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W H A T ' S   N E W
FEBRUARY 2005

Scan and Review the Highlights From the Various Categories Listed Below
  APA Legal News Business News Christianity News Community News Dance News  
Diversity News Entertainment News Fashion News Film News Literature News  
  Music News Political News R.I.P. Television News Tsunami Relief News  
     
 
NEWS FROM ASIA
 
     
 

EDITORIALS
DEFINITION OF STEREOTYPE:
One way to define the term "stereotype" is as a "loaded image," an image that is associated with a set of meanings and generalities. Thus, a racial stereotype is an image imposed on a racial group that defines that racial group according to a generality or a set of generalities become associated with an image and become stereotype? It occurs through repetition.

DIFFERENCE BY INTERACTING, WE ALL BECOME STRONGER
Cellist Yo-Yo Ma believes that by interacting with others in the world, we all become stronger. That goes for music, he says – and everything else too. "I think one of the best lessons that I received from my parents is to have the ability to understand the world beyond yourself," says Yo-Yo Ma.

DIFFERENCE SECOND CLASS CITIZENS
"Heretofore, Japanese Americans (during WWII) were considered second-class citizens, linked to Japan and not to be trusted," he (Shigeya Kihara) said. "Here they were asked to do something of vital service to the United States (Government Language School), very critical not only for the U.S. Army but for Japanese Americans."

DIFFERENCE EVIL WINS WHEN THE GOOD ARE QUIET
"How could such evil (Holocaust) happen in a cultured and highly sophisticated nation-state in the heart of Europe whose artists and thinkers had given the world so much," (Secretary-General Kofi) Annan asked. "Truly is has been said: "All that is needed for evil to triumph is that good men do nothing." "The purveyors of hatred, were not always and may not be in the future, only marginalized extremists," he said.

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN GOOD AND GREAT
We often have the notion in our culture that the Great Teacher is a Great Communicator: the enthralling evangelist, the mesmerizing orator. Of course, being able to communicate powerfully is vital to effective teaching. But it is still secondary. What separates good from great, across professions and domains, is the ability to receive before you transmit. Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel stated "It is not too late for today's children, ours and yours."

UNFORGIVEABLE BLACKNESS
A "Word to the Black Man" (in 1910) warned "do not point your nose too high" and intoned: "If you have ambition for yourself or your race, you must try for something better in development than that of the mule."

COMMUNITY NEWS

FILM NEWS

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APA & MEDIA NEWS

R.I.P.: ROBERT MATSUI
Democratic Rep. Robert T. Matsui of California, who spent time in an internment camp for Japanese-Americans as an infant during World War II and went on to serve 26 years in Congress, has died of complications from a rare disease. Doris Matsui will be seeking her late husband's Congressional seat.
Read More>>>>>

STEPHEN CHOW'S KUNG FU HUSTLE
"Kung Fu Hustle,'' the latest film by Hong Kong's hottest comic actor and director Stephen Chow (who is a big fan of Bruce Lee, has broken the Chinese territory's opening day box office record with 4.11 million Hong Kong dollars. A sequel is already being planned.
Read More>>>>>

GEISHA: BEYOND THE PAINTED SMILE
The West has long been fascinated with Eastern sexuality. Throughout its encounters, it has struggled with these passions, from indulging them in secrecy and condemning them in public to embracing them openly.
Read More>>>>>

KEANU REEVES IN "CONSTANTINE"
Keanu Reeves keeps his hair dark and his own accent in place for "Constantine," the Warner Bros. film.
Read More>>>>>

MARTIAL ARTS: DANCE IN ANOTHER REALM
As she whirls though the room, flinging sleeves against drums, this dazzling "Echo Game" sequence offers a vision of what a dance musical might be in the hands of Zhang Yimou and Tony Ching Siu-Tung. And even when the film evolves into an extended chase - or when "Hero" juxtaposes conflicting versions of the same events - the stylized combat scenes punctuate the narratives like dance numbers in a vintage MGM musical.
Read More>>>>>

DRUNKEN MASTER 3 WITH TONY JAA & JACKIE CHAN
Tony Jaa, the star of "Ong-Bak: The Thai Warrior," will play Jackie Chan's student in "Drunken Master 3." In the movie, Jackie will be playing the master and Jaa will be playing as Chan's student.
Read More>>>>>

ADOPTED WOMEN & THE FUTURE
Family trees have deep and distant roots when you are a foreign-born orphan raised in an American home. Hollee McGinnis, 32, was adopted from South Korea at 3 1/2 years old.
Read More>>>>>

JULIE CHEN & LESLIE MOONVES' MEXICAN HONEYMOON
CBS honcho Leslie Moonves and his bride, "The Early Show" anchor Julie Chen, enjoyed a Mexican honeymoon after getting married on December 23, 2004 at a private home in Mexico.
Read More>>>>>

CAROL LIU & MICHAEL PEEVEY - CAUGHT IN A TAX SCHEME
Tax evaders or victims, the La Cañada Flintridge couple have landed in the middle of a national uproar over questionable tax shelters. Michael Peevey and Carol Liu are among thousands of wealthy Americans who used the sophisticated strategies to avoid paying billions of dollars in taxes.
Read More>>>>>

