Category Archives: scissors

ANTM

OJCJg

white model dressed as an Indian

white model dressed as an Indian

PcY3t

black model dressed as a Korean

black model dressed as a Korean

So one one of the seasons of America’s Next Top Model they had a photo shoot where each model was dressed as a different ethnicity for a Got Milk advertisement. My question to you, is this yellow face and black face and racist or is it art?

white model dressed as a Native American

white model dressed as a Native American

Paper Beats Rock/Lizard Spock

1010400_10152163265406063_563088633_n

Couldn’t resist posting a few of my brain-droppings– those things that come to mind during class, but aren’t necessarily useful to mention at the time.

Click here to view the embedded video.

I may have to add lizard and Spock to my categories…

Last week our seminar was talking about isms; is it any surprise this was the first thing to come to mind?

Click here to view the embedded video.

And finally, the trailer for the film that I really, really want to watch in class– the one which I believe defines the genre:

Click here to view the embedded video.

Minorities: Feminine and Masculine

Throughout different readings and other materials the sexual exploitation of minorities and especially the women is something that always stands out. From picture brides, to war brides, all the way to prostitutes the minority women have little voice in regards to their fate in America. In regards to male masculinity there was the queue the Chinese men had that the white Americans saw as abstract and a threat to the system. The idea of short hair for men and long hair for women was befuddled with the introduction of the long hair of Chinese immigrants. Their hair was a target of abuse and was easily exploited.

On the flip side there were the Filipino men which gained the reputation of being better lovers than whites which then caused yet another movement against minority groups. The whites would then compare the men to barbaric, primal and beastly. The last thing the whites wanted was a new face stealing their women. Which furthers the ideal of powerlessness of women in this time period in which they are similar to a trophy to brag about.

Overall the group in power, the white Americans tried to find any trait that disagreed with their own qualities and use propaganda and scare tactics to prevent any kind of potential change from the minorities. The women had no rights except white women over minorities. There was little potential for change during the times that would upset the balance of white male dominated power. The transition between generations is always a high interest point due to all the change that can occur.

“Richard Sherman; You Just Won The Super Bowl…”

…what are you going to do next?”(announcer). “I’m going to Disney World!” (Sherman).

Click here to view the embedded video.

Now how many people would actually expect to hear something like that in today’s world from Richard Sherman moments after the Seahawks beat the 49′ers in storybook fashion? We talked a bit in class the other day about why he is getting such bad press. Shortly after the big game Forbs published an article that as of today has 44,496,464 views(!) Here are just a few snippets:

“His degree from Stanford was in communications … which might explain why, while he seemed to be hollering like a crazy person, he didn’t curse and looked into the camera the whole time.”

“If you stick a microphone in a football player’s face seconds after he made a huge play to send his team to the Super Bowl, you shouldn’t be surprised if he’s a little amped up.”

“Ninety-nine percent of on-field interviews are boring and useless. The TV networks do them anyway for the 1 percent of the time they get a moment like Richard Sherman.”

 ”As a reporter and writer, that raw emotion — whatever form it takes — is exactly what I hope for. That’s why media people fight for access to locker rooms. After players and coaches cool off, most of them turn into Crash Davis, reading from the book of cliches.”

“But we — the media, and fans in general — don’t know what we want. We rip athletes for giving us boring quotes. But if they say what they actually feel, we rip them for spouting off or showing a lack of class.”

“It’s like we want them to be thinking, Well, that was a fine contest, and jolly good that we won. Which NO athlete is EVER thinking.”

So why all the fuss? To use the local vernacular; haters gonna’ hate. That’s all there is to it. Be sure to watch the game Sunday– and when the Seahawks triumph over the Broncos listen for Richard Sherman to give Mickey’s magic-kingdom some love~

January 23 Class Notes

Anime Wong (play on//week 9 animes?): First Chinese American actress
Racialicious: “Racialicious is a blog about the intersection of race and pop culture.” & East Main Street
Parrying Katy: Geisha’s just love with all their heart. I think Katy Perry wasn’t being racist, I think she’s just ignorant about the culture and the lifestyle of Japan. I mean yea she could have just not said anything, but I mean, I don’t think she meant to be racist/offensive
Covering Richard Sherman: Monkey & a Thug. A corner back who was part of the team who gets to proceed to SUPERBOWL XXXXVIII. Super exciting right? But, he had made a very aggressive commentary against Crabtree of the 49ers saying that [sherman] is the best corner back in the league and that Crabtree shouldn’t be talking about him. & people reacted to this by calling him a “monkey & thug.” A thug: young black person who is outspoken. This bugs me. It’s a sport, it’s competitive, and it’s the nature of the game. People get heated and into the moment, of course there’s competition and people will talk, but what do people expect? It’s not like nobody else has ever lost their cool in a heated moment like that.

CULTURE: Integrated pattern of human behavior that includes thoughts, speech, action, and artifacts that depends on mans capacity, customary beliefs, social forms, material trait of a racial religion or social groups.

