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impressionist:

paradelle:

crossedwires:

niqaeli:

I admit, I don’t know Cho that well, so I am glad there are other readings to be had!

And if he is just calling it out simply because he’s tired of it and he feels comfortable doing so even on his own films now, I think that’s fantastic. There’s certainly plenty for him to be calling out.

Heh. Well, I don’t know John Cho either. But he has talked about race & representation before* (and not in a ‘we’re all human, it doesn’t matter’ way), so it’s not completely ‘out of character’ for him to bring it up. I think it probably would be easier on him if he didn’t say anything, but I’m glad he does.

*Re Harold & Kumar (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHEkLBZI1IM 4:07 mark): If you have a Korean and an Indian guy as your leads, you must address race at some point in the movie. You must, because the audience is noting it, really. The other thing is, I think, comedy at its best, treads in taboo waters a little bit. It has to have that transgressive quality to it, and race is the biggest taboo in America. I mean, people are very reluctant to talk about race and yet when you do jokes about race, uh, that work, people are very happy to release tension and laugh about it. But it has been interesting. I’ll make an observation. During the first tour for the first movie, we were talking about race all the time with journalists. It was almost like a process— looking back, the first movie was more concerned with race, but we talked about it so much, I felt that it was in a way…a way of justifying our presence in a motion picture.

And from an interview in 2009 http://www.asiaarts.ucla.edu/090703/article.asp?parentID=110145&gt:

JC: I recall from the Harold and Kumar movies is my struggle with the advertisers.

APA: What happened there?

JC: There was all this racial humor in the movie, and the advertising department wanted to say “Starring the Asian guy in American Pie, and the Indian guy from Van Wilder…” and they did go with that, and they submitted that to me for approval, and I said, “I don’t like it.” They asked me why, and I explain it to them, and that was tricky because it’s difficult explaining to my own representatives, why that didn’t jibe with me, because everyone kind of felt like it was keeping in tone with the movie. And I said, “I don’t like it. We’re poking fun at racism in the movie all the time, but it puts the audience on the wrong side of the racism joke.” So they were playing with the wording a little bit in the edits, and they kept coming up with versions to make me happy, but they were essentially the same thing, and I finally said, “you are not going to make me happy. You’re dancing around it, and you’re clearly attached to this idea, and I want you to know that no version of this idea will make me happy. And if you’re afraid that I won’t show up to do promotion because of this bitterness, you can rest assured that that’s not true. I consider promoting a movie part of my duties, and I will show up nevertheless. But you can either use this campaign and know that I’m unhappy, or you can change it and know that I’m happy. That’s it. Stop trying.” And eventually they went with it, and it’s one of those things where I look back and I’ve very proud of the movie, but that’s the thing I remember.

APA: Last question…for Harold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay, Viva La Union recorded a song for the soundtrack with the line, “I want my own Chinese baby” — what’s that about?

JC: When I was thinking about it, I thought of a literal baby. There’s a kind of lack that children fill, that’s just the dark side of being a parent, I think. And there’s an accessory quality to Chinese babies in America, and I just think it’s funny. I just liked it. And you know, I would know people who would fawn over Asian babies more, and it got me to thinking, there’s this belief that Asian babies are really cute, and it got me thinking that our whole race is infantilized to some degree, and it manifests itself in different ways. You infantilize a woman, and she becomes eroticized. You infantilize a man, and he becomes emasculated. You infantilize a baby [laughs] — and it’s possible, it appears that you can infantilize a baby even more. [laughs] The babies need to be cuter than white babies. And it’s just a weird thing that I felt like said something about mainstream America’s relationship to Asians in general. So that’s where it came from.

Also this interview: http://blog.angryasianman.com/2008/04/q-with-john-cho.html

“And yes, I do feel a responsibility, and always have, and it’s been an odd burden for me. Even when I started and no one gave a shit, I was trying to avoid doing roles—and it’s no accident that I’ve never done something with a chop suey accent. It’s no accident that I’ve never played those parts. I strongly believe there are a lot of Asian American actors who think that that’s the price to pay before you get to wherever you’re going. And I take real issue with that. Because you have to maintain integrity from the start, and on a personal level, you have to not do something that’s going to make you sick to your stomach.

