Gil Asakawa's Nikkei View | All Posts
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OK, I had to post these two photos, in which Spanish athletes mock Chinese by pulling back their eyes to make them slanty -- ha ha ha. The first is a posed shot of of the Spanish Olympic basketball team. It was used in an ad in a Spanish newspaper, which calls into question not only the photographer, athletes and team management's judgment, but also the national newspaper's staff and management. The second photo is of the Spanish tennis team, celebrating after defeating the Chinese to go on to the Fed Cup finals earlier this year. Man, I haven't seen that done since I was in grade school -- in the mid-1960s, when the expression was "enhanced" by the person sticking out his (or her, apparently) buck teeth and speaking in a heavy, phony Asian accent, saying crap like "ah-so!" and "herro, I solly, no tickee no laundoree." You'd think we'd moved past that kind of third-grade cruelty by now, but nope. Not in Spain, anyway. What were they thinking? Are racial mocking stereotypes acceptable in Spain where they're frowned upon here? Do Chinese athletes go around finding ways to mock Spanish athletes? These photos disgust me.

Check out the widget above. What’s a widget? Widgets are cool, portable little online features that you can put onto websites easily by just copying a little bit of code into your page. I'm helping to get the word out about The Denver Post's widget for coverage of the Democratic National Convention, coming up in a little over a week here in Denver. It’s a simple way for sites to include syndicated content from outside sources, contained within a defined box or space. Think of all the different elements on a MyYahoo or iGoogle home page – those individual boxes of content are all widgets on the page.

I just got a surprising amount of respect for Hilton, who responded this week with this spoof to an ad by John McCain's campaign criticizing Barack Obama for being too popular, and comparing him to Britney Spears and Paris Hilton: See more funny videos at Funny or Die And this one is just a wonderful acknowledgement of Joe Cocker's impenetrable mumbling. Yeah,...

. Saw this via Angry Asian Man (a daily must-read): Young Asian Americans are proving they can dance, and not just on MTV's "America's Best Dance Crew." This cool video is performed by FarEast Movement but created by Wong Fu Productions, a trio of Chinese Americans from UC San Diego who started making cool content online in 2003 and now run...

The Bagel is a boisterous, old-fashioned kosher deli in the Old Orchard Mall in Skokie, where Erin and I eat every time we visit Chicago. I always order an egg cream, a soda fountain fave from New York that I've never been able to order in Denver. Erin's favorite is the Mish Mash, a gigantic bowl of chicken noodle soup...

Erin, Jared and I ate at a Benihana restaurant recently, and then learned just a couple of days later that Rocky Aoki, the founder of the Benihana chain, had died. I wrote about my experience growing up eating at Benihana for special family occasions, and how in recent years, the restaurant only has one connection to being a Japanese eatery: its food. The staff at the one we go to, for instance, used to have one Japanese woman chef, which was a rarity in the entire company, but she's been gone a couple of years now. The waitstaff and cooks are all non-Japanese, and as far as I can tell, the chefs are all Latino. They love to tell jokes about how they serve "Teri-juana" sauce (get it? Tijuana, teriyaki?). They no longer are sent to Japan to train with master chefs like they used to decades ago. But they are all trained well as entertainers, and come up with some amazing tricks with their knives, throwing food around and catching the morsels. The food's still good, which is why we go from time to time... probably once a year, if that. (YouTube has a lot of videos of dinners at Benihana, including the one above, of a birthday celebration. Most evenings at the restaurants are interrupted by the clatter of multiple birthday celebrations.) The diners likewise are no longer Japanase or JA families. The diners are almost all white; a couple of weeks ago, we were the only Asians in the room.

Erin, our friend Joe Nguyen and I dined the other night at Korea House, a popular restaurant in Denver (actually, Aurora, the eastern suburb, where the Korean community is concentrated). The dinner was part of an arrangement by Korea House to advertise in Asian Avenue Magazine, and we were there to write a preview of the eatery. We had the full spread of Korean barbecue -- Bulgogi (marinated sliced beef), Calbi (marinated beef shirt rubs, cut off the bone) and Spicy Chicken -- as well as some Soon Doobu (seafood tofu stew) and Bibimbab (meat and vegetables served with spicy sauce over rice). The food was good (I'll post a link to the advertorial when it's up) and the experience was fun.