8Books Review: Rise: A Pop History of Asian America from the Nineties to Now

Rise: A Pop History of Asian America from the Nineties to Now is a monster of a book — both in that it is chock full of excellent content and that it literally weighs a ton (okay not a literal ton, but how is co-author Phil Yu holding it with just one hand). Written by an all-star team of journalist/critic Jeff Yang, Angry Asian Man Phil Yu and co-founder of Wong Fu Productions Philip Wang, Rise traverses decades of Asian American history, pop culture, books, movies, music, and more. Starting with BEFORE, Rise dedicates most of its pages to sections on the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s, and then goes BEYOND.

And despite its textbook-like weight, it reads as anything but. The tone is super conversational, friendly, and often hilarious even when tackling less than hilarious topics like yellowface across the decades. And it’s beautifully designed to boot, filled with brightly colored illustrations, lists, round table conversations, pull-out spreads, graphic novel storytelling and more that keep the 450+ pages entertaining and lively. Plus the authors invited scores of other folks to add their voices: “We don’t claim to be the only observers of this journey, the most objective, or the most diverse. We’re three guys of East Asian descent, and two of us are named Phil. So we’ve reached out to many people to help tell this story.” To name a few: a conversation between Rosalind Chao, Ming-Na Wen, Lauren Tom, and Tamlyn Tomita (if I need to tell you who they are, you definitely need this book); playlists for each decade from Richie “Traktivist” Menchavez, and “Postcards from Asian America.”

Some of what’s covered I knew, some of it I lived through (why yes, I did have an AOL screen name with AZN in it, and it’s surreal to see it reflected back as a larger phenomenon), but tons of it was new to me. Growing up in white suburbia in the 90s meant I had limited access to the wider world for many reasons, not least of which was that the only TV I could watch was PBS. So there’s lots I missed — like Asian Avenue, which I was too young to have experienced, or the whole Fast and the Furious thing and how many Asian Americans have won reality television contests, which I can only really blame on oblivion — and lots I’ve come away from Rise wanting to know more about. But even for the things I remember living through, the YouTubers I remember gaining fame, the groundbreaking politicians I remember getting elected, it’s great to see it all together, and to have so many voices and stories included. I can’t even begin to cover the half of what’s in here. But you really come away with a sense of steps forward and steps backward, and how Asian America has built itself up on the shoulders of those who came before.

I appreciate how BEFORE offers a concise but pretty thorough jaunt through Asian American history 101 and much of what set the stage for the larger part of the book — including immigration history, where the term Asian America came from anyways, Vincent Chin, and Miss Saigon. And then comes the bulk of the book on the 90s, 00s, and 2010s. The co-authors’ each introduce a decade, sharing their own experiences while linking it to the larger context of major shifts and events in Asian America (Jeff for 90s, Phil for 00s and Philip for 10s). Next are entries like Founding Fathers and Mothers, the Asian American Syllabus of “must-consume media,” Undercover Asians, and the Asian American Yearbook that are repeated each decade, as well as decade-specific pieces like Wen Ho Lee, FAQs about Apu, and a conversation on Black and Asian. I loved the pull-out spreads illustrating different spaces — the Home, Asian Grocery Stores, Boba Shops, to name a few. Asian Grocery Stores’ feature #8 is “Bags of dried stuff: You have no idea what it is, and it smells like a dusty sock, but Grandma swears it will heal whatever ails you.” I mean, can you say, nailed it.

Rise is an homage to Asian America, its successes and its shortcomings, its diversity and complexity, its encounters with racism, haters, xenophobia, etc. I promise you will learn something new. And in all likelihood, you, like me, will leave with a list of books you want to read, movies you want to watch, music to listen to, and a warm fuzzy feeling for all Asian America has been, is, and will continue to be.

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8Books Review: Eyes that Speak to the Stars by Joanna Ho

Eyes that Speak to the Stars, by Joanna Ho and illustrated by Dung Ho, is the brilliant follow-up to Eyes that Kiss in the Corners. The book opens with a scene all too familiar to anyone who has grown up Asian American in the US. A young boy comes home from school hurt, because a classmate drew him a picture with “eyes like two lines stretched across his face”–not the round eyes that every other one of his classmates was drawn with. He tells his father, “But it didn’t look like me at all.” It’s a sad rite of passage that too many Asian American children have gone through, being made fun of the shape of their eyes. Sometimes in drawings, sometimes in that way that children (and sadly adults) pull on their eyes in a mockery of Asian eyes. Sometimes it’s intentional bullying, sometimes it’s stereotypes and a lack of awareness. Either way, it hurts, even if, as the young boy says, it never resembles us at all.

