Inside the Lai Lai Ballroom and Dance studio Tuesday night, the state of the union was uncertain but optimistic.
Huddled beneath the security camera that captured the mayhem when Brandon Tsay disarmed the would-be attacker who had just killed 11 people at their sister studio, Star Dance, staff and relatives at the family run business peered at a TV overhead and watched the packed halls of Congress give Brandon a standing ovation.
His sister Brenda Tsay waited about an hour to hear President Biden acknowledge Brandon and let out a loud applause — all while wrangling kids and greeting dancers, both gliding through the Lai Lai lobby.
Along with his grandmother, Joyce Tsay, and coworkers Nancy Zhu and Zhi Li, Brenda watched as, once again thrust into the spotlight, Brandon stoically if not awkwardly gave a pageant-style wave to the crowd.
“I don’t know how to explain it, he’s a hero but he’s still just my brother,” she said.
In the backdrop of the lobby, instructors give private lessons to young dancers, seemingly unaffected by it all.
Not typically one for politics, Brenda points to dignitaries wearing bold and colorful outfits while trying to catch a glimpse of Brandon during wide shots, and is surprised how much of the speech related to her family.
From Taiwanese chips affecting the economy of her family overseas, to the Ukrainian conflict that has affected at least a dozen of their dancers, to of course, the calls for stricter gun control laws.
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