean-American in the diverse yet predominantly working-class Bay Area community, Pak faced significant cultural adjustment challenges, including subtle and microaggressions that made her feel like a perpetual outsider. She endured playground taunts such as "Stinky Sue" or "SuChin Puke," which fueled early embarrassment toward her heritage and family, leading her to internalize a need to assimilate by altering her appearance—such as attempting to widen her eyes or appear "less Asian" to blend into white-dominated spaces. Her mother's advice to "be nicer" to avoid conflict underscored the family's strategy of compliance for survival, a tactic rooted in their vulnerable position as immigrants. These experiences, while difficult, later informed Pak's budding interest in media as a way to bridge cultural gaps and represent underrepresented voices.

High school years and initial media exposure

SuChin Pak attended James Logan High School in , where she developed an early interest in and . As a student there, she volunteered for the YMCA's Youth in Government program, a hands-on initiative that simulates legislative processes to teach high schoolers about and oratory skills. This involvement honed her communication abilities and provided her initial exposure to structured public discourse. During her junior year at age 16, Pak's participation in the Youth in Government program led to her first media opportunity when she was featured in a news segment on KGO-TV, the ABC affiliate in . Impressed by her poise, the station's program director offered her the role of host for Straight Talk 'N Teens, a weekly show aimed at adolescent audiences. This marked her broadcasting debut, transitioning her volunteer work into on-air experience. On Straight Talk 'N Teens, Pak covered a range of youth-oriented topics, including events, dating, homework pressures, curfews, and community issues relevant to teens. The program, produced by and for teenagers, aired locally and allowed her to engage directly with peers on matters affecting their lives, building her confidence in front of the camera.

College and advanced studies

SuChin Pak enrolled at the , majoring in . She balanced her full-time studies with early media opportunities, including on-air work that began in high school. Pak graduated in 1997 with a degree. During her undergraduate years, Pak co-hosted segments on the educational series Newton's Apple, becoming the youngest host in the program's history at age 19. As a college senior in her second season with the show, she investigated real-world scientific phenomena, such as archaeological digs in , blending her on-camera presence with educational content aimed at youth audiences. This experience honed her skills while she pursued her degree. Pak initially intended to attend after graduation, viewing her education as preparation for a legal . However, her hands-on media roles during college redirected her path toward professional , where the analytical framework from her studies proved invaluable for reporting on social, political, and cultural topics.

Career

Early roles

Following her graduation from the in 1997 with a degree in , SuChin Pak transitioned into professional with roles focused on and in the . She joined ZDTV, a cable network specializing in tech coverage, as a correspondent on the daily program Internet Tonight from 1998 to 2001, where she reported on emerging internet technologies, gadgets, and digital innovations. Around 2000, Pak took on a reporter role at in , contributing to local news coverage with an emphasis on -oriented segments that highlighted issues relevant to younger audiences. She also had a brief stint covering news for KGO-TV, the ABC affiliate in the Bay Area, extending her earlier involvement in teen programming to professional reporting on community and generational topics. These early positions provided Pak with hands-on experience in fast-paced news environments and built her portfolio in both niche tech reporting and community-focused , fueling her ambitions to pursue opportunities in national media.

MTV News tenure

SuChin Pak joined MTV News as a in May 2001 at the age of 25, marking her as the network's first Asian American on-air reporter. This milestone came after her early local reporting experience in , which served as her entry into national broadcasting. During her initial years, Pak quickly expanded her role, anchoring news segments on Total Request Live () from 2002 to 2005 and narrating episodes of MTV Cribs during its original run from 2001 to 2005. She reprised her narration duties for the show's revival in 2021, bringing a familiar voice to the celebrity home tour series. Pak's reporting at MTV News covered a wide array of pop culture stories, including high-profile interviews with artists and filmmakers such as , NSYNC, , and . These assignments highlighted her ability to engage with major figures in music and entertainment, contributing to MTV's coverage of events like the Video Music Awards and film festivals. One of her most significant projects was co-producing and hosting the documentary series My Life (Translated), which explored the experiences of young immigrants navigating bicultural identities in America. The series, featured on , amplified underrepresented voices and earned Pak recognition for her commitment to diverse storytelling. In 2021, Pak publicly revealed a traumatic incident from her MTV tenure involving workplace discrimination, describing an encounter where a white male executive made misogynistic, racist, and violent remarks about her to colleagues. This disclosure, shared amid heightened awareness of anti-Asian hate, underscored the challenges she faced as a trailblazing Asian American woman in the industry during the early . Despite such obstacles, her work helped diversify and influenced subsequent generations of broadcasters.