Eyes that Speak to the Stars takes that hurt and turns it into a beautiful message–how the young boy’s eyes are like his Baba’s, his Agong’s, his Didi’s, how magical and special they are, eyes that speak to the stars. It’s also a loving reflection on intergenerational relationships, how the boy is connected to his father, his grandfather, and then looking forward with hope, his love and connection to his baby brother.

Joanna Ho’s writing has a wonderful lyrical and cyclical quality to it, perfect for this kind of story book for children. And Dung Ho’s sweeping illustrations are imaginative, colorful, and filled with beautiful little details. I particularly love one showing Agong’s memories as he and his grandson play a game of Chinese chess. The two are seated at the center of the spread while around them swirls images from Agong’s life, including rice fields and a night market where vendors are selling mango milk and dumplings.

And if this doesn’t convince you to check it out, I loved Bookstagrammer Shuli’s (asianlitforkids) reflection:

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Year of the Tiger Running Art

Even though we are well into the Lunar New Year, I would like to share this story about an amazing Strava Running Art above celebrating the year of the Tiger, I first thought that the most amazing thing was that the runner mapped out a run to produce a beautifully detailed tiger along his path. John and I are both members of Strava, but our runs and rides don’t produce anything like this and what he and others have done through Strava path art.  I think that the most amazing thing is that if you go to the actual Strava link to the run, you can see that Lenny Maughan ran more than 95 miles in more than 21 hours through almost 9,000 feet of climb to create this!  My legs get sore when I just think about that.

The article from Running Magazine has other examples of  his artwork and describes his work process.  It also has an animation of his run accompanied by music and showing elevation changes.  Check it out!
(h/t:  akj)

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Asian Canadian Commercial Watch: Google Pixel 6 X Simu Liu | For All You Are

Asian *Canadian* actor Simu Liu is in this Google Pixel 6 commercial speaking in Mandarin showcasing the Pixel’s “Live Translate” feature.

Pretty cool to see Simu speaking Mandarin.  He sounds fluent to me, but I’m not fluent in Mandarin (I know enought to get by). I have a Pixel phone, so I’ll have to check out this feature!

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San Francisco apologizes for discrimination against Chinese immigrants

In early February, San Francisco became the fourth city in the United States to apologize for its historic systemic racism against the Chinese:

“The Board of Supervisors passed the apology resolution presented by city supervisor Matt Haney on Monday, coinciding with the Lunar New Year.

Citing heinous behavior from the mid-1800s when the city was taking shape, the resolution acknowledges “the shameful history of structural and systematic racism and discrimination against Chinese immigrants and the Chinese American community by the City and County of San Francisco (that) reaches back over 150 years and touched every aspect of life including employment, housing, education and culture.”

A violent three-day riot targeting Chinese Americans in 1877 was also among the racist incidents for which the supervisors apologized.”

San Francisco is over 35% Asian, which I think the majority is Chinese. I haven’t come across any news of any public ceremony for this apology, like there was one for San Jose which I was able to attend last fall.

 

 

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Jon M. Chu Joins Ethnic E-Grocery Weee! As Chief Creative Officer

If you haven’t heard of Weee!, maybe the online delivery grocer doesn’t deliver in your area (their major markets are SF Bay Area, LA, Seattle, Portland, San Diego and New York but expanding rapidly). Weee! was founded in Fremont, California (San Francisco Bay Area) and is focused on ethnic food, specifically Asian and Hispanic groceries.

This past week, I saw that a friend of mine who works there, posted on Facebook that Weee! announced that director Jon M. Chu (of ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ fame) joined the company recently as Chief Creative Officer:

“It was Chu who, as one of Weee!’s new pandemic-era customers, initiated contact with CEO Larry Liu, who founded the Fremont, Calif.-based company in 2015. The two men – both Chinese Americans from the San Francisco Bay Area – got to talking, and to their surprise, an opportunity to collaborate emerged.

“I don’t know any combination of two people coming together with as different skill sets as us, but what we found in common was the idea of creating a new experience for food buying and, in that, culture sharing and passing,” says Chu. “It just became a very potent idea to me that I couldn’t let go of.”

