Cracked Up Amy Winehouse Gets Racist

Sunday, June 08, 2008



Dear Amy:

I can't believe I actually got sucked into your music for a while like the rest of the population who held you up as a soulful singer. Sure, maybe I have an excuse because of that 2007 SXSW performance, but I still can't help and feel shamed, because I pride myself on being able to spot a racist from a mile away - and somehow I missed you.

While I could go into it more, like how you especially seem to really like pissing all over me and my Asian people, there's really not much left to say except that I hope you find your way to the bottom where you deserve.

From News Of The World:

In a sequence shot around May 2007—weeks after the couple eloped to wed in Miami—they are in a dingy crack den with Delboy-style bamboo patterned wallpaper.

Amy, 24, and a pal called Sarah giggle as they sing a string of racist lines set to the tune of kiddies' favourite ‘Heads, Shoulders, Knees and Toes'.

Blake pretends NOT to record the unfolding events and eggs them on, saying: "Can we have a singsong of it?"

Sarah is at first reluctant but soon warms to the action as Amy enthusiastically sings:

"Blacks, Pakis, Gooks and Nips, Gooks and Nips!

"And deaf and dumb and blind and gay!"
She repeats the first line over again and on the word "Nips" Amy pulls her eyes into slits then pushes her boobs up in a gesture to her nipples.
View Amy's racist new single here and here.

Race Roundup

Sunday, June 08, 2008

East Texas Dragging Death Remembered 10 Years Later (FOX)

National tributes are scheduled to take place to remember the life of James Byrd Jr., who was dragged to death from a truck in 1998 by three racist Caucasian men in the small east Texas town of Jasper.
U.N. Official: Mixed Racism Picture in U.S (NPR)

Barack Obama's presidential candidacy is evidence that the United States has made significant strides in race relations, according to Doudou Diene, a U.N. official who reports on contemporary forms of racism. But Diene tells Scott Simon that the resegregation of American cities and the poor state of public education remain key areas of concern.
The Civil Rights Movement Needs to Overcome Its Fears (Washington Post)

For some civil rights loyalists, myself very much included, it's hard not to feel a spine-tingling thrill. But for a surprising number of others, the overwhelming feeling last week was apprehension. "I knew the real war was on," one friend told me. "Obama had crossed the point of no return. It was like when Jackie Robinson finally made it to the major leagues. . . . Now the gloves would come off, and failure [in November], I knew, would feel like we all had lost it -- all of black America."
Racism not dead, but socioeconomics is bigger issue (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Condoleezza Rice has more in common with Carly Fiorina, former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, than she has with a never-married mother of several living in the 'hood. Colin Powell would be more comfortable associating with other high-achieving public figures, regardless of race, than with the average black high school dropout.
Don't Duck Racism (WTVH)

Hundreds of people were at the Inner Harbor in Syracuse Saturday to bring attention to the problem of racism. Syracuse and Onondaga County leaders declared today "Don't Duck Racism" Day on the 6th annual Duck Race to End Racism.
Open-Mic: Racism in Hockey (Bleacher Report)

His name is Willy O'Ree.

On January 18th, 2008, the Boston Bruins held a ceremony at the TD Bank North Garden to honor the 50th anniversary of his NHL debut as the first black man to play in the League.

However, the history between Black players and the sport of Hockey hasn't always been bright.

Seven dead and multiple people injured in Tokyo stabbing rampage

Sunday, June 08, 2008



Talk about messed up - I just can't understand people who decide to take out their hatred with life on innocent people:

A man who police said "was tired of life" drove into a crowd of pedestrians Sunday and then went on a stabbing rampage in Tokyo's premier electronics and video game district, killing seven people and wounding 10, authorities said.

The deadly lunchtime assault happened in Akihabara district after the attacker drove a rented two-ton truck into a crowd, running over three people, public broadcaster NHK quoted an unidentified witness as saying.

News reports said the man jumped out of the truck and began stabbing the people he'd knocked down, then turned on horrified onlookers. The attacker grunted and roared as he slashed and stabbed at his victims on a street crowded with Sunday shoppers, reports said.
More news on the tragedy:

Ubuntu is the new Zen

Friday, June 06, 2008



I have to admit that while I'm all about the Big Three (and some guys named Rondo, Sam, P.J., and Kendrick among others), I also have another reason for rooting for the Celtics: Doc Rivers can become the first black head coach to win an NBA championship since K.C. Jones did it in 1986 (and 1984 too), coincidentally with the Boston Celtics as well - and while some of you might think it's a non-issue no matter what color you may be - to me it's significant - not just seeing more black head coaches in the NBA than in another Major League sport (which is significant in itself), but seeing a black head coach who's been vital in making the biggest turnaround in NBA league history go to the Finals and then win it all; because I never got to see K.C. Jones or Bill Russell do it.

