UFC Waterson vs. VanZant

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkTSVkS6uUc

Asian American mixed martial artist Michelle “The Karate Hottie” Waterson will be headlining Saturday’s UFC Fight Night card against Paige “12 Gauge” VanZant in a 115 lbs strawweight bout. The event will be in Sacramento, VanZant’s home court.

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Since her win over Angela Magana at her UFC debut back in the summer of 2015, Waterson has had to cancel two fights due to injuries.

VanZant is coming off a win against Bec Rawlings, but spent the earlier part of this year getting into the finals of Dancing with the Stars.

I predict Waterson to win, not just because she’s more seasoned and experienced. Waterson’s game and skills are a lot more refined. Plus, the Karate Hottie is fighting out of what is consistently considered the best MMA fight gym out there, Jackson-Wink MMA.

Of course, anything can happen in the octagon, but I’m looking forward to seeing Waterson making her way up the ranks and taking that UFC strawweight belt.

I'm pumped up after watching my teammates get down👊let's go!!!! #ufcsacramento #teamhottie

A photo posted by Michelle Waterson (@karatehottiemma) on

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‘Fresh off the Boat’ Episode Review: “Where Are the Giggles?”

Fresh Off the Boat, Season 3, Episode 8: “Where Are the Giggles?”
Original airdate December 13, 2016.

fotb_s03_e08-7Microsynopsis:  The Huangs get free passes to see Jingle All the Way at the movie theater, but in their haste to get there early enough to grab the good seats, they leave Evan behind.  Louis and Jessica call Marvin, asking him to go over and keep an eye on Evan until they get home.  When Marvin enters the house, he steps into a Home Alone trap Evan has set, injuring his back.  Marvin sues Louis’s insurance company, but his muscle relaxant sends him into strange dreams, in which he is visited by three ghosts whose aim is to convince Marvin to drop the lawsuit.  Jessica, in a fit of guilt, promises to buy Evan the year’s most in-demand toy: Tickle Me Elmo.

Good:  This episode is crammed with all kinds of badness, but there are a few highlights.

  • The three ghosts payoff is hilarious.  I won’t be specific in case readers haven’t seen the episode yet, but that third ghost makes the super-tired A Christmas Carol sitcom device completely worth it.
  • Deidre is usually super annoying, but there’s something sweet yet still dispicable about her interactions with Jessica, and when Richard steps in and saves Jessica’s day, it’s a moment of grace that’s sort of the theme of this episode.  It’s my favorite moment.
  • Am I allowed to say that Honey, who is always beautiful, is especially so this week?  ‘Cause she is.
  • Did we already know that the big stuffed bear in Cattleman’s Ranch is named Mark?  Highlight!
  • “Except for the Sinbad lines, I laughed all the way through.”
  • Marvin is seen twice reading Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club.

fotb_s03_e08-14Bad:  These reviews are always subjective — I am only qualified to respond to something from my own point of view, with my own knowledge, experiences, and biases, but this week’s is especially biased.

  • I hate Home Alone.  Hate it.  I have never liked one moment of it, and I have seen it more times than I care to admit.  I found the Home Alone stuff in this episode annoying.
  • I love A Christmas Carol, and although I’m tired of the three-ghosts motif in sitcoms, I admit it’s usually pretty interesting.  However, would these sitcoms please get the name of the third (sometimes fourth, in shows that do a Jacob Marley intro ghost thing) ghost correct?  It’s the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come.  “The Ghost of Christmas Future” grates on the ears and makes me shudder.
  • I hate Elmo.  Hate him.  I love the Muppets, and I love Sesame Street, but Elmo is a crime against Muppetdom.  And Tickle Me Elmo is the worst incarnation of him.  Have you seen Tickle Me Cookie Monster?  He’s adorable.  Tickle Me Elmo is one of the worst things about the Nineties.  Everything you hate about Millennials is either Elmo’s fault or represented perfectly in Elmo’s existence and popularity.
  • Jessica is made out to be the bad guy when she doesn’t slide over to let Richard and Deidre sit in the middle of the row.  This is one of my major peeves.  People who arrive late should never ask for seating rearrangement if it means moving people who get there early.  “Would you mind moving over, so my date and I can sit together?”  Listen, I sympathize.  But as someone who is often on planes, in restaurants, and in theaters by himself, I am asked to move far too frequently.  Why is my seating preference less important than yours?

fotb_s03_e08-10FOB moment:  “You don’t dream in Mandarin, do you?”

