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Wong's Lost and Found Emporium

"Wong's Lost and Found Emporium"
The Twilight Zone episode
Wong's Lost and Found Emporium.jpg
Scene from "Wong's Lost and Found Emporium"
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 9b
Directed by Paul Lynch
Written by Alan Brennert
Original air date November 22, 1985
Guest appearance(s)

: David Wong
Anna Maria Poon: Melinda
Carol Bruce: Mrs. Whitford
Stacy Keach, Sr.: Elderly Man
Jack Jozefson: Cashier
Marty Levy: Customer

Episode chronology
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"Dead Woman's Shoes"
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"The Shadow Man"
List of The Twilight Zone (1985 TV series) episodes

: David Wong
Anna Maria Poon: Melinda
Carol Bruce: Mrs. Whitford
Stacy Keach, Sr.: Elderly Man
Jack Jozefson: Cashier
Marty Levy: Customer

"Wong's Lost and Found Emporium" is the second segment of the ninth episode from the first season (1985–86) of the television series The New Twilight Zone. The episode is based on the short story "Wong's Lost and Found Emporium", by William F. Wu, first published in Amazing Stories, May 1983.

David Wong (), a young Asian American, has spent three years looking for a mysterious place called "The Lost and Found Emporium". He finally tracks it down in a backroom of a sleazy San Francisco porn shop, but once inside, he finds that the place has no owner or any staff.

Browsing around, David runs across an elderly woman, who walks through a door, apparently from downtown Fort Lauderdale, looking for lost time. He is not interested in her story, but suddenly, he sees an orb of light which is trying to point him to something. Following the orb, which the woman does not see, he finds a cage with mice with instructions to rub them until they calm down. Believing that this is her chance to win back her lost time, the woman tries to do so, but mice scatter away before she manages to do it. She breaks down in tears, with David just condescendingly quipping "them's the breaks" and walking away.

The next person David meets is an elderly man, who came to the emporium by accident. He eventually admits he lost the respect of his children, and David grudgingly points him (with help of the orb) to a mirror, which he should look at for no less than five and a half minutes. The man begins this procedure, but is disgusted by what he sees—a distorted, monstrous image of him. Unable to control himself, he smashes the mirror, then realizes what he has done. And just like with the old woman, David just shakes his head and leaves.

As he is walking away from the man, David is confronted by Melinda, who scolds him for his lack of compassion. David admits that it is his compassion he is after, explaining how he lost it years ago due to racial intolerance he encountered in his life. He mentions the murder of Vincent Chin, which was an important event for the Asian American community in the USA. Melinda offers him a deal—she will find his compassion if he finds her lost item, which she will not reveal. David agrees, and follows the orb to an old thermos, which releases a stream of vapor. After inhaling the vapor, Melinda cannot stop giggling—she got her sense of humor back. She then points David to his lost belonging, in shape of three flasks, with one containing his compassion.


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