Slant'd Accepting Submissions For Issue 08: Wild

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

From the email/release:

Hi there,

We're excited to share that the next issue of our literary magazine is in the works!

For Issue 08 (Wild), we invite you to share your stories of adventure. We’re looking for stories of people venturing off the beaten path and bravely going against societal convention. We want stories of travel—the sights you saw, the people you met, and the insights you gained along the way. Wild includes stories of spiritual awakening and the freedom that comes from embracing your full, vibrant self. Wild asks us to reconnect with nature and examine our role in this world. Issue 08 will be a celebration of what happens when we follow our curiosity and dive in head first into the vast, uncharted wilderness of our lives.

What to submit:
We welcome original works of creative nonfiction (personal essays), poetry, illustration, and photography. Don’t worry about submitting a finished draft—we only need your story pitch and an outline. 

Who can submit:
Anyone! No MFA, no agent, no previous bylines needed. We prioritize potential over polish and art over accolades. You don't even have to call yourself a "writer" to pitch us. You just have to have a story worth telling—and we'll help you bring it to life.

This especially goes for AAPI writers and artists who identify as disabled, neurodivergent, trans and LGBTQIA+, or are over the age of 30. Your story has a home here.

What the process is like:
Every contributor is paired with a dedicated editor, layout designer (and if you're a writer, then you'll also be paired with an artist!) to workshop their story from idea to page. Think of it like developmental editing meets coaching.

Here's what one of our writers from Issue 07 had to say about it:

"My experience with Slant'd was one of both validation and growth. I start with validation because, at every point in the editorial process, I was reminded that I belonged and that my work was of worthy quality, which helped me process feedback and tackle each challenge with the confidence needed to not only improve what we were working on but also grow as a creative more broadly. - Dakota S.

Know someone with a wild story to tell? Forward this email or tag them on our Instagram post!

Share your wild story by 4/19 at 11:59 PM PST

ACLU’s Cecillia Wang Challenges Taking Birthright Citizenship Away. Set For A Supreme Court Fight

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Glad to see that we are right in the thick of things and not leting these moments pass us on by. 

Wang, the group’s national legal director, will urge the justices to reaffirm the Supreme Court’s 1898 ruling in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, which held that children born in the US to foreign nationals are citizens under the Constitution. Wang said that decision has become the foundation of post-Reconstruction America.

“Our entire country has been built on the basis of birthright citizenship,” Wang said. “To reinterpret, or overturn—which the government is really asking them to do—would shatter the foundation of American life.”

The article also quotes more from Wang on being a second gen immigrant and the meaning of the 14th Amendment.

“I’m one of countless millions of second-generation Americans for whom the birthright citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment is very meaningful,” Wang said. “And there are many, many millions more, tens of millions of people, who have an ancestor who was a citizen of the United States because of the 14th Amendment.”

“There’s a merging of how I feel personally about this case with how millions of Americans feel about this case,” Wang said of the birthright litigation. “What the executive order does is profoundly counter to this fundamentally American principle that all of us born in this country are American citizens, one and all, and that we have equal rights as citizens.

Read the article in full.

TSA Administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill On DHS Shutdown

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

In a recent artcicle Ha Nguyen McNeil said:

"We are being forced to consolidate lanes and may have to close smaller airports if we do not have enough officers. It is a fluid, challenging and unpredictable situation. This is a dire situation. We are facing a potential, perfect storm of severe staffing shortages and an influx of millions of passengers at our airports in less than 80 days".

Nguyen McNeil was referring to the start of the FIFA World Cup.

While there is an executive order it does not specify what happens with latter checks in the DHS shutdown.

Best Of: Jeremy Lin on Luka Doncic

Tuesday, March 31, 2026


Nice to see Lin making the rounds not only here but also on other shows/podcasts as well, making sure that he gets his due not only as an NBA player, which is important, but as an Asian American one.

Love it.

Jimmy O. Yang - Finally Home Trailer

Thursday, March 19, 2026


Will definitely have to get to the theater for this one:
FINALLY HOME - My 3rd comedy special will be in the movie theaters! The first Asian comedian to ever have a special in theaters 🥹🙇🏻 HK 3/20 | US, Canada 3/27 HK tix on sale now, America on sale next Tuesday Jimmy O. Yang returns home to Hong Kong for five massive arena shows for his newest comedy special - FINALLY HOME! It’s about coming home, his hilarious family, fighting for the bill, great Karaoke and so much more! This comedy special is funnier, bigger and more epic than ever. The film will be premiering in theaters only 3/20 in Hong Kong, 3/27 in US & Canada. The film is in English with some Cantonese mixed in (subtitled). Follow me on other socials: IG: https://www.instagram.com/funnyasiandude/?hl=en Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@funnyasiandude?lang=en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/funnyasian/ #JimmyOYang #FinallyHome #StandUp #StandUpComedy #MovieTrailer #ComedySpecial #HongKong

Tzi Ma, Rae Dawn Chong and Aileen Wu + Charlie Chan Is Back?

Thursday, March 19, 2026

This sounds good to me - and so many great people attached to the project:

  “Our series is a bold and necessary reinvention — a proud reclamation of a complicated legacy,” said Lee and Sager in a joint statement. “By crafting an authentic and modern hero, we are transforming a once-offensive cultural caricature into a complex, dignified protagonist for a new generation.”

