Daily Archives: May 20, 2010

FM SATELLITES – Episode 22

FM SATELLITES – Episode 22
The latest song from Far East Movement blowing up the ‘Net and radio stations is “Like a G6“. This transmission of FM Satellites goes behind the scenes as FM does a music video for the track. This one’s gonna by fly like a g6. Here’s the lowdown:

The Far East Movement team up with director Matt Alonzoe and Skee Tv for the official music video shoot for their new single “Like A G6” around where they live in Downtown LA. The music video gives you a look at the Far East Movement staying free wired all night in LA. Cameos from The Cataracs, Dev, The Stereotypes, Colette Carr, Wong Fu Productions, The Social Trust, Transparent Agency, Stampede Management, Cashmere Agency, Orisue Clothing, Karmaloop, IZ, Power 106, Q104.7, DJ City, Cherrytree Records, Interscope Records, Skee Tv and more.

That doesn’t sound like a music video shoot to us. That sounds like a party up in there. For Wong Fu Productions that would be up in da club.

FM SATELLITES – Episode 22

Karate Kid Love with Happyslip

Karate Kid Love with Happyslip
Apparently, Happyslip is a big fan of the original Karate Kid movies, especially Karate Kids 2, the one set in Japan. Check out her own remake of the tea ceremony with Ralph Macchio. BTW – Tamlyn Tomita was in Karate Kid 2.

The remake with Jaden Smith and Jackie has some many things wrong with it. The biggest thing that bother us is that the title of the film is Karate Kid, but throughout the whole trailer they keep saying Kung Fu. Ummmm… Hollywood, Karate and Kung Fu are different martial arts disciplines.

Karate Kid Love with Happyslip

Karate Kid Love with Happyslip (behind the scenes)

Officer Bart Kwan wants you to vote

Officer Bark Kwan wants you to vote
Here’s another PSA from the Reel in the Vote 2010 campaign. This time we spotted Officer Bart Kwan of Just Kidding Films. The PSA was directer by Karen Lin. (check out some of Karen’s other work Sublingual by Scott Tang and 2010 Census – Taiwanese American PSA.)

If you think you can made a better PSA, join the 30- SECOND VIDEO CONTEST

If you have access to a video camera and a great idea, here’s your chance to make a difference and win cash + an all-expense paid trip to the San Diego Asian Film Festival! We are looking for the most creative, 30-second videos that promote and encourage voter registration and participation in the APIA community. This competition is free and open to anyone. Deadline is August 31.

For more questions please e-mail INFO@SDAFF.org

Officer Bart Kwan wants you to vote

Laura Ling talks on Oprah, Larry King, and Today Show

Laura Ling talks on Orpah, Larry King, and Today Show

Laura Ling broke her silence about her North Korea ordeal. Along with her sister Lisa Ling, she hit the talk show circuit to talk about her experience in North Korea along with promoting her new book about the whole situation. The sisters hit Orpah, Larry King, and Today Show. Read more about what happened here. Here’s more about the book:

On March 17, 2009, Laura Ling and her colleague Euna Lee were working on a documentary about North Korean defectors who were fleeing the desperate conditions in their homeland. While filming on the Chinese–North Korean border, they were chased down by North Korean soldiers who violently apprehended them. Laura and Euna were charged with trespassing and “hostile acts,” and imprisoned by Kim Jong Il’s notoriously secretive Communist state. Kept totally apart, they endured months of interrogations and eventually a trial before North Korea’s highest court. They were the first Americans ever to be sentenced to twelve years of hard labor in a prison camp in North Korea.

When news of the arrest reached Laura’s sister, journalist Lisa Ling, she immediately began a campaign to get her sister released, one that led her from the State Department to the higher echelons of the media world and eventually to the White House.

Somewhere Inside reveals for the first time Laura’s gripping account of what really happened on the river, her treatment at the hands of North Korean guards, and the deprivations and rounds of harrowing interrogations she endured. She speaks movingly about the emotional toll inflicted on her by her incarceration, including the measures she took to protect her sources and her fears that she might never see her family again.

Lisa writes about her unrelenting efforts to secure Laura and Euna’s release. Offering insights into the vast media campaign spearheaded on the women’s behalf, Lisa also takes us deep into the drama involving people at the highest levels of government, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former Vice President Al Gore, Senator John Kerry, and Governor Bill Richardson—intense discussions that entailed strategically balancing the agendas and good intentions of the various players. She also describes her role in the back-and-forth between North Korea’s demands and the dramatic rescue by former President Bill Clinton.

Though they were thousands of miles apart while Laura was in captivity, the Ling sisters’ relationship became a way for the reclusive North Korean government to send messages to the United States government, which helped lead to Laura and Euna’s eventual release.

Told in the sisters’ alternating voices, Somewhere Inside is a timely, inspiring, and page-turning tale of survival set against the canvas of international politics that goes beyond the headlines to reveal the impact on lives engulfed by forces beyond their control. But it is also a window into the unique bond these two sisters have always shared, a bond that sustained them throughout the most horrifying ordeal of their lives.

Get Laura and Lisa Ling’s book “Somewhere Inside: One Sister’s Captivity in North Korea and the Other’s Fight to Bring Her Home”.

Surviving North Korea, Laura Ling spent 140 Days in Captivity. She talks about her stomach ulcer. How it delayed her entrace into the labor camps and her experience with North Korean medical procedures.

Laura and Lisa Ling will discuss Laura’s imprisonment in North Korea with CNN’s Larry King

Journalist Lisa Ling says she feared for her sister Laura’s life as she remained in a North Korean prison accused of being a spy.

Represent by Iris Yamashita

Represent by Iris Yamashita

Here’s another short film Represent by Iris Yamashita from the Interpretations Film Initiative. Using the same script seen in Far East Futura and Orient Express, Iris Yamashita (Oscar nominated writer, LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA) directs a completely different concept. Her short involves dance and disabilities. The piece was choreographed by Phillip Chbeeb & Di “Moon” Zhang. Along with the choreography, the pair show their moves along side dancers Yuri Tag, Aye Hasegawa, Arielle Coker, and Troy Austria. The crew really wants to inspire those who are struggling with disabilities to see all the options they have to express themselves INCLUDING DANCE.

See more dance moves by Phillip Chbeeb & Di “Moon” Zhang in 0 views, The Sleep Sweepers, Magic Bathroom, Office Life, and Take Me Back

Represent by Iris Yamashita

Represent by Iris Yamashita (behind the scenes)

Someday Interview with May Ling & MinhTu Van

On the channelAPA.com East Coast tour, we chatted with singer/songwriter May Ling and executive producer MinhTu Van of the music video Someday, a song about domestic violence. We learn about their respective music and filmmaking backgrounds. Additionally, they talk about how the music video came together and what it means to them. This project fused a non-profit organization (New York Asian Women’s Center) with talented artists. Not only do they promote social activism and awareness, but they also show how the video is used to help those faced with domestic violence. Look for a potential music video about child trafficking in the future.

Someday Interview with May Ling & MinhTu Van

Someday music video