“Send Me an Angel”

“Send Me an Angel”

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What was that? That was Overground, a one-hit-wonder German boy band that had a brief encounter with fame in the mid-2000s (2003-2005). He didn’t get much camera time, but did you notice the Asian kid with the high voice?

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‘Beautiful Nail’

January 29, 2010

NailSalon_AnjelahJohnson

NailSalon_AnjelahJohnson

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I was cleaning out the Epicanthus video vault when I came across this vid of Mexican American funnygirl Angelah Johnson’s then-controversial (circa 2005) Vietnamese nail salon routine. Yeah, Angelah went on to land a cast gig on MADtv, most notably as Bon Qui Qui, from over at King Burger.

  • [Update] Belgium’s Justine Henin steam-rolled China’s Zheng Jie 1 and 0 in their semifinal match setting up a confrontation with No. 1 seed Serena Williams Saturday.
  • [Update] No. 1 seed Serena Williams defeated China’s unheralded challenger Li Na, 7-6, 7-6, in a baseline-to-baseline slugfest Thursday in Melbourne to advance to the finals of the 2010 Australian Open women’s singles championship against either Belgium’s Justine Henin or China #2 Zheng Jie.
  • Chinese Players Making History at Australian Open, Yahoo! Sports
  • Zheng Donates Wimbledon Winnings to Sichuan Quake Victims, mirror.co.uk
  • Tattoo Watch: The Flower on Li Na’s Chest, tennisservedfresh.com
  • Chinese American tennis pro Vania King Sings “America the Beautiful” at U.S. Open, goldsea.com

TheBinges @ GR’s Biennale, JAMN

TheBinges @ GR’s Biennale, JAMN

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Hard-rockin’ Los Angeles-based band The Binges shook the  Japanese American National Museum to its core Sunday at Giant Robot’s Biennale exhibit.

via Cate Park

Rep. Mike Honda (D-Sacramento) points out that men of color significantly trail behind most students on achievement and school completion scales. African American, Hispanic, Native American and Asian American men are outperformed by their female counterparts in each racial grouping by 9%, 9%, 7%, and 2 %, respectively.

“We must address this crisis and quickly,” Honda wrote in an article appearing in the Jan. 26 Huffington Post. “While Asian Americans are over-represented in the top scores, they are also over-represented in the bottom scores.”

Read Rep. Honda’s entire HuffPo article here.

A chilling cautionary tale related to the 2010 U.S. Census from the Mar. 30, 2007 issue of Scientific American: “Despite decades of denials, government records confirm that the U.S. Census Bureau provided the U.S. Secret Service with names and addresses of Japanese-Americans during World War II.”

The disclosure, while legal at the time, was ethically dubious and may have implications for the 2010 census, say historian Margo Anderson, University of Wisconsin, and statistician William Seltzer, Fordham University, who together rooted out and confirmed the federal agency’s 67-year-old duplicity.

“Records show that in 1943 the Census Bureau revealed names and addresses of Japanese-Americans in the Washington, D.C., area. Prior research had found that the Bureau provided the government with less specific information about Japanese-Americans in California and other states to round them up (above) for imprisonment in internment camps,” writes JR Minkel in his Scientific American piece entitled, Confirmed: The U.S. Census Bureau Gave Up Names of Japanese-Americans in WW II. Read Minkel’s entire article here.

Census data is routinely used to enforce the National Voting Rights Act and other policies, but not in a form that could be used to identify a particular person’s race, sex, age, address or other information, Census Bureau officials contend.

The Bureau admits it provided neighborhood data on Arab-Americans to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in 2002. A provision in the controversial Patriot Act—passed after the 9/11 attacks and derided by critics as an erosion of privacy—gives agencies access to individualized survey data collected by university researchers as well.

via Larry Shinagawa, director, Asian American Studies Dept., University of Maryland.

Related resources:

In Heavy Rotation_Aaron Takahashi

In Heavy Rotation_Aaron Takahashi

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The reason that Aaron Takahashi’s face seems familiar is the hilarious “Busted” TV spot for Amp’d Mobile he shot in 2006. It’s the one where the Asian dude rocks out in the men’s room to E-40′s My Ghetto Report Card cut “U and Dat.” Since then Brutha Takahashi been blowin’ it up!

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“Rain” by Priscilla Ahn

Etheriel ~ Musings

January 18, 2010

“One of my favorite blog writers is Grace Wang, of ‘Etheriel Musings,’… She’s a natural writer. You sense no angst or hesitation in her prose. It sparkles like conversation. She attended the Toronto Film Festival, and her entry on “City of Life and Death” will not be bettered by any other critic.”
Roger Ebert

“In a perfect world, my life will be brimming with my passions: Cinema, Travelling, Writing, Photography, Fashion, and little else.”

Grace Wang

Fortune Cats

January 18, 2010

iPhone pic via Sasurau

Little Tokyo Reimagined

January 8, 2010

Intimization of L.A. streets courtesy of artist/designer David Yoon

PC vs Mac Beatdown

January 8, 2010

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