I never got to know it in that way, and I want too.

I want to see Ubuntu become the new Zen.

Note To Music Companies

Friday, June 06, 2008

Just an idea - but I think it would work - and don't worry - you don't have to give me credit for it, but you certainly could (cause I'm like that).

If you truly want to make more money - and what music company doesn't - and have music reach a broader audience - especially Asian tunage here in the U.S. - just do what film companies have been doing for years now, except do it with music videos:

Add subtitles.

I mean there's so much incredible Asian music out there but it can't reach a worldwide audience in the way that it truly could because of simple language barriers.

But we love visuals. We love stories. We love music.

Just take any great foreign film that's won an Oscar and it's proof enough that even if people don't know the spoken language, as long as it has subtitles - they'll watch it.

Especially on DVD.

Think about a great compilation of Asian music videos with subtitles - stuff like Koda Kumi's Hot Stuff (one of my favorite vids by her) - or artists like Foxxi misQ, BoA, Utada, Lee Hyolee (Lee Hyori), Dragon Ash, Asian Kung-Fu Generation, Chae Yeon ---- it just gives that much more of an incentive to actually buy an artist's work while also expanding their audience.

Really - it's a no-brainer.

Checkmate

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Desi Media Networks & DNOAX

Thursday, June 05, 2008



Got some info sent to me about Desi Media Networks, an independent hip hop record label, and DNOAX, a hip hop/rap group which has more than 20 members - sounds pretty cool.

Check out Desi Media Networks here and DNOAX at MySpace.

Vietnam, Past and Present

Thursday, June 05, 2008

This sounds pretty cool. Check it out:

Six Vietnamese artists will leave Vietnam for Denmark on June 6 to participate in the "Vietnam, Past and Present" show in Copenhagen as part of Deputy PM Nguyen Sinh Hung’s official visit to Denmark from June 9-16.

"Vietnam, Past and Present" is an outdoor show that will be held from 3-7pm at the Nytorv Square in Copenhagen, organised by the Vietnam-Denmark Cultural Development and Exchange Foundation and the Vietnamese Foreign Ministry. The show was developed based on Vietnamese folk music like Cheo (traditional operetta), Xam (beggar’s songs), Quan ho (Love duet) and Cai luong (southern folk opera) and performed in World Music style.

Vietnamese folk music will be mixed with modern music to create a special kind of art.

"The show is a meeting between Vietnamese folk songs and modern western music, between traditional and electronic musical instruments to meet the strict requirements of European audiences. Through the show, European audiences will learn about a traditional, renovated and integrated Vietnam," said musician Quoc Trung, the show’s art director.
Read more down at VietNamNet.

Hot Track: Prayer + Watching Only Me

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Chris Brown and Usher fans - meet Korean R&B singer Tae Yang from Big Bang:

Belkis "Bel" Leong-Hong Backs Obama

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Here's a quick tidbit on Belkis "Bel" Leong-Hong from two nights ago who is throwing her support behind Obama - from PolitickerMD.com:

Maryland Democratic National Committeewoman and superdelegate Belkis "Bel" Leong-Hong endorsed Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) for president [...]

Leong-Hong, a former high-ranking Department of Defense employee and now the principal of a consulting firm, released a statement touting Obama as "the strongest candidate for the Asian-American and Pacific Islander community [who] understands that it’s time for AAPI issues — immigration, education, and small business policy, for example — to be discussed on the national stage."
I expect more people and communities will be coming out in the next few months offering up their support now that Hillary's campaign is over - or at least over in the nominee sense.

Epic: Black Mamba Versus The Big Ticket

Wednesday, June 04, 2008



Tomorrow night just can't come fast enough.

P.S. Kung Fu Dunk

Wednesday, June 04, 2008



I can't believe I had more than one post on you, because while you might chalk it up to me seeing you on a plane - which I don't really think made a difference - you just weren't that good.

Don't worry. I still love you Charlene.

TCM: Race & Hollywood: Asian Images in Film - Tuesdays & Thursdays in June

Wednesday, June 04, 2008



Just a reminder that Turner Classic Movies' Race & Hollywood series, focusing on Asian Images In Film, starts this month with the next set of movies and discussion happening this Thursday. Here's a link to a past post, or you can go directly to the TCM site.