Chong said she was drawn to the project’s global scope and its BIPOC representation, calling it “smart, quirky and very global.” Ma, meanwhile, spoke to the broader imperative of reclaiming culturally appropriated characters, and described Vancouver as an ideal backdrop given its embrace of multiculturalism. “We have the opportunity to lead the charge,” said Ma, “and provide this so-called ‘day player town’ the opportunity for the world to see the wealth of our Canadian talents.”   

Read it in full at Variety:  https://variety.com/2026/tv/news/charlie-chan-series-tzi-ma-rae-dawn-chong-aileen-wu-1236685930/

Suni Shouts Out Asian Women Representation And Alysa Liu and Chloe Kim

Thursday, March 19, 2026


This is just a great clip of Suni Lee shouting out to Asian Woman Representation.

Can't wait to see Lee's next projects.

Did White Liberalism Win The Oscars (AKA Gimme The Real AKA Sinners Got Robbed AKA But Junglepussy Was So Beverly Hills)

Thursday, March 19, 2026

First of all, I am not saying that OBAA was a bad movie or that it had bad performances, or that it did not have a diverse cast. 


I'm not trying to besmirch the good names of Benicio del Toro, Teyana Taylor, Regina Hall, Chase Infiniti or Shayne A McHale AKA "Junglepussy". As I finish that sentence I can't help but wonder what road I may be driving off.

But hear me out (and beware there are spoilers).

First OBAA has Leonardo DiCaprio...I mean, I feel like this is self explanatory. And his character is a hippie pot smoking "revolutionist".

Second, it's helmed by P.T.Anderson...how much more liberal Whiteness can we get there? Magnolia. Punch-Drunk Love. Boogie Nights. Cigarettes & Coffee.

All great movies. Starring White People. 

The canvas is set because you don't do all those movies with casts so trắng and move away from that (I mean one can argue it's almost impossible).

Does it get into immigrant struggles, BIPOC struggles, etc.

Yes.

But it's all done in many ways (with some exceptions simply because of what the actors brought) through the eyes of a White lens. White stories. It's like Operation Babylift--sure there were Vietnamese on those planes but the stories are told by White people, where in many ways, it's less about the Vietnamese babies and more about the people "saving" them.

Perfidia was in a weird love triangle with a racist White guy and pot-smoking-didn't-understand-her White guy who btw happens to be named "Ghetto" Pat Calhoun. Some could argue she's the Black man trope in a woman's body. And you can have some crazy BFWM dynamics but who dedicates a large portion of the movie to said racist White guy trying to find and then have his daughter killed while having that countered with a pot smoking step-in dad trying to find her, taking care of business while the Black mother is gone?

White people. They eat that up.

For a moment, why not delve into the possible and say she has that baby on her back fighting the revolution. Showing her the tools of the trade, molding her into that strong Black daughter. Why must she abandon her and move into the shadows? 

Who controls what Willa knows about her mom?

The answers are all White people.

Compare it to Sinners. 

Original screenplay.

Mainly BIPOC cast. 

Through the lens of POC trying to make their own way in a White world.

A Black writer and director. 

If we look at Sinners addressing the same issues as OBAA, just in a different time, we see completely different ways it handles the storyline, the characters, the history.

Everything about Sinners is what great cinema is supposed to be. It has layers upon layers of histories and dreams rooted in the past, connecting us as viewers. It's camera work, the direction, the acting, the storylines--those luscious shots out in the country deep with so much weight in beauty and tragedy. 

We're there in the Blues. The music that opens gateways. Delta Slim (and as an aside, why is that White actors who play roles of drunks and drug addicts get far more praise than Black and other POC actors who do the same--is it because some people don't think it's that much of a stretch for non-White actors?).

We're in worlds both known and unknown, celebrating life, telling the story of struggle and revolution.

And to be honest, I don't know if liberal White people got it as much as POC did. 

I don't know if it interested them as much, even though they have similar themes. 

It's almost as if there is that feeling of allyship without real friendship and understanding.

And to me some aspects of the endings tell the real story--Colonel Lockjaw in OBAA dies at the hands of the Christmas Avengers, which we should root for, but the Xmas Avengers are still there. The racist White guys still win and the family is still estranged--albeit being kept together by the White Savior Leo. 

In Sinners, Smoke cleans up the Klan, killing all the Klan members there, sacrificing his life, reuniting with Annie and his daughter, while Stack lives on--living a dream of being a Black man controlling his own destiny with limitless power (albeit as a vampire--because nothing is free).

When you think about what Ryan Coogler and Michael B. Jordan created together (and thankfully they both got Oscars for their achievements) in comparison to OBAA and the world they made, Sinners is the real. 

There's just no way around it.

And just like Stack says---give me the real.

P.S.

And let's always remember the power of those ending credit scenes intertwined with the music that was the lifeblood of the film, and how they tie so much together, and as viewers, how they also gave us surprise and wonderment.

It Just Feels Like Maybe We Could Use Some Retro Covers By Cathy Nguyen, Andrew Garcia, AJ Rafael, And Adinah

Thursday, March 12, 2026


It just feels like maybe we could all use a little bit of this retro Cathy Nguyen and Andrew Garcia.

That's it.

Okay. 

Maybe one more retro cover.


XO.