We’re excited to announce that Far East Deep South has officially been added to ClickView, making the film accessible to more than 12,000 schools across Australia, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, the United States, and Canada.
Through ClickView’s educational streaming platform, Far East Deep South is now available to over 1,000,000 teachers and 7,300,000 students worldwide — dramatically expanding the reach of the film and the untold history it shares.
ClickView is a leading, award-winning educational video platform tailored for K-12 schools and universities, designed to improve student engagement through curated, curriculum-aligned content. The platform provides safe, ad-free streaming, interactive video tools for teachers, and allows educators to both search for and create personalized video learning resources.
Far East Deep South is distributed educationally by New Day Films, a pioneering filmmaker-run distribution cooperative known for bringing groundbreaking social issue documentaries to audiences around the world.
Directed by Larissa Lam and produced by Baldwin Chiu, Far East Deep South follows Baldwin’s family journey into the Mississippi Delta in search of his father’s roots. Along the way, the film uncovers little-known Chinese American history in the segregated South, exploring themes of identity, belonging, race relations, immigration, and intergenerational healing.
“We’ve always believed these stories belong in classrooms,” said Lam. “Students are often surprised to learn about the Chinese American experience in the Deep South and how connected these histories are to broader conversations about race and identity in America and around the world.”
The addition of Far East Deep South to ClickView comes at a time of growing demand for inclusive educational content and Asian American stories that are often left out of traditional curriculum.
Educators using ClickView can now stream the film directly in classrooms and integrate it into lessons related to history, social studies, Asian American studies, ethnic studies, immigration, civil rights, media studies, and cultural identity.