CNN Reports Obama Wins Democratic Nominee

Tuesday, June 03, 2008



This is definitely a defining moment in our history, and in so many ways I just can't believe that I'm here to witness it - to actually see something so monumental happen in my lifetime.

Sen. Barack Obama on Tuesday became the first African-American to head the ticket of a major political party.

Sen. Barack Obama on Tuesday told supporters he will be the Democratic nominee.

Obama's steady stream of superdelegate endorsements, combined with the delegates he received from Tuesday's primaries, put him past the 2,118 threshold, CNN projects.

"Tonight we mark the end of one historic journey with the beginning of another -- a journey that will bring a new and better day to America," he said.

"Tonight, I can stand before you and say that I will be the Democratic nominee for president of the United States."

Read more coverage at CNN and view a piece of his victory speech below:

Geraldine, The Race Card, and Clueless White People

Tuesday, June 03, 2008



While I can't discount some of what Geraldine Ferraro had to say in her recent Boston Op-Ed concerning aspects of sexism in the current Democratic Primary -- because all you have to do is look at every president we've ever had in our history, as well as the candidates who've run, to know that sex has mattered and continues to matter in who as nation we elect -- I just can't believe she's talking about race and racism again after she went completely batshit in March and then got her ass canned from the Clinton campaign.

I mean did Geraldine feel that demoralized (as she should have) from being called a racist that she now has to take up for clueless white people who think Obama is playing the race card, and are worried about "reverse racism" because she thinks it's going to vindicate her?

Apparently so.

The Race Card

I'm not saying the race card doesn't exist. Because it does.

It's nothing more than an ad hominem argument when a person is on the side of a losing battle, and even though there's absolutely no legitimacy to the claim of racism whatsoever, it's used so they can slither their way out alive.

But let's get it straight in saying that when people usually say someone is "playing the race card", that when the majority of pundits use that term, it's simply done because they can't see or won't admit to the real and legitimate part that racism has and still plays in our society; that many times it's people's own racism, indifference to racism, or simply a defense mechanism (because it's too hard to look at themselves) that makes them use that term in the first place.

It's an easy bandwagon for people to jump onto, and one that Ferraro seems intent on fueling.

The fact that she wants to be talking for the people who think Obama has been playing the race card throughout the campaign, and are frightened because no one's "calling him on it" is just mind-boggling, because Obama has every right to talk about race and racism in this country and how it can also affect his bid to be the Democratic candidate and President of the United States.

Just look at the white only club, good or bad, that has taken office, or the history of racism and equality for some that has permeated our nation, or simply a recent Washington Post article about the racism that his street teams have encountered.

Saying that Obama is playing the race card is like saying Sharon Stone really had something important to say when she said maybe it was karma that killed all the innocent people in China during the recent earthquake.

It's just fucked up.

I've heard that before

Ferraro also claims she and her new found supporters aren't racist but they just have "racial resentment", and that their fears of "reverse racism" are justified because Obama said "Our Time Has Come" and because essentially they're white and he's black, and because white people can't open up their mouths without being labeled a racist.

Are you kidding me?

Racial resentment is just a nice white way of trying to cover up being a racist.

Being afraid of Obama without any justification simply because he's black and their white is like trying to justify the lynchings of black men because they dared to look at a white woman.

You can't.

It's rhetoric like this that also gives power to the notion that if a person of color is prejudice against someone who's white (wrong as this is), that this in some way is the same as the systematic racism that's been going on for hundreds of years when clearly the two aren't even close, even though we like to throw around the term "reverse racism" as if they were; in effect minimizing institutionalized racism.

At the same time, Ferraro tries to lump the segment of the white community who's educated themselves about race, and who aren't afraid to have real and courageous conversations about something like white privilege and who work to help end racism in this country, into the same boat as the people she's speaking for and supporting, even though each are at opposite ends of the racial awareness spectrum.

Put it all together and it's the same type of fear and hate mongering and obfuscation of truth that has been going on for years, and that's been the foundation for every piece of oppressive legislation against people of color since our inception as a country.

Did Geraldine think people really wouldn't notice that?

I guess it's better than Yoga Booty Ballet

Monday, June 02, 2008



Available June 6th for those that just need more Shilpa Shetty in their lives.

Get Your Tickets Now: NY Asian American International Film Festival 2008

Monday, June 02, 2008



While it's still about a month away for the 2008 Asian American International Film Festival to begin (July 10–19) - it's never too early to get your tickets and get planning for the festival sponsored by Asian CineVision with Asia Society.

