Daily Archives: August 24, 2009

Asian Americans protest The Goods at Paramount

The Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) and Media Action Network for Asian Americans (MAANA) protested in front of Paramount Studios in Los Angeles on Friday. (See their statements here and here.) The protest was centered around a scene in “The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard” where Ken Jeong‘s character is a victim of a hate crime. The scene was promoted in the trailers for The Goods. Paramount has apologized and are pulling scene from the trailer. However, the scene remains in the film. Paramount is also offering to discuss the scene with Asian American leaders.

Paramount Pictures is also responsible for the production and casting of “The Last Airbender” film.

Asian Americans protest The Goods at Paramount



M.I.A. revealed

We know M.I.A. as a musician and an artist. She’s also known as Maya Arulpragasam, a Sri Lankan refugee and activist. During a vacation in Sri Lanka, the things we normally take for granted inspired her to create her music with a message. Watch this short clip about M.I.A. She was named on the Time 100 list of “World’s Most Influential people”.

This has been a big year for M.I.A. with Swagga Like Us with T.I. and “O Saya” off the Slumdog Millionaire Soundtrack.

M.I.A. revealed

"I Love Yous are for White People" : The Making of a Memoir

I Love Yous are for White People” : The Making of a Memoir is a short documentary based on the HarperCollins published memoir of Lac Su, a young Vietnamese refugee at the time who struggled to find himself on the mean streets of West Los Angeles. As a young child, Lac Su made a harrowing escape from the Communists in Vietnam. With a price on his father’s head, Lac, with his family, was forced to immigrate in 1979 to seedy West Los Angeles where squalid living conditions and a cultural fabric that refused to thread them in effectively squashed their American Dream. Lac’s search for love and acceptance amid poverty—not to mention the psychological turmoil created by a harsh and unrelenting father—turned his young life into a comedy of errors and led him to a dangerous gang experience that threatened to tear his life apart.

Directed by film producers Steve Nguyen and Brian L. Tan, the documentary takes you through a journey of Lac’s past revisited after 15 years. Heart-wrenching, irreverent, and ultimately uplifting, “I Love Yous Are for White People” is a memoir at its most affecting, depicting the struggles that countless individuals have faced in their quest to belong and that even more have endured in pursuit of a father’s fleeting affection.

This reminds us of the Vietnamese American Oral Histories Project. There’s a potential collabo here.

“I Love Yous are for White People” : The Making of a Memoir