Daily Archives: May 14, 2011

Ann Curry to be new co-anchor of Today Show

Ann Curry to be new co-anchor of Today Show

Earlier this week, Ann Curry was named the new co-anchor of the ‘Today’ Show along side Matt Lauer. Five years ago, she was passed over for the position when Meredith Vieira came in. With Vieira leaving, Curry fills the role. Ann Curry likens getting the new role to the computer nerd getting asked to the prom by the quarterback of the football team.

Curry has served as ‘Today’s’ news anchor for more than 14 years, since March 1997. She has also been the anchor of “Dateline NBC” since May 2005, and she regularly substitute anchors for “NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams.” Curry has covered the major news stories of the past decade-and-a-half including three presidential elections, the September 11 attacks, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and Hurricane Katrina. She recently spent a week in Japan covering the destruction from the massive earthquake and tsunami. And just last week, in the wake of Osama bin Laden’s death, she traveled to Pakistan to report live on the developing situation on the ground in that country.

Ann Curry has distinguished herself in global humanitarian reporting, frequently traveling to remote areas of the world to cover under-reported stories. She has travelled to Sudan five times since 2006 to report on the violence and ethnic cleansing taking place in Darfur and Chad. Curry has conducted numerous exclusive interviews with world leaders and dignitaries including three sit-downs with Dalai Lama, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari’s first-ever interview with an American news organization, and an interview with former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, just two months before her assassination in December 2007. Curry has traveled the world reporting from war-torn areas, and she was the first network news anchor to report on the refugee crisis caused by the genocide in Kosovo in 1999. As part of ‘Today’s’ unprecedented Ends of the Earth series, Curry spent ten days in Antarctica and the South Pole in November 2007, and she climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in November 2008 to shed light on the global effects of climate change.

Ann Curry is slated to begin her new role in June. Here’s some of our favorite news pieces from her: Ann Curry discovers her Japanese roots and Ann Curry does comedy.

Ann Curry talks to Access Hollywood about her new role

Today Show announcement Ann Curry (see 3:20 mark)

Wong Fu Weekends : Episode 49

Wong Fu Weekends : Episode 49

Season 3 of Wong Fu Weekends concludes with the guys sharing the video they made for their 100th event held during the 2011 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival. Wes, Phil and Ted send you through a compilation of their work from the past to present. . Some of the video highlights include

music videos: That Girl, Cali Cali Cali,, NAME, Dance Like Michael Jackson, Won’t Even Start, When We Say (Juicebox), Dance to This Song, What Does It Take
short films: Strangers, again, Agents of Secret Stuff, These Four Walls, When Five Fell, and Yellow Fever
shorts series : Technology Ruins Romance (Forever Endless Valentine of my Winter Heart, The Airport, The Letters, War Torn, and Destiny) and The One Days: HK ( Dream Line, The Returning, See Through, and Lost to Luck)
web series: Funemployed

If you missed Wong Fu Productions 100th event, you can read a recap here.

Wong Fu Weekends : Episode 49

King Without A Throne by Wrex Washington x Dru B Shinin’

King Without A Throne by Wrex Washington x Dru B Shinin'

Wrex Washington teamed up with Dru B Shinin’ for his first single “King Without A Throne” off his album The Wrex Files. Wrex Washington takes the first & last verse, while Dru B Shinin’ carries the middle. They kings without a throne. It’s great to see collaboration outside the Asian American community.

King Without A Throne by Wrex Washington x Dru B Shinin’ (contains profanity)

Toyota Corolla use virtual pop diva Hatsune Miku in US Market

Toyota Corolla use virtual pop diva Hatsune Miku in US Market

Toyota’s 2011 Corolla campaign for the Asian American market announced a new partnership with Hatsune Miku, a unique musical artist known for her songs, dance moves and long, blue pigtails. Most interestingly, Hatsune Miku is a 3-D holographic character developed to put a face on a singing synthesizer software developed by Crypton Future Media. The campaign showcases the 2011 Corolla and introduces the virtual pop diva, a native of Japan, to her growing fan base in the U.S. Toyota Corolla will serve as the proud sponsor of Hatsune Miku’s first U.S. concert performance, slated for July 2, 2011 at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles, CA during Anime Expo 2011.

Working with its Asian American advertising agency, Toyota has built an integrated marketing campaign that includes TV, print, out-of-home, digital and social media, primarily targeted to the Asian American market. Not only are commercials in English, but it has also been translated to Cantonese, Mandarin, Korean, and Vietnamese. The campaign launched on May 5, 2011 with commercial spots on YouTube, garnering over half a million views in less than three days. With big dreams in a compact package, both the Corolla and Miku are driving straight to the top. The best-selling compact car, Corolla’s updated exterior and interior design and technology features allow it to stand out from the compact vehicle category, much like Hatsune Miku does in her field. No wonder it was Hatsune Miku’s top choice for her first vehicle in the U.S.

Watch Hatsune Miku as she steps out of her new 2011 Toyota Corolla and then steps onto the stage.

Blackout Step Team : Kollaboration Boston 1 Winners

Blackout Step Team : Kollaboration 1 Winners

Blackout, Tufts University’s all-male step team, took first place at the inaugural Kollaboration Boston 1 competition on Saturday, April 16, 2011. In front of over 1000 audience members at the John Hancock Hall in downtown Boston, Blackout performed a crisp, high-energy routine that ultimately beat out the eight other competing acts in combined audience reaction and judges’ scores.

As the members – Kyle Carbone, Groom Dinkneh, Chris Owens, Ekow Essel, Drew Bibby, Fernando Fiorentino, and Karl Wang – stood backstage after the show, all that they could say at first amidst their shock and excitement were words of gratitude. “It’s for everybody, not just us,” said Owens, in reference to their win. “We appreciate the help and the cooperation everyone’s given us and it’s just amazing.” Added Dinkneh, “It’s the greatest thing that’s happened to the group, that’s for sure.” The step tradition has roots in African culture, and Blackout was founded in 2004 under the Tufts African Students Organization, according to their website. Today, the diversity of the group – which Fiorentino likened to “a Gap commercial” – is a testament to how successfully the team, in its short history, has been able to bring an appreciation for step to a much larger community.

Their diversity also illustrates how far Kollaboration has come as a movement in the entertainment industry. Eric Nam, the executive director of Kollaboration Boston, thought that Blackout was very deserving of their win, despite the fact that the team doesn’t exactly have the look of a typical Kollaboration winner. “Kollaboration Boston is about uniting and empowering,” Nam said. “We sought to showcase the talents and abilities of Asian Americans across all forms of the fine arts.

At it’s core, Kollaboration should rise above racial bounds; this is why we exist in the first place. The men of Blackout put on an outstanding show and in the end, I only have to say, ‘Congratulations!’”

The team, in return, credits a lot of their success to shows precisely like Kollaboration, shows that help to get people to “look at you,” which Bibby described as another key factor in becoming successful. All of the current members had little to no experience with step coming into Blackout, but through hard work, dedication, and a lot of performance, wound up loving the dance form. The team used Wang, whom Fiorentino called one of the team’s best steppers, as an example of someone who worked through his initial intimidation on Blackout by continually putting himself in front of audiences.

“For anyone trying to make it out and trying to make their big break,” Bibby advised, “just go out there and keep trying.” For their first-place win, the team received the Kollaboration trophy and $1000, as well as a trip to Kollaboration in LA later in the year.

Blackout Step Team : Kollaboration 1 Winners