Go to the Asian CineVision site for more information and to get your tickets, which went on sale today for members of ACV.

News You Can Use

Monday, June 02, 2008

Word from the mouths of bloggers and beyond:

Rajiv Gowda to run for NYC City Council

Rajiv Gowda, the first Indian American/South Asian to be elected to public office in Staten Island has decided to run for New York City Council in 2009 from District 49, Staten Island.An engineer by profession, Gowda is a life long public servant.
Asian Americans First Won Olympic Gold 60 Years Ago

Sixty years ago, Sammy Lee and Victoria Manalo-Draves became the first Asian-American athletes to win gold medals at the Summer Olympics. Overcoming discrimination to train and compete, the two paved the way for the many Asian-American Olympic athletes who would follow.
Newsarama interviews Ming Doyle

Newsarama has interviewed Asian American illustrator Ming Doyle, who drops a hint that she may be contributing to the "Secret Identities" anthology.
Report Cites Asian-Americans' NCLB Issues

Schools are failing to identify struggling Asian-American students under the No Child Left Behind Act and to get them the academic interventions they need, a report says.
Video Link: If Asia Could Vote in the US Elections

During the Asia Society's 36th Annual Williamsburg Conference in April in Bali, Indonesia, we asked policy leaders from across Asia which US presidential candidate is most favorably viewed in their part of the world.
the five asians in sex and the city

List of Asians spotted in the Sex and the City movie, which opened number one at the box office this weekend (yes, I watched it, and I ain't ashamed to admit it):

1. Charlotte's cute adopted daughter from China, Lily, played by Alexandra and Parker Fong (twins). The gals teach her to say "sex." I guess it had to happen sooner or later.

DVD + Short: August 15th and Electric Shadows

Monday, June 02, 2008



August 15th

I caught this over the weekend on Netflix, and if you get a chance you'll definitely want to check it out. It played down at Sundance this year where it got an honorable mention and also just got accepted by the 2008 Cannes Film Festival’s Cinéfondation earlier this month (which is a foundation that was created to support the next generation of international film-makers).

Here's some information about the short as well as some comments from director Xuan Jiang of Beijing (this was her thesis film at the California Institute of the Arts):

The 21 minute film was inspired by a true story. A young Chinese woman and her boyfriend board a bus and head home to meet his parents. But the trip turns unpredictable when two young men hijack the bus. Traveling through China’s rural mountains, every passenger must decide how much they are willing to sacrifice to preserve their own safety and dignity.

"I felt anger when I read the news stories on which August 15th is based," recalls Xuan Jiang. "What still lingers in my mind, are the faces of the people on that bus. Some might dismiss what happened as common, but I couldn't let go so easily. As I passed people on the street or the subway, I looked at their faces. I couldn't help but think any one of them could have been one of the people sitting on that bus. Ever since then, I wanted to make a movie about those silent faces. About moments in life where one choice can completely change who we are."

The cast includes Tingyi Meng, Tao Bian, Shaoshi Qu, Xinxi Zhao, and Lu Cai. The movie’s dialog is in Mandarin, with English subtitles, and it was filmed in China.
Read more from the full article here.

Electric Shadows



While I had heard about this movie before (released in 2005 in the U.S.), I never took the time to actually see it, so I finally picked it up for a weekend view and it was pretty good (I'd give it 3 1/2 out of 5 not because I couldn't believe the story, but because I thought the ending wrapped up too quickly):

Mao Dabing, an easygoing film buff, works delivering water bottles in Beijing. One day after he accidentally crashes his bike in an alley, he's suddenly brained with a brick by a disturbed young woman, Ling-ling. Arrested by the police, Ling-ling remains silent, but she gives Dabing the key to her apartment, asking him to feed the fish. Her place turns out to be a shrine to the movies, and especially to one star, legendary '30s singer-actress Zhou Xuan. As Dabing reads Ling-ling's private diary, the film flashes back to Ningxia province in the early '70s and the story of Ling-ling's mom, Jiang Xuehua.
If you want to know more, check out a past NY Times review.

Thao with the Get Down Stay Down: Bag of Hammers

Monday, June 02, 2008

YouTube is playing the video for Bag of Hammers by Thao with the Get Down Stay Down in their featured videos section.

Here's the video:



Here's also an interview with Thao Nguyen:



For more Thao go to the site, MySpace page, IMEEM, or YouTube channel.