When Waysians Become America's Next Culture-Setting Class
There's a quiet demographic plot twist happening in the United States. The numbers are sitting right there in the Census tables, easy to miss if you're not paying attention: the future is going to look very mixed, very educated, and very different.
Between the 2010 and 2020 Censuses, the multiracial population didn't just grow -- it exploded. The U.S. went from 9 million people who identified as two or more races to 33.8 million. That's a 276% increase. In one decade. Demographers almost never see triple-digit jumps unless something tectonic is happening.
Zoom in further. Among Americans under 18, this shift is even sharper. In 2010, only 5.6% of children were multiracial. By 2020, it was 15.1% -- a tripling in a single generation, and that was before the post-pandemic birth clusters and before Gen Z hit full family-formation mode. America isn't easing into this future. It's already there -- just waiting for the Census to catch up.
But inside this explosion is one demographic that's quietly becoming the main character: White-Asian Americans. The Waysians.
You already know them. Keanu Reeves (Chinese-Hawaiian dad, English mom). Olivia Rodrigo (Filipino and Irish-German). Chloe Kim, throwing 1080s at the Olympics while her Korean immigrant dad films from the sidelines. These aren't anomalies anymore. They're the new template.
Why Waysians Matter
Waysians aren't just having a moment. They're what happens when you combine America's two most educationally and economically dominant demographics and let them cook for a few generations.
Asian Americans now hold the highest median household income in the country -- $108,700, compared with $81,060 for White households (2023 Census). That gap has been widening for two decades. But income is just downstream of education, and the education numbers are even more dramatic: 56% of Asian Americans have a bachelor's degree or higher, compared to 36% nationally (Pew Research). That is a nation-shaping delta.
Now combine that with intermarriage. According to Pew Research, 46% of U.S.-born Asians marry someone of another race. That rate drops to 24% for foreign-born Asians, which means: as Asian Americans get more Americanized, intermarriage doesn't stabilize -- it accelerates. And who do Asian Americans intermarry with most? Whites. Pew reports that 11% of all intermarried couples in the U.S. are White-Asian. That's not fringe. That's mainstream.
So you've got a group that's:
- Out-earning everyone
- Out-educating everyone
- Intermarrying at the highest rates
- Growing fast
The Human 2.0 Prototype
Which brings us to Eileen Gu, possibly the most visible avatar of this shift. A viral tweet reframed her as the "human 2.0 prototype":
Eileen Gu is actually a human 2.0 prototype:>
- IQ: aced SAT 1580, went to Stanford
- aesthetic: supermodel (Louis Vuitton, Tiffany & Co, Fendi, Gucci)
- physical: Olympic gold medalist (elite at skiing)
- genetic: biracial optimization (Chinese American)
- cultural: multilingual, dual-market value
- financial: mega generational wealth>
this is a glimpse of what humans look like in a few decades>
bio/acc>
-- @mgoesdistance
Yes, the tweet is exaggerated, tongue-in-cheek, and half in the voice of tech Twitter meme-speak. But it caught fire because it reflected a real and intuitive sense: Waysians sit at the intersection of multiple systems -- economic, educational, cultural, aesthetic -- and are emerging as a kind of hybridized elite.
Eileen Gu isn't interesting just because she's athletically elite, academically gifted, or aesthetically striking. Those exist in every group. What makes her culturally resonant is that she represents a new type: multilingual, bicultural, algorithm-friendly, globally mobile, plugged into both Western and Asian prestige circuits, comfortable on runways and in lecture halls, able to navigate the U.S.-China complexity without flinching. She's a one-person Venn diagram of where a lot of upward-moving young Americans want to be.
And whether you like it or not, that's a preview of where a big chunk of Gen Alpha and Gen Beta are heading.
It's Not Eugenics, It's Just Math
Before anyone gets weird: this isn't a master race thing. It's selection effects. High-achieving immigrant families + high intermarriage with the majority population + America's love of people who can code-switch across cultures = a demographic feedback loop that keeps reinforcing itself.
The pattern is already visible:
- Asian Americans are one of the youngest median-age racial groups in the U.S.
- White Americans still make up the majority of marriages overall.
- Waysian children thus grow proportionally faster than either White-only or Asian-only categories.
There's a reason fashion, tech, and entertainment keep casting Waysian faces. Sure, they're striking. But brands also follow future demographics the way VCs follow growth curves. It's not just representation -- it's forecasting.
Hollywood figured this out years ago. The Matrix needed a hero who could plausibly exist in any culture, any timeline -- they cast Keanu. Disney needed a Gen Z pop star who'd scan as both girl-next-door and something new -- Olivia Rodrigo. The Winter Olympics needed an American snowboarder who'd make Korea and California both claim her -- Chloe Kim. None of this is accidental.
Devon Aoki was doing this in the early 2000s -- half-Japanese, half-English-German, walking runways for Chanel at 16, then showing up in 2 Fast 2 Furious looking like the future of cool. Alysa Liu, the figure skater, became the youngest U.S. women's champion ever at 13 -- trained in Oakland, competing for Team USA, with a story that reads like an only-in-America subplot.
The Inflection Point
America has absorbed demographic waves before. But this one hits different because it's happening during peak globalization, peak digital mobility, and peak cultural remix energy. Previous waves made ethnic blocs. This one makes hybrids.
And hybrids don't wait for permission to shape culture. They just do it.
Waysians sit at the exact intersection of America's two highest-earning, highest-educated demographics.
The question isn't whether Waysians will be part of America's next elite. They already are. Check any elite university, any modeling agency, any Olympic roster.
The real question is: What happens when "looking American" stops meaning melting pot and starts meaning mixed prototype?
If 276% growth in one decade is the preview, we're not talking about a marginal identity group. We're talking about the future default.
If Waysians are becoming the cultural hinge of 21st-century America, what new norms, aesthetics, and values will they establish that the rest of us haven't even caught up to yet?
If Waysians are becoming the cultural hinge of 21st-century America, what new norms, aesthetics, and values will they establish that the rest of us haven't even caught up to yet?
Sources:
- U.S. Census Bureau: Multiracial Population Growth
- U.S. Census Bureau: Multiracial Youth
- Pew Research: Key Facts About Asians in the U.S.
- Pew Research: Intermarriage Trends
- Statista: Median Household Income by Race