Damn, Malay DNA 🧬 is more dominant, he is a very Malay looking guy and good looking as well, I would never thought he is mixed but once he speak, you can hear the foreign accent
@@atycinmalaysiayou can also interview Kevin Zahri, fitness coach and influencer, he is also malay-german mixed, it’s interesting to know his experience too
Super interesting interview, Atyc! You asked the right questions to showcase Amir's upbringing and experiences! I also want to say that a very good job on the parents for bringing up such a culturally inclusive family! In my personal experience, I think most half white, half Asian people would tend to sway more towards the western side, so it's really nice to hear that he would like to settle down in Malaysia eventually.
After seeing this video, I feel like he is a little like me. I am not of a mixed heritage, I was borned in Malaysia (malaysian-chinese), went to US and stayed there for 18 years, and then went to Germany and been living there (my 19th year). So I could relate to what his story is about.
That melting pot thingy, does it mean he will continue the mix-marriage culture like choosing a spouse from India or Japan for example, and on the other hand, he may just want to re-connect with either Germany lineage or Malaysian lineage which might mean that the mix-marriage ends with him only? If he wants to end the mixed lineage, who will he choose, the Malay or the German? I hope you wont forget to add this question whenever you interview a mix-lineage person ok, really interesting to know too. Anyway, love your content and keep up the good work yea.
Damn, Malay DNA 🧬 is more dominant, he is a very Malay looking guy and good looking as well, I would never thought he is mixed but once he speak, you can hear the foreign accent
Malaysian at heart
@@atycinmalaysiayou can also interview Kevin Zahri, fitness coach and influencer, he is also malay-german mixed, it’s interesting to know his experience too
He looks like the Malaysian actor, Azrel Ismail.
Depends who the mother was. Generally speaking the baby will look most closely to the race of the mother not the father.
Super interesting interview, Atyc! You asked the right questions to showcase Amir's upbringing and experiences!
I also want to say that a very good job on the parents for bringing up such a culturally inclusive family! In my personal experience, I think most half white, half Asian people would tend to sway more towards the western side, so it's really nice to hear that he would like to settle down in Malaysia eventually.
Glad you enjoyed it! 😀
nice to know he still able to speak malay after living overseas for so long
Kita nk dgr perbualan dlm bahasa melayu yg spontan bkn ayat2 bot.
After seeing this video, I feel like he is a little like me. I am not of a mixed heritage, I was borned in Malaysia (malaysian-chinese), went to US and stayed there for 18 years, and then went to Germany and been living there (my 19th year). So I could relate to what his story is about.
mantop bro...!!! more plz...😊
Well speak, interesting interview👍
Power Atiq! Ape tips nak jadi sador eh?
Thanks bro. Kalau nak sadur jangan lupa makan betik hari isnin, khamis dan sabtu bro 💪🏻
Imagine mixed with German but still 160cm tall man
Ouch 🤕
i have a friend like him, his mom is mamak :) and short.
That melting pot thingy, does it mean he will continue the mix-marriage culture like choosing a spouse from India or Japan for example, and on the other hand, he may just want to re-connect with either Germany lineage or Malaysian lineage which might mean that the mix-marriage ends with him only? If he wants to end the mixed lineage, who will he choose, the Malay or the German? I hope you wont forget to add this question whenever you interview a mix-lineage person ok, really interesting to know too. Anyway, love your content and keep up the good work yea.
Do you celebrate Hari Raya in Malaysia..? Is there any difference celebrating it in other countries...?
Cool.
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