Colorado balloon boy Falcon Heene: I notice when Asian Americans are in the news, for good or bad

The Heene family in a publicity shot from ABC, for the network

I don’t know about other Asians, but I bet Erin and I are not the only ones who flinch whenever we hear or see coverage in the news media that involves an Asian or Asian American. If it’s good news, hooray and we cheer on the butt-kicking Asian, or applaud the award or medal or accomplishment.

But if it’s bad news, we share the tragedy, shame or embarrassment as if it’s happening to our own family.

A good example is the big story today north of Denver, where a six-year-old boy reportedly climbed into his parents’ homemade flying saucer-shaped balloon which took off and floated for several hours across northern Colorado. The media first reported that the “balloon boy” had crawled into the balloon and managed to untie a tether, which set the helium-filled craft free into the sky. Continue reading

Asian Americans have a place in the Obama administration

The Asian American blogosphere is all abuzz, and with good reason. The White House has more AAPIs in high places (the Cabinet) than ever in history. And yesterday, President Obama signed an executive order restoring the President’s Advisory Commission and White House Initiative on Asian American and Pacific Islanders. Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke, who is Chinese American, and Education Secretary Arne Duncan will serve as co-chairs.

The the commission was originally created during the Clinton administration, but it expired during George W. Bush’s presidency and was not reauthorized. That alone says a lot about Bush’s view of AAPIs as a force in this country, I think. It also says a lot about Obama’s empathy for and understanding of AAPIs as a people who are woven throughout the fabric of American society.

As part of the ceremony, Obama also paid tribute to the South Asian celebration of Diwali, the end of the harvest season in India and Nepal.

The video of the ceremony is above; here’s the full text of President Obama’s speech: Continue reading

visualizAsian.com has three great interviews coming up: Filmmaker Lane Nishikawa, Angry Asian Man Phil Yu & author Lac Su

Lane Nishikawa, writer, star and director of "Only the Brave," which comes out on DVD nationally on VeteranWow. Wow. Wow. It’s a triple play. It’s a hat trick. It’s an Asian American trinity, sort of.

Erin and I have booked three killer guests for our visualizAsian.com series of interviews in the AAPI Empowerment Series:

Next Tuesday, Oct. 20 at 6 pm PT we’ll speak to filmmaker Lane Nishikawa of “Only the Brave,” an independent movie about the Japanese American soldiers who fought during World War II that will be released nationwide on Veteran’s Day;

On Tuesday, Nov. 10, we’ll spend an hour getting to know Phil Yu, the man behind the must-read news site about Asian Americans, AngryAsianMan.com;

And on Tuesday, Nov. 17, we’ll meet Lac Su, the author of a powerful new memoir, “I Love Yous Are for White People.” Continue reading

“White on Rice” is a winning Asian American movie

Hiroshi Watanabe as Jimmy and Nae as Aiko in "White on Rice"
Hiroshi Watanabe as Jimmy and Nae as his sister Aiko in director Dave Boyle’s independent film “White on Rice.”

Erin and I attended a screening tonight of a new movie, “White on Rice,” sponsored by Denver’s Asian Avenue Magazine at the Starz Film Center, and thoroughly enjoyed the film. It’s a sweet romantic comedy about an affable doofus of a Japanese man, 40-year-old Hajime “Jimmy” Beppu, who leaves Japan when his wife divorces him, and moves in with his sister and her husband and son in America. A hapless loser, Jimmy’s reduced (when he’s not living in a park or in his company’s broom closet) to sharing his young nephew’s bunk bed and pining after his brother-in-law’s niece Ramona, who also moves in with the family.

“White on Rice” pokes gentle fun at Japanese cultural values and personalities (the gruff, the clowny, the servile) but does it with respect, never lowering itself down to parody or worse, stereotype.

The movie’s chockfull of Asian Americans in addition to the rich portrayals of the Japanese characters: Jimmy’s employer,a customer service company, has several Asian Americans, including Jimmy’s friend Tim, played by James Kyson Lee of “Heroes” fame, who ends up being Ramona’s love interest, thwarting Jimmy’s obsession. The ensemble cast, which includes Hiroshi Watanabe as Jimmy, Japanese actress Nae as Jimmy’s sister Aiko, Mio Takada as Aiko’s husband, Lynn Chen (viewers may recognize her from “Saving Face”) as Ramona, and very young Justin Kwong as the strange and wonderfully straight-faced kid Bob.

The cast is mostly Asian and Asian American. Almost half the dialogue is in Japanese with subtitles. And, the co-writer and director, Dave Boyle, is a 27-year-old Mormon Caucasian from Provo, Utah.

“Yeah, that’s always the first question people ask,” he said tonight after the screening. “So, what’s with the white guy making a movie about Asians?” Continue reading