Soundtrack flashback:  There’s a brief instrumental bit, in the scene where Marvin is visited by the Ghost of Kwanzaa Present, that sounds for all the world like Vince Guaraldi playing “O Little Town of Bethlehem” in the A Charlie Brown Christmas style, but I can’t track down evidence that this exists.  Yeah, I know it’s not a difficult style to emulate; I thought maybe this was a test of some sort.  I think I failed.

Final grade, this episode: Although I like the theme of extending grace (Marvin and Louis to each other, Evan to Jessica, Richard to Jessica, and (sorta) Deidre to Jessica), there are too many plot-related things that rub me completely the wrong way.  C+.

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8Books Review: “The Boat Rocker” by Ha Jin

boatrockerThe Boat Rocker, the latest novel from author Ha Jin, follows a journalist Feng Danlin as he becomes immersed in one particularly outrageous story.

Danlin, the book’s narrator, works for a Chinese newspaper located in New York, and is assigned a story about his ex-wife Haili. His articles begin reporting on suspicions about the hype being bred around Haili’s forthcoming novel–that they are all exploitative lies. As the narrative unfolds, it centers around both their personal relationship and antagonism, and the relationship between official Chinese media and independent journalists in the diaspora.

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‘Dr. Ken’ Episode Review: “Ken’s Apology”

Dr. Ken, Season 2, Episode 10: “Ken’s Apology”
Original airdate December 10, 2016.

dr_ken_s02e10-17I have done all that I could to see
Ken overlooks something crucial in a patient’s medical history.  He feels terrible about it and wants to apologize to the patient, but Pat informs him very firmly that apologizing means admitting fault, which is against Welltopia’s policies.  If he does so, he will lose his job.  D. K. goes to Dave’s parent-teacher conference.  He accuses the teacher of not challenging Dave enough, and without clearing it with Ken or Allison, applies to have Dave skip a grade.  D. K. also tries to set Molly up with his barber’s son, a boy who’s “Korean and a boy,” and therefore perfect for her.

the evil
I really hate this D. K. story, even though it rings mostly true.  As a career educator, I’ve heard more than my share of stories just like this, and most of it’s pretty believable.  I think I’m just tired of this plot device.  It almost ruined Everybody Loves Raymond, a good show that could have been a lot better with grandparent figures who weren’t so there.  Even the Molly part of this episode isn’t bad, such as it exists.  I think my problem is that D. K. is the least interesting character, yet he’s given far too central a role this season.  I’m tiiiiiiiiiiiiiired of it.

dr_ken_s02e10-11and the good
The Ken story is really well done.  It’s like the writer whose job is to add the wackiness and the writer whose job is to make everything heavy-handed took the week off together.  The seriousness with which Ken, Pat, and Allison treat this mistake is convincing.  Since the three of them aren’t making silly jokes, Damona and Clark, who don’t have a story this week, get to add the comic relief, a dynamic that’s been consistently effective this season.  The resolution at the bowling alley, when the patient offers his hand and Ken instead gives him a hug, is an excellent payoff because it’s so well set up.  It’s sweet, funny, and very serious all at once, nicely dismounting and then sticking the landing in a way Dr. Ken doesn’t often exhibit.

without hiding; you must help me if you can.
Except for D. K., everyone in this episode is great.  Molly and Dave (who has one of the best lines, when he calls Jay “K-Pop”).  Damona, Pat, and Clark.  Allison and Ken.  Don, the patient.  Jay, the Korean boy.    This could have been a top-five episode for this show.  3.5 appointment books out of 5.

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Eking out a living riding a bus: Asian American Seniors in New York

8a-2016-12-120116-wabc-casino-buses-seniors-02-imgIn the Asian ethnoburb where I live, one sees three kinds of buses.  One kind is the Santa Clara Valley Transit public transportation bus, and another is the kind is the tech bus, as white Google buses pick people up and drop off every week day near my house.  A third kind is the bus that stops at the local Asian shopping center that picks up people to trips, often to casinos.  My dad takes buses like this to gamble at distant casinos like Cache Creek – about two hours away from my house.  I recently saw this article and was stunned to learn that some Asian Americans from New York, mostly seniors, take a similar two hour casino bus ride for a surprising reason: to make ends meet.