Television and media projects post-MTV

Following her tenure at MTV News, SuChin Pak expanded her television career into diverse hosting and roles across networks, drawing on her established on-air presence to explore , environmental, and reality programming. In 2008, Pak transitioned from her full-time role at to host G Word on the Planet Green network, a daily series co-hosted with Daniel Sieberg that focused on eco-friendly living, innovative green technologies, and environmental personalities to make accessible and stylish. The program emphasized practical tips for urban audiences, featuring segments on topics like energy-efficient and celebrity-led conservation efforts, airing as part of Planet Green's launch lineup to promote mainstream environmental awareness. Throughout the late and into the , Pak contributed as a correspondent for , delivering segments on entertainment trends, fashion, and travel tips, including collaborations with the network on affordable style guides and in-flight beauty routines. She also made appearances on other cable outlets, such as ABC and affiliates, covering and news features that aligned with her expertise in pop culture reporting. Beginning in 2012, Pak served as the chief video correspondent for DailyCandy, an online lifestyle platform, where she produced and hosted content exploring deals, trends, and cultural events through engaging video series and on-camera recommendations. Her work included curating fashion hauls and interviews with designers, helping to bridge with her traditional television background. In 2019, Pak hosted the Sister Wives Tell All special for TLC, conducting in-depth interviews with the Brown family to unpack the dynamics of their plural marriage, family challenges, and season highlights in a two-part reunion format. The episode delved into sensitive topics like financial strains and interpersonal conflicts, with Pak facilitating candid discussions that revealed new insights into the family's evolving relationships.

Podcasting and recent hosting work

In 2020, SuChin Pak transitioned into podcasting by co-hosting Add to Cart with , a weekly series launched on November 17 that explores , habits, and cultural influences through humorous discussions and personal anecdotes. The , which has received awards for its subversive take on what purchases reveal about identity, features guest appearances from comedians and experts to dissect trends in , media, and . Pak's background in has informed the show's structured yet engaging format, blending investigative insights with lighthearted commentary. Pak expanded her audio work in 2022 as the solo host of Uncared For on Lemonada Media, a series that investigates systemic failures in the U.S. healthcare system, focusing on issues like , denials, rural closures, and access disparities. The draws on interviews with patients, physicians, advocates, and policymakers to highlight personal stories of financial ruin and inadequate care, with Season 1 addressing inequities and subsequent seasons broadening to caregiving burdens and policy shortcomings. By 2024-2025, Season 3 delved into the emotional and economic toll of long-term illness on families, emphasizing cuts and spousal caregiving challenges while advocating for reform. Alongside her podcasts, Pak has bridged her television roots to digital and live media, narrating the 2021 revival of MTV's to provide continuity for the celebrity home tour series during its pandemic-era return. In recent years, she has emceed cultural events, including the 7th Annual Benefit fundraiser for the organization Gyopo on October 5, 2025, in , where she hosted discussions on and community support. Earlier that year, on May 28, Pak moderated a public conversation with author Susan Lieu at KAAREM in , exploring themes from Lieu's memoir The Manicurist's Daughter.

Personal life

Marriage and children

SuChin Pak married author and humorist Mike Bender, co-founder of the Awkward Family Photos project, on March 24, 2012. The couple, who had been dating for several years prior, welcomed their first child, a son named Kai, in June 2012. Their second child, a daughter named Soe, was born in the years following, completing their family of four. Pak and Bender's early years of coincided with significant milestones, including the births of their children and multiple relocations to accommodate their professional and personal needs. By 2021, the had settled into a newly built home in , designed in part to address Bender's health sensitivities related to electrohypersensitivity. These transitions highlighted the couple's commitment to creating a supportive environment for their young children amid ongoing life changes. Post-2012, Pak has navigated the demands of motherhood alongside her media career, including hosting like Add to Cart and producing investigative series such as Uncared For. In discussions on her shows, she has shared how parenthood reshaped her priorities, emphasizing creative fulfillment and family stability while managing the rigors of content creation and caregiving. Bender's challenges during this period further tested their partnership, with Pak often taking on primary responsibilities for the household and children as he stepped back from work.

