Bowen Yang.Photo: James N Scully/Instagram

Bowen Yangis kicking off the new year with a new look!
TheSaturday Night Livestar, 31, showed off his freshly bleached locks on Instagram Sunday, sharing a silly selfie in which his eyes are half open.
“Normative queer semiotics would suggest that i am _________ but they would be wrong,” Yang wrote in the caption, going on to credit N.Y.C.-based hairstylistYu Nakatafor his new ‘do.
Youstar Scully, 29,decorated the photowith a heart-face emoji.
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Yang joined the cast ofSNLin 2019 after starting out as a writer the previous year and recently made hisSexiest Man Alivedebut, telling PEOPLE in November that the long-running NBC sketch series “changed my life in every way imaginable.”
“There was a huge chasm of misunderstanding,” Yang said in a June issue of PEOPLE. “Neither side really understood where the other was coming from, and it led to very dangerous situations overall.”
Still, “what was always constant was the intention of love from both sides. It pushed me into questioning what it meant, what was protected and what I should be protective about in termsof being a queer person,” added Yang. “I don’t take it for granted.”
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Yang, who also co-hosts theLas Culturistaspodcast, is thefirst Chinese American star ofSNLand the first openly gay man to be featured beyond a single season.
In May, he and Joel Kim Booster chatted during an episode of Booster’sJoy F*ck Clubseries, where they discussed how their queerness and race have “intersected and affected both [their] identities.”
“It might be fair to say that at first consideration, it feels like they’re identities that are somewhat at odds with each other. In terms of Western gay identities, which in a lot of ways sort of devalues Asian people or sort of puts Asian people in this weird purgatorial status in the gay community,” Yang said. “That feels like it’s at odds with my Asian identity, which in a lot of weird, bizarre ways is also messaged something around like, ‘You don’t be gay, don’t be gay.’ So having those two things be weird, diametrically opposed poles in some ways, having those two things have to be tightly wound together is really, really, really tough.”
But also, Yang noted, “holding those two identitiesof being gay and Asian have, I guess, made my skin a little thicker.”
source: people.com