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Asian American Commercial Watch: Ken Jeong, Nissan & ‘Rogue One: A Star Wars Story: Going Rogue’

I’m eager to see the new Star Wars spin-off movie, ‘Rogue One: A Star Wars Story’, which takes place between the Episode III and Episode IV.

aacw_nissan_ken_jeong_nissan_star_wars_rogue_one

It’s no surprise to see trailers for the movie, but it was a pleasant surprise to see actor Ken Jeong in a commercial tie-in with Nissan, where Nissan happens to have an SUV that is named Rogue (which existed before the movie)

Looking forward to seeing the actual movie. The trailers have been terrific.

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‘Fresh off the Boat’ Episode Review: “The Taming of the Dads”

Fresh Off the Boat, Season 3, Episode 7: “The Taming of the Dads”
Original airdate December 6, 2016.

fotb_s03e07-7Microsynopsis:  Eddie and Alison celebrate their first anniversary with a night at the 1996 Romeo + Juliet.  Louis discovers that Alison’s father also loves Shakespeare, sparking an awkwardly chummy friendship.  The dads have so much fun together that Alison realizes she and Eddie no longer have that kind of fun, prompting her to break up with him.  Jessica is called for jury duty, but is furious that she’s not elected foreperson.  Emery and Evan receive a gift Tamgotchi from their cousin in Taiwan.  They are at first elated, but the little virtual pet becomes a nuisance.

Good:  The Alison-Eddie stuff is pretty good.  I love that Eddie has matured in his thinking about women, but he’s also still a young man with a lot to learn.  Alison continues to be a bright spot whenever she’s in an episode.  Louis is awful in this, but Randall Park’s acting has some really nice moments, especially near the end, in two one-on-one scenes with Eddie.

fotb_s03e07-5Bad:  Jessica’s story is unremarkable, and although the Tamagotchi idea is cute, there’s really not enough there.  They might have done better to move up in the craze, to where many young people had three or more Tamagotchis and had to ask friends to sit for them sometimes.  As it is, the little toys haven’t been released in America yet, so the device itself is the story, which isn’t as interesting as the mania that surrounded it for such a brief moment.

I can’t decide if the Louis-Gary relationship is so bad it’s good or so bad it’s horrifying.  Either way, it’s bad!

FOB moment:  Jessica tries to bribe the other jurors with oranges.

Soundtrack flashback:  “Two Princes” by Spin Doctors (1993).  Your reviewer is not ashamed to say he approves.

Final grade, this episode:  It’s an utterly forgettable episode, I am sorry to say, with a few moments but little else.  C+.

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Amanda Nguyen and the Federal Sexual Assault Survivor’s Bill of Rights

Given the fact that 62,759,366 Americans just voted for a misogynist to take the highest office in our land, the work of courageous individuals such as Amanda Nguyen are more important today than ever before.

Nguyen was assaulted in college and her rape kit was removed and almost destroyed. There’s a limit to how long a rape kit can be kept in Massachusetts, where she went to college, unlike in states like California and Texas, where kits are not destroyed.

Her activism has led to an official Federal Sexual Assault Survivor’s Bill of Rights, the first time the term “sexual assault survivor” has been used in federal law.

President Obama signed this into law on October 7, 2016.

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‘Dr. Ken’ Episode Review: “D. K.’s New Girlfriend”

Dr. Ken, Season 2, Episode 9: “D. K.’s New Girlfriend”
Original airdate December 2, 2016.


dr_ken_s02e09-15
The patient’s immediate condition.
Allison and Ken have problems with D. K.’s not respecting boundaries while living in their house.  When Ken tries to talk about the issue with him, D. K. decides to move in with his girlfriend of three weeks, an arrangement Ken is not comfortable with.  Allison, on a mother-daughter spa day with Molly, confesses that she’s having trouble with her adjustment to Welltopia, and although she likes Clark and Damona, she’s frustrated with their involvment in her personal life.  Ken lets Dave attend a jazz festival with Pat.  When a pretty woman strikes up a conversation, assuming Pat is Dave’s adopted father, Dave plays along so that Pat might get to know her better.

Some indicators questionable.
The execution is a little shenanigany for my tastes: an orange bra and men’s dress socks strewn across the living room couch, Clark and Damona stealing someone else’s couples massage, for example.  But it’s a small quibble in an episode where the central characters for once act like normal people with normal issues.

dr_ken_s02e09-1Vitals are stable and within normal limits.
Well heck.  That’s certainly not something I’ve seen before.  I just Googled “later life crisis,” and it’s apparently a thing.  While the setup is only marginally interesting, the concern Ken feels about his dad’s state of mind when D. K. moves out is convincing, and when he talks to him about it, D. K.’s existential response is also convincing, in a way that doesn’t come out of left field like some of this character’s serious moments in recent episodes.  It’s well done, and the characters don’t force the poignancy, as is their wont.

