Blog Archive: March 2011

Blog Archive: March 2011

Debunking the Flanagan Delusion: Tiger Moms vs. Eagle Moms

Having missed the memo on outdated racial stereotypes, social critic Caitlin Flanagan keeps the fear alive in her recent article in The Atlantic, where she discusses the paranoia that Western white ‘good mothers’ have about all these gosh darn upstart Asian robots taking Junior’s place at Yale and how it’s all because of these insane Asian women parceling out switchings like cough lozenges.

Racist Video Rant about Asians in UCLA Library Goes Viral

An alleged UCLA student named Alexandra Wallace posted a YouTube video blog with inflammatory remarks against Asian students who share the library space with her.

I remember finals week at UCLA. I was an English major, so usually this meant chaining myself to my laptop surrounded by a foot-high stack of Shakespeare in the library.
Powell, the main campus library, is a landmark at UCLA. Ray Bradbury wrote his famous novel Fahrenheit 451 in just nine days on a rented typewriter in the basement of Powell. And more recently, the library made news when UCPD officers tasered a student after he resisted and refused to show identification. 
Last Friday, an alleged UCLA student named Alexandra Wallace, posted a YouTube video vlog with inflammatory remarks against Asian students who share the library space with her. 
At the peak of her rant against Asian students living in Westwood, the neighborhood surrounding UCLA, she continues her complaint against Asians on the phone in the library:
“I'll be in like deep into my studying, into my political science theories and arguments and all that stuff, getting it all down, like typing away furiously, blah blah, blah, and then all of a sudden when I'm about to like reach an epiphany... Over here from somewhere, "Ooooh Ching Chong Ling Long Ting Tong, Ooohhhhh.”
Alright, I’ve felt that same irritation against loud people in libraries -- it’s just not the place to do that. But Wallace takes it to a whole new level, singling out the largest ethnic group of undergraduates admitted to the university last Fall, according to UCLA’s Office of Analysis and Information Management. http://www.aim.ucla.edu/enrollment/enrollment_demographics_fall.asp
It gets worse:
“I swear they're going through their whole families, just checking on everybody from the tsunami thing. I mean I know, okay, that sounds horrible like I feel bad for all the people affected by the tsunami, but if you're gonna go call your address book like you might as well go outside because if something is wrong you might really freak out if you're in the library and everybody's quiet like you seriously should go outside if you're gonna do that. “
Talk about bad timing.
She’s not the only one who took offense to all the “ching chong.” Since the video was posted on Friday, YouTube users not only “disliked” the video, but they posted Wallace’s email, phone number and a link to her profile on Examiner.com. Yikes -- of all places to launch a racist tirade against Asians, YouTube is probably the worst. 
YouTubers, some Asian, others not, have posted responses. Inevitably, YouTube comments pushed back against Wallace with the same ignorance and bigotry -- with more than just blonde jokes. Others are have a slightly bigger picture. One vlogger points out, tongue-in-cheek, that Wallace is simply emulating America as a whole. After all, Rush Limbaugh went on a ching-chong rant of his own a few weeks ago. 

King Hearings on Domestic Terrorism: Muslim Peril?

On March 10, the House Committee on Homeland Security, chaired by Rep. Peter King (R-NY), held the first in a series of hearings on “The Extent of Radicalization in the American Muslim Community and that Community’s Response.” Its purpose was to investigate whether American Muslims, including around one million Asian Americans, were at fault for not doing enough to foil domestic terrorist attacks.

SFIAAFF 2011 Reviews: 'Almost Perfect' and 'The House of Suh'

It's Thursday. Have you not bought your SFIAAFF tickets yet?! Well, in case you needed an extra little nudge to make your movie picks this week, here's Hyphen's last installment of film reviews from the SFIAAFF 29 catalog. Today we've got romance and family dysfunction, Asian American style -- and real-life murder, Korean American style.