In addition to being a signature element of his films, the sharing of food is part of Chu’s roots. His father, Lawrence Chu, opened the Chinese restaurant Chef Chu’s in 1970, and the family continues to run the beloved Silicon Valley staple to this day. “I’ve watched food spread the ideas of who we are as a family, as a people, both at the ground level at the restaurant and on the movie side,” the director says. “This idea of being able to make that experience accessible to everybody using story doesn’t mean [screen] content. It means the actual experience of discovering something.”

Weee!’s website and mobile app currently already have a social component alongside the e-commerce; each product’s page includes a robust reviews section where customers post photos and multilingual quick takes, but Chu and his team will ideate ways to further enhance engagement, including tapping into the director’s extensive rolodex for partnerships with Hollywood studios and Asian American leaders and influencers like the nonprofit Gold House.”

That is pretty interesting to see what Weee! and Chu are doing. I happened to organize some “Gold Open” buyouts for ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ (and even made it into one of Chu’s Twitter or Instagram videos) as well as for Shang-Chi and Eternals. My favorite film that has Asian food in the background is one of my favorite films by Ang Lee Eat Drink Man Woman, which happened to also be remade as an American film featuring a Hispanic family, Tortilla Soup.

What I found really interesting to read was that Chu had reached out to Weee! first. Given his family’s background, its no wonder that Chu has a connection to food. Food is obviously a very important part of cultural connection to any ethnicity, and it’ll be interesting to see what Chu comes up with at Weee! Maybe a YouTube webseries feature Weee! groceries centered around Asian and Hispanic families? Looking forward to seeing what comes out of this collaboration!

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The University of Utah honors Wat Misaka, first person of Color in the NBA

Long before Linsanity or even before any African Americans would play in what would become the NBA, Wataru “Wat” Misaka became the first person of color to play professional basketball in the Basketball Association of America, playing three games for the New York Knicks in 1947.  In January 2022 , he was honored by the University of Utah and had his jersey hung in the rafters of The University of Utah’s Jon M. Huntsman Center.  Misaka was born in Utah and lead his high school team to a state championship.  He lead the University of Utah to an NCAA tournament championship in 1944, and after serving in the Army, lead the Utes to a NIT tournament championship.  Misaka was honored in 2020 by a resolution from Utah State Senator Jani Iwamoto that recognized all that he had done.

After basketball, Misaka had a career as an electrical engineer. Misaka died in 2019, but got a chance to watch another Asian American basketball pioneer, Jeremy Lin, play against the Utah Jazz in 1993.

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Asian American Commercial Watch: P&G: Chloe Kim & ‘Always There’

I saw Chloe Kim tweet this Proctor & Gamble television ad, which is also available on YouTube (but for some reason not embeddable):

“Because her dad was always there, Chloe Kim has the confidence to stand on her own.”

I just love it. From the 2018 Olympics, I knew that Chloe was especially close to her father, who spent lots of time driving her when she was a kid to the slopes to snowboard. This commercial is such a touching tribue to Chloe’s father. A lot of the footage looks to be actual home movie footage from Chloe’s parents and reminds me a little of some of the interactions I’ve had with my young nieces. I’m hoping great things again for Chloe for these Olympics.

Shortly after I saw this commercial, I came across this FiveThirtyEight article on Chloe and how dominant she is in her sport:

Four years later, Kim continues to set the tone for her peers. An anguished transition to celebrity life resulted in Kim leaving the sport for 22 months to briefly enroll at Princeton. She returned to snowboarding in January 2021 and has won every competition since: first the Laax Open, then the World Championship, then the U.S. Grand Prix, then the Laax Open again. Three of those four wins have had margins wider than 4.0 points, including the 2021 Laax Open, which was decided by a staggering 13.25.

Such is Kim’s dominance that any result less than gold in Beijing would register as an earthquake.

“She is the greatest women’s snowboarder of all time,” said Arielle Gold, who won a bronze medal in the halfpipe in Pyeongchang. “By far.”

Kim is the Olympic, Youth Olympic, World and six-time X Games champion in the halfpipe, the first athlete to hold all four titles. She has appeared in 29 career halfpipe events 3 and has won 22 times, including each of her past 11 starts. The margin for error in snowboarding is as thin as the board, and with each rider given just a handful of runs at each event, unmitigated dominance is incredibly rare. Kim has missed the podium only twice in her 14-start World Cup career and is undefeated at world championships and Olympics. She has never missed the podium in eight appearances at the X Games.

