Hardships for Asian Food Workers
Tough to
mistake canines for quackers, but that is what an enterprising Minneapolis TV
journalist did when trying to determine if a New York City Chinatown meat
market was selling cuts of man's best friend.
Tough to
mistake canines for quackers, but that is what an enterprising Minneapolis TV
journalist did when trying to determine if a New York City Chinatown meat
market was selling cuts of man's best friend.
Top Chef heats up (promise that's my only cooking pun), Work of Art takes the show to the streets, some backstabbing on Survivor, almost to the Sing-Off's finale, and a whole lot of craziness going on with Glenn on The Walking Dead.
Wing Luke Asian Museum's latest exhibit From Fields to Family will make your tummy rumble and serve up plenty of food for thought.
The idea of the “Asian American” was born in the '60s with Oakland Mayor Jean Quan and her Third Worldist comrades. Now she stands as a sobering reminder of what a movement like Occupy risks becoming as time wears on.
When Occupy Cal students marched through the
city of Berkeley, many API students could be seen holding signs that
read, “Asian American and Proud,” and calling for funds for Ethnic Studies and
the language departments.
Zahra's Paradise is a fictionalized account about the search for a young university student who fails to come home one night after participating in the 2009 protests in Iran.
Patrick Wang's In The Family survived 30 film festival rejections to become a critically lauded indie.
In celebration of the 15th anniversary of the National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum, Hyphen joins Angry Asian Man in recognizing NAPAWF's list of 15 APA Women Leader Spotlights.