The LGBTQ Asian-American experience is unique because its members suffer from multiple forms of discrimination. LGBTQ AA must live up to society's stereotyped expectations as well as their parents' traditional expectations. However, these narrow categories cannot correctly describe the range of LGBT personalities. Furthermore, the majority of the research focuses on gay AA males rather than the LGBT community as a whole. AA lesbians, for example, may have a different experience as shown by the supportive reaction Helen Zia received in Asian American Dreams. Moreover, the bi/trans community is barely been represented at all in the research literature. Thus, the LGBTQ AA community has many more strides to make in terms of racial equality among its members. The strides that AA have made in American society to be represented and seen as complex individuals rather than one-sided archetypes must be repeated again in the confines of the LGBTQ community. One such trailblazer to this movement is George Takei, whose popular FaceBook page and Twitter feed is full of humorous pictures but also social commentary. His new campaign "It's ok to be Takei!" encourages LGBT pride in the face of Tennessee's "Don't Say Gay" bill. Due to his celebrity status, George Takei has the opportunity to be a Willie "Woo Woo" Wong for the LGBTQ community. The AA LGBTQ population is definitely still understudied and rife with stereotyped expectations; however, there is development occurring in terms of the AA community's acceptance and promotion of a unique LGBTQ identity.