Experiences with discrimination

In March 2021, SuChin Pak publicly disclosed a traumatic incident from her early tenure at MTV News, describing it as a "misogynistic, violent, racist" encounter where a white male executive referred to her using the derogatory phrase "'me sucky sucky love you long time' whore" in front of colleagues while she was on air. She detailed how the remark, rooted in a harmful Asian stereotype, left her feeling fearful and ashamed, but she ultimately fought for the executive's removal, hired a lawyer, and refused reconciliation, framing the experience as emblematic of broader anti-Asian violence amid rising hate crimes. Pak connected the event to the Atlanta spa shootings earlier that month, which claimed the lives of eight people, six of them Asian women, and emphasized that such "jokes" mask deeper misogyny, racism, and white supremacy. As the first Asian American news anchor at MTV starting in 2001, Pak reflected on the immense pressure of representation, often navigating stereotypes that limited Asian to roles like "Connie Chung or kung fu" figures, while facing microaggressions, fetishization, and harassment that MTV took months to address. She described suppressing multiple racist experiences during her over-a-decade-long tenure to maintain professionalism, viewing them retrospectively as part of a pattern of in the industry that demanded she prove her worth twice over. These encounters, including the 2001 slur, underscored the isolation of being a trailblazer, where she felt compelled to embody perfection to counter pervasive exoticization and doubt about her belonging. Pak has channeled these experiences into through storytelling, notably as host of the Uncared For, which investigates systemic inequities in the U.S. healthcare system, including structural 's role in disparities like those affecting Black maternal health. The series, produced by Lemonada Media and the , features interviews with patients, experts, and advocates to expose issues such as and insurance denials, highlighting how exacerbates access barriers and outcomes in care. Through this platform, Pak amplifies voices on intersecting inequities, drawing from her own history of workplace to underscore the need for in institutions. Her contributions extended to Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month discussions, particularly in 2022 when she penned the introduction for My Life: Growing Up Asian in America, a collection of essays edited by the Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment (CAPE) that celebrates AAPI identities and calls for action against ongoing inequities. Published on May 17, 2022—aligning with the heritage observance—Pak's foreword reflects on her trailblazing role and the importance of sharing personal narratives to combat erasure and foster community resilience. In subsequent interviews, she continued advocating for recognition of AAPI contributions and challenges, linking her career adversities to broader movements for equity.

Other contributions

Entrepreneurial ventures

Following her tenure at MTV News, SuChin Pak transitioned into entrepreneurial pursuits that emphasized community building and cultural diversity. In 2010, she co-founded the Hester Street Fair in New York City's alongside her brother Suhyun Pak, serving as the creative force and curator of this outdoor marketplace. The fair, which operated nearly year-round starting in April 2010, functioned as a designer and block-party-style event featuring indie designers, local artisans, and neighborhood vendors offering unique items such as artisanal popsicles and banh mi sandwiches. Pak positioned the Hester Street Fair as a cultural hub supporting immigrant and diverse entrepreneurs, providing a platform for first-time vendors to gain visibility and potentially launch their own storefronts or businesses. She actively promoted the event by recruiting insiders and leveraging her connections, such as hosting celebrity events like Sway Calloway's birthday party in July 2010, to draw crowds and foster a vibrant atmosphere. The highlighted and , creating an accessible space for underrepresented creators to showcase their work and connect with broader audiences. Building on her experience curating lifestyle content as a for DailyCandy starting in , Pak launched additional community-oriented projects. In April 2015, she founded Mashiso.co, a digital platform—named after the Korean word for "delicious"—that empowered global women through curated lists, tips, articles, and resources focused on personal and professional growth. This venture extended her interest in lifestyle and , offering practical insights to foster connections among diverse users.

Film and television appearances

SuChin Pak's visibility as an MTV News correspondent in the early 2000s led to several minor acting roles and cameos in film and television, often portraying reporters or playing versions of herself. In the animated series (2003), Pak provided the voice for Alison Tomita, a news reporter character who appears in multiple episodes, including "" and "Spider-Man Dis-Sabled." Pak appeared as Newscaster Susie Parks in the comedy film Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo (2005), directed by Mike Bigelow, where she delivered on-screen news reports. She played herself in a cameo as an reporter in the holiday comedy (2006), starring and , reporting on the film's central conflict involving illuminated houses. Additional guest spots include her role as Connie Popavich-Mosimoto in the film : The Search for a New (2007), a satirical take on Hollywood casting. In The Rocker (2008), Pak appeared as herself in a brief interview scene with the fictional band.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.