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   » » Wiki: Eddie Huang
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Edwyn Charles Huang (born March 1, 1982) is an American author, chef, restaurateur, food personality, producer, and former attorney. He was a co-owner of BaoHaus, a restaurant in the East Village of . Huang previously hosted Huang's World for . His autobiography, , was adapted into the ABC sitcom Fresh Off the Boat, of which he narrated the first season.


Early life and education
Huang was born in Fairfax, Virginia, to Jessica and Louis Huang, who were immigrants from . They were both Taiwanese ; the ancestral homes of his father and mother were in the and provinces of , respectively.
(2025). 9780812983357, Spiegel & Grau.
Huang was raised in Silver Spring, Maryland, a suburb of Washington, D.C., then moved to Orlando, Florida, where his father owned a successful group of steak and seafood restaurants, including Atlantic Bay Seafood and Grill and Cattleman's Ranch Steakhouse. He appreciated African-American culture, especially , at a young age. He also frequently got into fights, getting arrested at least twice on assault charges while growing up.

Huang attended Dr. Phillips High School in Orlando. He also went on to attend the University of Pittsburgh and , graduating with a B.A. in English and Film from Rollins in 2004. At Rollins, he also won the Barbara Lawrence Alfond English Award and the Zora Neale Hurston Award, and was Sports and Humor editor for the school paper, The Sandspur. In 2008, Huang earned a from the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University. At Cardozo, Huang worked at the Innocence Project, served as President of the Minority Law Students Association and as Vice President of the Asian Pacific American Law Students Association, and also won a New York City Bar Association Minority Fellowship in 2006.James Rickman, Eddie Huang and Jeezy on Racism, America and Bossing Up, , http://www.papermag.com/2015/04/eddie_huang_jeezy_fresh_off_the_boat.phpEddie Huang, Fresh Off the Boat, page 211


Career
After graduating from law school, Huang worked as a corporate attorney at the law firm Chadbourne & Parke in New York City. He worked as a summer associate in 2006 and 2007, then was hired as an associate in the firm's corporate department in 2008. Within a year, due to the 2008 financial crisis, Huang was laid off, and began working as a and dealer.


Clothing designer
From 2006 to 2009, Huang ran a streetwear company called "Hoodman Clothing," initially called "Bergdorf Hoodman." At Hoodman, Huang co-created with Art Director Ning Juang, a whom he had met in Taiwan.


Chef and restaurateur
Huang was also interested in food as he had grown up watching his mother cook at home. He also learned cooking techniques from various chefs of different cultural backgrounds and cuisine styles that worked at his father's restaurants. He learned management and how to be a good . Working as an expeditor was a skill he learned from his father. In 2011, Huang was named to the Chow 13, a list of influential people in food presented annually by Chow.com.


Restaurants
In December 2009, Huang opened BaoHaus, a Taiwanese () shop, on the Lower East Side of .Turner, David Rap Snacks: Inside the Hip-Hop Restaurant Boom Rolling Stone. October 8, 2015 In July 2011, he relocated his first shop to 238 East 14th Street in the East Village with an expanded menu. In October 2020, Huang announced the permanent closure of BaoHaus. Prior to shutting down, the restaurant had been praised by TimeOut for cheap pricing and unique menu items.

Another restaurant, Xiao Ye, was less successful and closed after poor reviews and controversy over its sales of . , a reviewer for The New York Times, awarded the restaurant zero (out of four) stars, and wrote that "if Mr. Huang spent even a third of the time cooking that he does writing funny blog posts and wry Twitter updates, posting hip-hop videos and responding to Internet friends, rivals, critics and customers, Xiao Ye might be one of the more interesting restaurants to open in New York City in the last few months."


Author
Huang created the blog called Fresh Off the Boat and later published with Random House by the same name. was released in early 2013, receiving favorable reviews from Publishers Weekly and The New York Times.

Double Cup Love: On the Trail of Family, Food, and Broken Hearts in China was published in 2016.


Television
Huang hosted Cheap Bites on the at the end of 2011 and also appeared on several episodes of before leaving the Cooking Channel for , where he hosted a recurring segment, also called Fresh Off the Boat, which was later developed into an hour-long show and renamed Huang's World. In 2014, Huang was the host of Snack Off on . The show featured Huang, mentoring contestants participating in challenges that determine who can whip up the tastiest treats using random ingredients like fish sticks, canned oysters, chocolate and much more.


