In other ethnic media news, Hilary Clinton’s campaign snubbed reporters from ethnic media. Reporters from Chinese-language papers, a Chinese-language TV station, and a Russian-languge newspaper were denied admission to a San Francisco fundraiser.
Reporter Portia Li of the World Journal - a Chinese-language paper run independently from offices in San Francisco and other North American cities - said she arrived about five minutes late. When Li showed her business card, the staffer asked for two forms of identification, which Li said she found insulting because she never had to do so at similar events.
"She kept saying this is only open for local media, not foreign press," Li said. "I told her, I'm not foreign press. I'm local media."
"It's not about myself, it's about how the mainstream looks at Chinese (people) as a whole. Why do they call us foreigners, even they we have a local address on our business card?" she added.
I couldn’t agree with Li more.
Oh, but enough about that. Judging from the volume of comments being left on our site, I know you really want to talk about the AsianWeek thing. SF Chronicle columnist Jon Carroll weighs in today. He wonders what the hell AsianWeek was thinking in printing Eng’s column. Don’t we all? AsianWeek's Ted Fang says Eng’s column doesn’t reflect the views of the paper.
OK, I wouldn’t say that all stories that appear in Hyphen represent the views of all Hyphen staffers either, but the thing is: there are lots of racist idiots spewing hateful, badly-written drivel. But you don’t hand them a column -- especially when you claim to be “the voice of Asian America,” which is AsianWeek’s tagline.
Surely when young Mr. Eng wrote in to AsianWeek to say he was the author of a book and wanted to write a column for them they asked him for some work samples? Or maybe not. It doesn’t seem like they googled him, or else they would have found this.
Carroll refutes Eng’s assertion that blacks hate Asians by bringing up Tiger Woods. Apparently one famous, multiracial child of an African American man and Asian American woman means that race relations between Asian Americans and blacks are A-OK!
For more takes on the story, you can read former Hyphen staffer Claire Light’s opinion at other magazine’s blog.
Or read Philip Arhur Moore’s dissection of Eng’s column.
And best of all, check out these fine songs dedicated to Eng, who it seems was annoying his classmates at NYU long before he subjected his views on the rest of us.
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