Lock and Key Podcast-Both Sides of Prison
Jay Kim grew up in a Korean-American household in suburban California - disciplined, middle class, and emotionally closed off. He never expected to find himself in an orange jumpsuit, sitting behind glass at a county jail while his parents wept in silence on the other side. No words. Just tears. That visit changed everything. In this episode of Lock and Key: Both Sides of Prison, Jay opens up about his three-year term at San Quentin State Prison, now the San Quentin Rehabilitation Center, and the unexpected journey that began inside its walls. Through a domestic violence program called HEART, Jay started excavating decades of unprocessed trauma, tracing a direct line from his childhood silence to his adult choices. He wrote. He reflected. He began to heal. Now 13 months post-release, Jay is channeling that experience into something concrete. He works with Dignify — a nonprofit tech company building an AI-powered web app designed to connect formerly incarcerated individuals with reentry resources, services, and programs in their county. No more dead-end Google searches. No more navigating a broken system alone. In this conversation, Tone and Marv explore: * What San Quentin is actually like today versus its notorious reputation * The emotional cost of growing up in a home where vulnerability was never modeled * How a domestic violence program became the catalyst for Jay's transformation * Why the reentry system is fragmented and what technology can do about it * Dignify's platform, its AI chatbot, and the roadmap to national expansion Jay's story is one of cultural identity, systemic failure, personal reckoning, and purposeful rebuilding. This is what reentry looks like when it's done right. 🌐 Learn more about Dignify: dignify.org
12 episodios
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