Daily Archives: January 22, 2011

Tiger Mom Amy Chua PBS interview & discussion

Tiger Mom Amy Chua PBS interview

Last week Yale law professor and author Amy Chua interviewed on PBS about her new book “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.” She was nice but defensive. With the firestorm set off by the Wall Street Journal article “Why Chinese Mothers are Superior,” she is set on addressing various misconceptions about the book and the article from the WSJ.

Here’s five things to know about Amy Chua
1. Book is a memoir, not a how to guide. She believes prosperity can’t last more than 3 generations.
2. Amy Chua not good at writing humor, but this is subjective.
3. Her sister has down syndrome, but Tiger Mothering has given her a productibe life
4. She is surprised by the tone of the back lash from the Wall Street Journal article. She’s received death threats and been called abusive.
5. She’s making bank with a $500k book advance and the book is currently the #1 Nonfiction Bestseller on amazon.

Chua admitted that casting the book as a clash of cultures may have roused passions. “I’m talking about Chinese values versus Western values, and that’s such a hot button issue right now,” Chua said. But she defended her book, saying it was an expression of core American values as much as anything else. “The current model of relatively permissive and coddling parenting,” Chua said, “I think it’s pretty recent.” Of American parents, she added: “A couple generations ago, they actually parented very similar to the way I did.”

Amy Chua interview on PBS about her book, which is as much about her mistakes as a mother as it is her triumphs.

U.S. and China relations with first half discussion about Amy Chua. Jeff Yang participates in the discussion. See his article Mother, Superior?

Children of Invention on Hulu

Children of Invention on Hulu

If you missed the film Children of Invention on the film festival circuit, the movie is now FREE on Hulu. Director Tze Chun makes a “fine feature debut” (NY Times) with this multiple award-winning Sundance 2009 film. Here’s a synopsis of the film:

After being evicted, hardworking single mom Elaine Cheng (Cindy Cheung, Lady in the Water) tries to maintain a normal life for her children, Raymond and Tina. Elaine juggles a number of jobs, including working for a questionable pyramid scheme. When Elaine doesn’t return home one night, nobody knows the kids are home alone, and they are left to fend for themselves. As the days pass, Raymond, a budding inventor, realizes he needs to come up with a plan to take care of his little sister.

We’ve been impressed with their multi-channel distribution method bypassing traditional distibution. They began selling DVD while the film was on the film festival circuit and eventually through all major retailers like Amazon. Other innovative techniques they’ve tried include YouTube rentals and doing a collaborative theatrical release with White on Rice. They’re not done yet. In addition to Hulu, you can expect the film to hit PBS in New York this month too.

Children of Invention on Hulu

Asian Americans for the Trevor Project

Asian Americans for the Trevor Project

Pan Asian Community Together releases the third of its PSA projects, “APIs for the Trevor Project.” The Trevor Project works every day to save the lives of young lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning people, through direct crisis intervention, suicide prevention, education and advocacy efforts. (See Darren Criss support the Trevor Project : Not Alone by Darren Criss and Teenage Dream by Darren Criss x Katy Perry) Directed by Benjamin Wong and produced by PACT and Ken Choy, the PSA includes Sue Jin, Francois Chao, Megan Lee, Jully Lee, Randall Park and Jae Suh, Eli, zabeth Sung, Steve Nguyen, Aki Aleong, and Tzi Ma.

PACT produced “Speak Out against Violence” directed by Shane Sato, and “Get Out the Vote” directed by Mark Niu.

Asian Americans for the Trevor Project