Kim will join U.S. snowboarding legend Shaun White as one of the most marketable athletes in Beijing. And although she’s 14 years younger than the Flying Tomato, Kim already has a legacy that rivals his.”

She competes in the half pipe qualifiers on Wednesday February 9, 9:30 AM Beijing time (Tuesday 8:30 PM EST), with the half pipe finals on Thursday, February 10, 9:30 AM Beijing time (Wednesday 8:30 PM EST ).

Best of luck to you Chloe, but I don’t think you need any luck!

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CBS Sunday Morning: ‘Actor James Hong: At 92. Still going strong’

If you’ve watched any television or movies in the past 70 years, you’ve probably seen actor James Hong at least once in your life, even if you may not have known who he was. In fact, he may be the most prolific English speaking American actor ever, having been in over 600 TV and movie credits to his name. CBS Sunday Morning did a nice profile on Hong recently:

“Over nearly seven decades, James Hong has racked up more film and TV credits than almost anyone. Even more impressive, the character actor did so while confronting demeaning stereotypes in Hollywood. Turner Classic Movies host Ben Mankiewicz talks with the constantly-working Hong about a career that began with entertaining U.S. troops during the Korean War, and extended to such treasured films as Chinatown and Big Trouble in Little China.”

My first recollection of seeing Hong was in the film Big Trouble in Little China. I remembered him also in Wayne’s World 2:

When you look at Hong’s IMDB page, I’m sure you’ll find something that you’ve seen him in – even if you never realized it!

 

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Asian American Commercial Watch: NBC Sports – 2022 Winter Olympics Tie-In with Nathan Chen & Jurassic World Dominion

I’m not sure if this is airing on television – I think I caught this on the web – but this has to be one of the strangest commercials I’ve ever seen! NBC is promoting the Winter Olympics (which it is broadcasting), with a tie in with the next upcoming ‘Jurassic Park’ series of films:

“Olympian Nathan Chen is greeted by dinosaurs from Jurassic World Dominion, in theaters worldwide June 10.”


There’s really no connection between the Winter Olympics and the Jurassic Park films at all. I do like the majestic soundtrack playing with Chen skating, but I find it really bizarre that Chen is skating and then sees these dinosaurs and then the dinosaurs running away. I have to say that the commercial did its job – I clearly remember that there is a Jurassic World Dominion coming out in June, which is the 6th film in the franchise

The Winter Olympics begins today with Curling and Luge, with the Opening Ceremonies on Friday February 4

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Golden State Warriors 2022 Lunar New Year Celebration Night

The highly popular and successful Golden State Warriors play in the San Francisco Bay Area , which overall is almost 25% Asian. San Francisco, where the Warriors play in Chase Center, is itself 35% Asian, so it’s no surprise that Lunar New Year is a big deal in the Bay Area, as well as to the Golden State Warriors.

This past Saturday (January 29, 2022), the Golden State Warriors had their Lunar New Year Celebration Night for their game against the Brooklyn Nets, with lots of live and taped video entertainment during the game and I was fortunate to be able to attend on behalf of 8Asians. It’s really great that the Warriors support the AAPI community with such evenings as well as other activities in a big way.

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San Francisco Asian Justice Rally & Remembering Vicha Ratanapakdee

This past Sunday marked the one year anniversary of 84-year-old Vicha Ratanapakdee being assaulted while on a walk in San Francisco and died.

The Asian Justice Rally, held in five other cities along side San Francisco (Atlanta. Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia), all of them seeking justice for Asian Americans who have been harassed, assaulted, or killed in alarming numbers since the start of the pandemic. This week, San Francisco Police reported anti-Asian hate crimes have spiked more than 500% since the pandemic began, victims continue to come forward.

In San Francisco, there were many notable speakers at the rally, including San Francisco Mayor London Breed and San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu.

After the rally, there was a short march to where Vicha died, where there was a national moment of silence as well as a cello performance and some comments by activist Justin Zhu, “We will not be silenced.”

After that, there was a luncheon in Japantown, not too far from the rally & march locations, where a slideshow of Vicha’s life was shown, as well as many speakers discussing about the #StopAsianHate movement.

It was really great to see all of those interested and involved in the community to help address the issue of #StopAsianHate.

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