KATRINA LEUNG'S SPY CASE TOSSED
Charging prosecutors with willful and deliberate misconduct, a federal judge dismissed all criminal charges against a former FBI informant accused of serving as a Chinese double agent.
Read More>>>>>

AMY TAN'S "THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF FAITH"
There are two kinds of writers in this country: those who write for critics, and those who write for readers. Since 1989's, Amy Tan has distinguished herself as one of America's most talented writers of the latter sort: Her prose is clean and elegant, her characters and stories engaging.
Read More>>>>>

1 PART JAY-Z, 2 PARTS LINKIN PARK
Jay-Z and Linkin Park did a "Mash-Up" - which is is a completely new track in which the vocals of one track have been mixed over the music of another track that uses elements of tracks from different genres.
Read More>>>>>

NEED FOR APA JUDGES
With the nation's highest concentration of APAs and some 150,000 lawyers, the California Bar, in 2001, was 83 percent white, 6 percent Asian American, 3.7 percent Hispanic and 2.4 percent African American; it was 68 percent male and 32 percent female.
Read More>>>>>

IMMIGRANTS CREATE NEW MARKETS
With a critical mass of Chinese immigrants, the Bay Area is fast becoming the destination of choice for music acts, including pop, rock and rap, from China. The groups -- relegated in the past to local hotels, casinos and colleges -- are now performing in mainstream venues, although promoters can't use traditional ways to reach fans.
Read More>>>>>

CHINA GOLD RUSH
The current China frenzy has only progressed to the second of five phases that define most gold rushes. (Spark, Boom, Bust, Mature Growth and Decay)
Read More>>>>>

HARUKI MURAKAMI'S KAFKA ON THE SHORE
In big ways, "Kafka on the Shore" doesn't work. The ways in which it consistently does work, taken together, are a bigger accomplishment than the book's fuzzy and banal themes.
Read More>>>>>

TED NAGAKI - WWII HERO
How did a Japanese-American soldier - mistrusted as a Nisei and limited to pruning trees and landscaping the grounds on a wartime military base in World War II - arrive in an elite team of Japanese- Americans serving in the China-Burma-India Theater? How did he become part of the first espionage unit the United States used behind Japanese lines?
Read More>>>>>

KOREAN/COREAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE ON TV
Egg WestCoast is a video magazine show about the Corean American experience on the West Coast. The show is targeted toward the 16 to 35 year-olds trying to strike a balance between the demands of their Corean heritage and of fitting into American society.
Read More>>>>>

MORGAN CHU WINS $82M FROM SONY
Irell & Manella's ace patent litigator Morgan Chu won an $82 million verdict against Sony Corp. Chu's client Immersion Corp. sued Sony for infringing on patents relating to the mechanism that feeds into the joystick the vibrations and jolts that create the impression of being in physical contact with the game's reality.
Read More>>>>>

CYNTHIA KADOHATA WINS AWARD
Cynthia Kadohata wins the American Library Association's Newberry Award about her book describing a Japanese-American girl growing up in the U.S. South and another about a kitten who mistakes the moon for her bowl of milk.
Read More>>>>>

R.I.P.: SHIGEYA KOHARA
Shigeya Kihara, the last surviving original instructor of the first U.S. Army language school, which was founded in 1941 to teach Japanese to American soldiers, has died. He was 90.
Read More>>>>>

TED (BUN TAK) NGOY - DONUT KING & HIS GAMBLING PROBLEMS
Once, he (a Chinese Cambodian) enjoyed the warmth of family and the respect of his community. Once, he was a poor boy who carried away one of Cambodia's wealthiest daughters. Once, he was a millionaire who met three U.S. presidents.
Read More>>>>>

ART & SCIENCE OF THE SHILL
Celebrity transcends mere fame; it has become so integral to our experience that an advertiser who ignores star power risks losing cultural relevance. At the same time, the star and the brand must match perfectly or today's wised-up consumers won't find it credible. So the celebrity endorsement, which began as a simple advertising strategy, has become a sort of science.
Read More>>>>>

AMY TAN @ MICHAEL TILSON-THOMAS B-DAY BASH
Guests at the Jan. 13 event included composer John Adams; novelist Amy Tan; Rep. Nancy Pelosi; chef Alice Waters; broker Charles Schwab; Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich; Mayor Gavin Newsom; gazillionaire Gordon Getty and his wife, Ann; and actor Robin Williams.
Read More>>>>>

JESSICA YU'S NEW DOCUMENTARY
Jessica Yu's new documentary is an attempt to connect with an artist of disconnect and a foray into the disturbing, mysterious vision of Henry Darger.
Read More>>>>>

DISTINCT LITERARY VOICES: ALICE TUAN & NAOMI LIZUKA
Naomi Iizuka and Alice Tuan Are Among 6 Distinct Voices with L.A. Roots.
Read More>>>>>

RADIO WAVE OF ANGER OVER ASIAN SLAP
A popular hip-hop radio show is in hot water over a parody that mocked victims of the South Asian tsunami catastrophe, calling them "screaming chinks" and "little Chinamen."
Read More>>>>>