But on a political level, how are things supposed to ever change if there’s someone willing to do it? I can tell you now, having worked in the business, that you can gather an army of people to hold picket signs and stand outside the studio, and say, “we destest this portrayal”… but it doesn’t matter if there’s a guy—who they know, a peer—who’s willing to do it, who stands in front of the crew and does the buck-tooth accent. If he or she is willing to do it, it makes the protestors look like extremists. It makes this guy look like the normal guy. Because we all work in the same industry. So the willingness of one actor negates a thousand protestors and a thousand angry letters.”

(So I can see why Butawhiteman Cantbekhan playing Khan would be deeply upsetting to him, even if Cho wasn’t in this movie.)

I love him 1000 times just for flawlessly articulating this racist absurdity in the most succinct and accurate way I’ve ever encountered.

john cho my hero

(Source: whitelaws, via hmsbread)

edwardspoonhands:

auntytimblr:

thirtywhacks:

sazzlepops:

still the best Eurovision song

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don’t even argue with me

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just accept it

they were fucking robbed, still mad about this like 7 or 8 years later

This song is all I’ve ever wanted to be in life. 

[x]

Always happy when this comes back around on the dash…

This must be what a bad acid trip feel like.

(Source: holepsi)

collectivehistory:

Children in Barcelona pretending to be a firing squad at the dawn of the Spanish Civil War ca. 1936 (via Imgur)

So incredibly relevant to what we’re studying right now. It’s strange to think about a “civil war” happening outside of a “far past, 100+ years” context. I’m so conditioned by American history to think to civil wars as something antiquated that it is slightly shocking each time I think about civil wars (the Spanish Civil War in particular), that they are so so recent. These children may still be alive. I wonder how they would feel about this picture if they were to see it again today.

collectivehistory:

Children in Barcelona pretending to be a firing squad at the dawn of the Spanish Civil War ca. 1936 (via Imgur)

So incredibly relevant to what we’re studying right now. It’s strange to think about a “civil war” happening outside of a “far past, 100+ years” context. I’m so conditioned by American history to think to civil wars as something antiquated that it is slightly shocking each time I think about civil wars (the Spanish Civil War in particular), that they are so so recent. These children may still be alive. I wonder how they would feel about this picture if they were to see it again today.

fishingboatproceeds:

Mind says 14 minutes. Clock says 2 years.

…unhealthy internet use (check). It must be pseudo finals time.

(Source: hepkatz)

nointerrruption:

when you and your friends hate the same person

image

(via notalexus)

graceebooks:

unfollowing me won’t free you from the chains of capitalism

(via polishcrown)

*1

I “was sick” this morning, so OF COURSE I am now actually sick.

I had it coming I suppose.

"I’m not J.J. Abrams, who’s ultimately responsible. I’m just his Asian puppet. Which, by the way, is also the title of my autobiography."

John Cho (x)

yo my heart is racing at the guts it takes to say something like this knowing full well what could happen. damn!!!!

(via strugglingtobeheard)

What if I change my okc profile from “message me if your junot Diaz” to “message me if you’re John cho”

(via notalexus)

(Source: itreallyisthelittlethings, via notalexus)

May or may not be watching To Catch a Predator.

(Early 2000s nostalgia is so weird.)

(Also heavy reminders of L&O: SVU)

(And Chris Hansen is so interesting. He reminds me of a cheesier version of Brian WIlliams)

ohhopelessromanticme:

leucrotta:

theginnytohisharry:

loverdosis:

bluekulele:

MO CLICK THIS 

THIS

THIS IS

THE BEST EARGASM I’VE EVER HAD OOOHHHHH

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OH MY GOOOOOOD.

You know I always wondered if these two songs would go together

Answer: yes

Re-queue/blog
Sah good

You know me so well.

(Also their new album is so fantastic[FOB not P!ATD {Hahahahaha. P!ATD putting out a new/good album}])

(Source: bsbnfobnadamfreak, via polishcrown)

lameborghini:

ive been annoyed ever since i was born

(via skepticalorangutan)

queenofmanyfandoms:

theangelgabrieldidmyhair:

The Yahoo people actually coming to look at the site they want to buy

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accurate gif usage 

(via hmsbread)

*42
relevant to all of my interests

relevant to all of my interests

(Source: societe-du-spectacle, via fantasticallyweirdshit)

fishingboatproceeds:

#sass

(Source: bidenette)