Daily Archives: September 15, 2010

That’s not gay! with Kevjumba

That's not gay! with Kevjumba

Kevin Wu (aka Kevjumba) talks about using the “gay” way too much. A lots of young people use the word “gay” to describe things they hate, think is stupid or lame. Kevin sets the record straight that he’s not gay and demonstrates non-“gay” actions. Watch a special scene with Kevjumba eating vanilla ice cream on a hot summer day.

Here’s a few more videos with Kevjumba that’s not gay: Funemployed and 2010 ISA NY backstage with Kevin Wu and Ryan Higa.

BTW – Look for KevJumba on Amazing Race Season 17 along with his dad.

That’s not gay! with Kevjumba

Just The Way You Are by Kina Grannis

Just The Way You Are by Kina Grannis

Kina Grannis released a video of herself singing the cover “Just The Way You Are” by Bruno Mars. Not only is she the main vocalist, but she also sings backup and background on the track. It’s like a choir of Kina Grannis(es).

She’s also got a bunch of shows all over the US and Canada. For tickets, visit here and here.

Don’t forget to pick up her Stairwells album. Available on on Kina Grannis - Stairwells. or amazon.

Just The Way You Are by Kina Grannis

We Could Happen by AJ Rafael

We Could Happen by AJ Rafael

AJ Rafael released a new original song “We Could Happen”. Inspired by the song “Introducing Me” from Camp Rock 2, he wrote a this happy, fun, simple love song. Take a listen to this catchy upbeat tune. Hope he puts it up on online.

Here’s a few more AJ Rafael originals: MidKnight, I Just Want You, (500) Days, and When We Say (Juicebox)

Update: you can now see the We Could Happen music video.

We Could Happen by AJ Rafael

Lyrics to We Could Happen by AJ Rafael

i’ll hold the door
please come in and just sit here for a while
this is my way of telling you i need you in my life

it’s so cold without your touch
i’ve been dreaming way too much
can we just turn this into reality

chorus:
cuz i’ve been thinking bout you lately
maybe you can save me from this crazy world we live in
i know we could happen cuz you know
that i’ve been feeling you

storms they will come but i know
that the sun will shine again
he’s my friend and he says that we belong together

i’ll sing a song to break the ice
just a smile from you would suffice
its not me being nice girl this is real tonight

Spice it Up by Feodor Chin

Spice it Up by Feodor Chin

From the people behind Golden Boy, comes the short film Spice It Up! for the Interpretations Film Initiative. Watch Feodor Chin and Jennifer Chang spice up their sex life. Being adventurous in the bedroom might not always come out the way you think. The tagline for this superfreaky short sums it up with “Sex. Violence. Clowns.” It’s funny and Not Safe For Work. After watching this, you’ll think that the couple should be in a KY Jelly Intense commercial. Check out his page here.

Someone get Feodor a TV show, a web series, or something. This guy cranks out some hilarious videos.

Spice it Up by Feodor Chin (NSFW)

Today is the deadline for Interpretations Film Initiative, so it may take some time for the video to load. Please be patient.

Marie Digby Interview with channelAPA.com

Marie Digby Interview with channelAPA.com

A few weeks ago, channelAPA.com had a chance to chat with the lovely and beautiful Marie Digby. We talk to her about how she got into music and both her album & webseries “Breathing Underwater.” With her music career straddling both Japanese and American music markets, Marie spends time working on and promoting her music in Japanese and English. She’ll be working on her next album soon.

Be sure to check out Marie Digby in Breathing Underwater the album and Breathing Underwater the webseries.

Marie Digby Interview with channelAPA.com

Shoutout to Kollaboration for making this happen.

In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee on PBS

In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee on PBS

Earlier this year, we saw the premiere of the documentary film “In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee” by filmmaker Deann Borshay Liem at the 2010 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival. You may have even caught the film at your local Asian American film festival. Yesterday, the film made its television debut on PBS. The film offers a fascinating look at one woman’s journey to learn more about her adoptive roots in Korea. Here’s more about the film:

Her passport said she was Cha Jung Hee. She knew she was not. So began a 40-year deception for a Korean adoptee who came to the US in 1966. Told to keep her true identity a secret from her new American family, this eight-year-old girl quickly forgot she was ever anyone else. But why had her identity been switched? And who was the real Cha Jung Hee? IN THE MATTER OF CHA JUNG HEE is the search to find the answers. It follows acclaimed filmmaker Deann Borshay Liem as she returns to her native Korea to find her “double,” the mysterious girl whose place she took in America. Traversing the landscapes of memory, amnesia and identity, while also uncovering layers of deception in her adoption, this moving and provocative film probes the ethics of international adoptions and reveals the cost of living a lie. Part mystery, part personal odyssey, it raises fundamental questions about who we are…and who we could be but for the hands of fate.

Here’s the filmmaker’s statement:

Cha Jung Hee and I were fellow orphans at the Sun Duck Orphanage in South Korea in the 1960s. She and I had nothing in common and I did not know her personally. And yet, at age eight, just before I was sent to the United States to be adopted by the Borshay family in California, my identity was switched with hers without anyone’s knowledge. I was given Cha Jung Hee’s name, birth date and family history and told to keep the switch a secret. Simultaneously, through a bureaucratic sleight of hand, my previous identity was completely erased. For years, Cha Jung Hee was, paradoxically, both a stranger and also my official identity – a persona unknown, but always present, defining my life. In my new film, IN THE MATTER OF CHA JUNG HEE, I search for Cha Jung Hee finally to put her erstwhile existence to rest by meeting her in real life and finding out how she has fared.

In the course of my journey, I meet many women named Cha Jung Hee and through their stories imagine what my life would have been like had I stayed in Korea. I also delve deeper into the bureaucratic switch that changed my life and, in the process, raise questions about the history and ethics of international adoptions from South Korea.

Look for this film on your local PBS station. If you can’t find the film on PBS, you can watch online for FREE here through October 15, 2010. Also look for Wo Ai Ni Mommy on PBS as well.

In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee trailer