Unforced is a nice way to describe the whole episode.  There’s a nice theme through all three plots, where Molly, Dave, and Ken play grounded, self-aware, sensitive children advising their parents — in Dave’s case, advising his real dad and his fake dad.  What I really love is that this all works because the characters have already been established this way, not as wise-beyond-their-years children, but as well-adjusted, independent thinkers who have been encouraged to become these people.

It all works together to allow Clark and Damona to go a little crazy, and their comic relief is genuinely funny, and well timed.  When the show doesn’t depend on zaniness, the zaniness does its job.

Patient is conscious and comfortable.
A pleasant surprise.  While the episode neither goes for nor achieves wow, it’s a solid, thoughtful, believable half hour.  4 ice chips out of 5.

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‘Fresh off the Boat’ Episode Review: “WWJD: What Would Jessica Do?”

Fresh Off the Boat, Season 3, Episode 6: “WWJD: What Would Jessica Do?”
Original airdate November 29, 2016.

fotb_s03e06-3Microsynopsis:  Jessica’s Sunday excursions to Costco with Evan are threatened by her son’s sudden interest in church.  Louis accepts some free dental care from Marvin, who gives him extra-extra white teeth without asking first.  Emery and Eddie struggle to consume all the bad cereal from the variety pack so Jessica will buy them some more Frosted Flakes.

Good:  This is probably meant to be way, way down on the list of good things about the episode, but I’m used to seeing cynical or condescending portrayals of churchgoers in the mainstream media.  It’s nice to see a funny but fair take on a topic Hollywood seldom treats with any sincerity.  The Jessica-Evan story is really silly, but they make it work on the strength of their well-established relationship and Constance Wu’s great acting.  The Eddie-Emery story is kind of a throwaway, but it has its moments too.  I like it when the usual Evan-Emery dynamic is broken up so each character can spend time away from the other.

fotb_s03e06-13Bad:  I’m going to admit that the bright teeth gag got a few laughs out of me, mostly courtesy of grandma, but this is a crazy plot idea.  It feels like a three-joke gag that reaches for nine jokes.

FOB moment:  Jessica is completely unfamiliar with the Noah’s Ark and Jonah stories.

Soundtrack flashback:  “It’s Not Unusual” by Tom Jones (1965, sung by Evan).  “Playaz Club” by Rappin’ 4-Tay (1994).  “Missing You,” the Tina Tuner cover of the John Waite song (1996).

Final grade, this episode:  I dislike the dumb story ideas, but I like the jokes and acting, plus the non-cynical portrayal of a young boy’s exploring spirituality.  It’s also nice to see Yeardley Smith’s face instead of just hearing her voice.  Give it a solid B.

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8Books Review: “The Art of Confidence” by Wendy Lee

taocWendy Lee’s latest novel, The Art of Confidence, takes readers through the tale of a single forgery, its making and unmaking. Liu Qingwu is a poor artist hawking goods outside the Met in New York City, when he’s approached by a Chelsea dealer to recreate a work. Little does he know her motivations (to save her aunt’s gallery) or her intended price ($2 million). All he knows is that it is a job, and he long ago failed to become as successful as some of his friends.

As the tale unwinds, Lee takes us through the stories of all the different players, shifting narrative voices between chapters. In one, we hear from Liu. In another, from Caroline Lowry, the gallery owner. Later, from Molly, Caroline’s college best friend’s daughter and now gallery assistant, and from Harold, a Taiwanese businessman intent on buying an expensive piece of art.

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Asian American Commercial Watch: Kay Jewelers’ “With This Ring”

https://youtu.be/Zg-qQ2_As4s

I haven’t caught this on TV yet, but saw this Kay Jewelers’ commercial posted on Facebook recently – where Kay Jewelers shows men proposing to women asking them to marry them.

8asians_aacw_kay_jewelers_1

8asians_aacw_kay_jewelers_2

What is notable of course is that in one particular case, we see a handsome Asian American man proposing to an attractive blond white woman. Usually, the pairing is often the opposite … I think the first time I noted this was in a McDonald’s commercial. Kudos to Kay Jewelers on going against the grain …

 

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