COMCAST PURCHASES I-CHANNEL
Cable giant Comcast Corp. will expand its efforts in ethnic-targeted programming with the conversion of a recent channel acquisition into an all-Asian network.
Read More>>>>>

EXHIBITION DOCUMENTS BLACK & ASIAN TIES
The martial arts-inspired "Black Belt" exhibition in Santa Monica focuses on the ties between black and Asian American artists.
Read More>>>>>

THE BEST DIM SUM
The best, most sophisticated and creative dim sum in the country can be found in the San Gabriel Valley, home to the nation's largest Chinese community, nearly a quarter of a million people has lured several restaurateurs from Hong Kong, the acknowledged center of the dim sum universe, to open branches here.
Read More>>>>>

RUTH PEASE'S DIVERSITY EFFORTS
She made her first move toward opening a school when she took care of toddlers at home in the early 1940s. Her concern about diversity was expressed early on and would continue throughout her tenure with the school. The U.S. was at war with Germany and Japan when Pease took in a boy whose father was Chinese and whose mother was white. His parents had difficulty finding day care for him.
Read More>>>>>

HAWAII'S MERCHANT PRINCE
Afong's life has been written about before. American novelist Jack London "put words in his mouth" as Dye puts it, in his 1909 short story Chun Ah Chun, and Afong's great-grandson, Eaton "Bob" Magoon, Jr., brought his story to Broadway in 1961 in the musical 13 Daughters, with the late Don Ameche as Afong.
Read More>>>>>

Q - A DANCING APPLE ISSEI
Nagoya-native Q (aka Kumi Naito) is one of the many new `Issei' or Japanese immigrants who are cultural refugees drawn to New York's creative clamor and in search of freedom for their spirits. This 26-year-old Japanese woman with cornrows is one of the street break dancers and member of Float Committee, a crew of young black dancers. This is a wild departure from the stereotype of the past Japanese immigrant that are young, artistically inclined, open to risks and twice as likely to be female than male.
Read More>>>>>

GWEN STEFANI'S HARAJUKU GIRLS
Gwen Stefani's "Harjuku Girls" is arguably the centerpiece of her delicious "Love Angel Music Baby" album. The song is Stefani's ode to Japanese pop culture (and Harjuku's colorful youth scene in particular) that was the primary source of inspiration for the record and her L.A.M.B. fashion line.
Read More>>>>>

SUCKER FREE CITY
Sucker Free City (written by Alex Tse), the latest effort from the prolific Spike Lee, takes some of the director's classic themes — urban turmoil and culture clashes — while transporting the action from his regular NYC turf to San Francisco. The film centres around three young men of different races who are all involved in illegal activities in their own neighbourhoods.
Read More>>>>>

 
 

Aishwarya Rai, the reigning queen of Indian cinema who has starred in 24 Bollywood films over the last seven years and a classically trained dancer, has been called the most beautiful woman in the world – according to thousands of Web sites, a British magazine, Internet polls and even Julia Roberts.

Despite being virtually unknown in the United States even though fans have created more than 17,000 Web sites devoted to her and her beauty compared to Grace Kelly, Ingrid Bergman and Elizabeth Taylor – she is among the elite of an industry that attracts a global audience of 5 billion people, which is twice the reach of Hollywood.

The reasons Bollywood films have such universal appeal and influence is that the industry produces three new films that are distributed worldwide every day and because they're squeaky-clean. There are no sex scenes, not even kissing. Every time you think someone's going to do it, they'll burst into song instead.

She has never kissed on screen -- not even after 24 films because kissing is taboo in the Indian cinema. Rai said if she did kiss someone on screen in a Hollywood movie, it would create a minor scandal among her fans. “In our society, you don't really see people around the street corner kissing or being extremely or overtly physically demonstrative," she said. However she won't rule out kissing in films when she moves from "Bollywood" to Hollywood -- although she says it is certain to create a minor scandal among her fans.

Rai grew up in a strict middle-class home, who lives and works in Bombay India, is the daughter of a merchant marine and a writer. She was an "A" student on track to becoming an architect, until the "Miss World" pageant came along. At age 21, Rai became Miss World and soon becoming the brightest star in Bollywood.

This independent and astute businesswoman negotiates her own contracts, including endorsements for L'Oreal, Coca-Cola and DeBeers diamonds. She is not only one of the wealthiest women in India, but Time magazine named her one of the 100 most influential people on the planet. When she's seen in new clothes, it invariably sparks a new fashion trend. Choosing what to wear, she says, is not so much about caring as it is, "just about being open to life and trying different things out."

 

Her future includes going to Hollywood and she has several films lined up – the first project is from the director of "Bend it Like Beckham" (Gurinder Chadha) and called "Bride and Prejudice." She recognizes that India's "good girl" is bound to run up against something of a cultural hurdle: kissing men on the big screen.

This Greek goddess with the soul of an Indian (who always seek to be “real”) is a source of pride for many of her people because there really hasn't been that strong a representation of the Indian in Hollywood." With Rai in the vanguard of an Indian invasion, that could change. Is Hollywood ready?

 
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