Fresh Off the Boat
In 2014, ABC ordered a television series based on his book, also titled Fresh Off the Boat, starring and , with playing Eddie. The show debuted with two preview episodes on February 4, 2015, and premiered in its slot on February 10, 2015. Huang narrated every episode of the first season, but left the show prior to the second season.

Huang was outspoken in his criticism of the development process of the show, writing a lengthy essay about his concern that his vision for the show was compromised. Huang has said that he doesn’t like the show, because he thinks that the storyline after the pilot episode is not what he wrote in his memoir. He has said that he mostly avoids watching it, though he admits there were two exceptions he tuned into: The episode with a DMX cameo in which he appreciated the interactions between DMX and young Eddie, which he talks about in his book, “Double Cup Love”. He also admits tuning for a few minutes to the episode where the family visits Taiwan, but didn’t like it.Huang, Eddie. Double Cup Love: On the Trail of Family, Food, and Broken Hearts in China. Spiegel & Grau, 2016.


Film
In August 2019, it was announced Huang would direct and write Boogie, a coming-of-age movie about a young Chinese-American basketball player's rise to prominence, starring , , Jorge Lendeborg Jr., , , , Perry Yung, Alexa Mareka and , with distributing. Huang wrote the screenplay in five days with no plan or outline, incorporating the themes that have defined his life such as basketball, feeling adrift in a country where he has always been in a minority, and domestic abuse. SCMP. 2021-03-13 He directed the 2025 documentary Vice is Broke.


Controversies
Huang drew criticism in May 2015 for comments he made about black women during an interview on Real Time With Bill Maher. He said, "I feel like Asian men have been emasculated so much in America that we're basically treated like black women." Later he engaged in a exchange on his account @MrEddieHuang with @BlackGirlDanger where he defended his comments, which were called "". Huang then tweeted "are we dating cause you wildin. lol" and proceeded to make romantic advances towards her.

Huang has also drawn criticism for his appropriation of African-American culture. Huang has stated: "I’ve devoted myself to speaking about people owning their own cultures that they’ve created, that they came over with, and educating people about the foundational values in culture." In The New York Times, Joshua David Stein described Huang as "a walking mixtape of postmodern cultural appropriation." In New Bloom magazine, Brian Hioe wrote that Huang exhibits "misogynistic language and attitudes," non-conventional English speech and dress, and experiences with police that indicate an "adoption of a hip hop influenced persona". It was also noted that Asian Americans have been a part of the Hip Hop community since Fresh Kid Ice of 2 Live Crew fame.


Matt Sauerhoff incident
In late February 2025, Huang released a video on his TikTok account, where he was involved in an incident in his New York City apartment building with fitness trainer and former actor Matt Sauerhoff. According to Huang's website, the encounter began outside the building when Huang and his dog were allegedly knocked off of a bench by an unleashed dog owned by Sauerhoff. Huang asked Sauerhoff politely to leash his dog, but Sauerhoff refused, and instead became enraged at Huang. Both men and their dogs then went inside to the lobby of their building, and Huang began filming Sauerhoff who was going on a long tirade. Sauerhoff attempted to have Huang thrown out of the building by accusing him of trespassing, even though Huang was a resident there, and repeatedly hurled expletives and abuse at Huang.

New York City law requires that dogs be leashed in public places and Huang reported Sauerhoff for keeping his dog off leash. Huang also demanded an apology from Sauerhoff, which Sauerhoff has also refused as of February 27, 2025. Not long after the incident, Huang was confronted by Sauerhoff's mother-in-law, Dalia Krinsky. In an attempt to intimidate Huang to deter him from pursuing charges against Sauerhoff, Krinsky indicated that her husband, Barry H. Krinsky, was a Superior Court Judge, even though his actual occupation was an attorney. Since the incident, Sauerhoff decided to quit his social media, due to major backlash.


Works and publications


See also
  • Chinese people in New York City
  • New Yorkers in journalism
  • Taiwanese people in New York City


External links
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