Popular Culture starts with studying someone’s culture
Define:

1. Culture that is widely favored or well liked by many people
2. Culture which is left over after we have decided what is high culture
3. Mass Culture
4. Culture which originates from “the people”
5.Culture rooted in exchange and negotiation between dominant and subordinate groups
6. Culture which no longer recognizes distinction.

———————————————————-
Stereotype: greek/ stereo:hard, fixed – typos: blow, impression
Oriental: geocentric, why isn’t the U.S. the “East?”
Yellowface: derogatory of blackface. blackface 1830-40 cultural form to characterizing black people

CNN News

I found article on CNN about Dolphin hunting in Japan. The following is article from CNN web site.(http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/20/world/asia/japan-dolphin-hunt/)

————————————————————————–

Tokyo, Japan (CNN) – The slaughter of bottlenose dolphins in an infamous Japanese cove took place on Tuesday.

About 500 dolphins were driven into the cove this year, a larger number than usual, according to the local Taiji fishermen’s union. A fisherman who is a union board member, and who did not want to be named, told CNN that the total number of dolphins to be captured or slaughtered was less than 100, and that the rest would be released.

The yearly event is a focal point of the Taiji community’s dolphin hunting season, which many in the community in southwest Japan view as a long-held tradition. The annual hunting season begins in September and runs through March, according to animal rights activists.

But the hunt is heavily scrutinized by environmental activists, who have been monitoring activities and livestreaming and tweeting about the latest developments.

In recent days, environmentalist group the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has provided livestreams showing bottlenose dolphins splashing frantically as they tried to escape their human captors. Dolphins separated by nets into smaller partitions bobbed up and down, trying to reach other members of their pod. The group said that the dolphins appeared bloodied, and had had nothing to eat since their capture in Taiji Cove four days ago.

The union representative said that the fishermen had introduced what they considered a “more humane” method of slaughtering the dolphins, cutting their spines on the beach to kill the animals more swiftly and cause them less pain.

2009: Film explores dolphin hunts

Amazon bans sale of dolphin meat

Group: 250 dolphins could be killed

Defending tradition

Although the hunting of dolphins is widely condemned in the West, many in Japan defend the practice as a local custom — and say it is no different to the slaughter of other animals for meat.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters at a news conference Monday that marine mammals including dolphins were “very important water resources.”

“Dolphin fishing is one of traditional fishing forms of our country and is carried out appropriately in accordance with the law. Dolphin is not covered by the International Whaling Commission control and it’s controlled under responsibility of each country.”

Taiji mayor Kazutaka Sangen echoed the sentiments.

“We have fishermen in our community and they are exercising their fishing rights,” he said. “We feel that we need to protect our residents against the criticisms.”

He accused the Sea Shepherd of using the issue of dolphin hunting to raise funds and attract attention. The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has been live-streaming video of events in the cove and posting frequent updates on Twitter.

The Wakayama Prefectural Government, where Taiji is located, gives an annual “catching quota.” This year, the government allows for the hunting of 2,026 small porpoises and dolphins (557 are for bottlenose dolphins).

The dolphin hunt has seen some changes, Sangen said. The town wants to create a whale/porpoise study with the aim of bringing a marine park to the city. And the method of hunting has been changing, becoming less crude, he added.

On Monday, the fishermen focused on selecting dolphins to be sold into captivity at marine parks and aquariums in Japan and overseas, the conservation group said. Trainers marked the dolphins deemed unsuitable for captivity, which would be either killed or driven back out to the ocean, according to the Sea Shepherd group.

Kennedy’s tweet met with criticism in Japan

Caroline Kennedy, the recently installed U.S. ambassador to Japan, tweet that she is “deeply concerned by inhumaneness of drive hunt dolphin killing.”

—————————————————————————

 

Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe responded to online comments posted by U.S. Ambassador to Japan Caroline Kennedy.

“The dolphin hunting that takes place in Taiji town is an ancient practice rooted in their culture and supports their livelihoods,” Abe said in the interview, part of which is on CNN’s website. “We hope you will understand this.”

While acknowledging criticism of the dolphin hunt, Abe said, “In every country and region, there are practices and ways of living and culture that have been handed down from ancestors. Naturally, I feel that they should be respected.”

 

 

Just In my opinion, I don’t understand why people focus on dolphins. How about pigs, chickens, fish, horses, cows….? I’m just saying though.

 

 

-ANA News

I researched about “HIMYM” which is an American TV show. In this show, the actors made fun of Asian people. They were making themselves look like stereotypical Asian people, even though they are not Asian. However, I found the same news from Japan. In the airplane company commercial on TV, they made of fun as foreign people by stereotyping them. In the class, we talked about these news such as airline’s, American TV show’s, and Katy Perry’s and discussed about how today’s pop culture is either a playground or a battleground. I think these news are not racism. This is because these things that were said racism are just showing the characteristics of people, and there is nothing to discriminate against other cultures. Talking about this in our class, I remembered that we used to have an interesting TV show in Japan. This is the TV show’s picture. (I looked for the movie, but this show already finished, so I couldn’t.)

はねとび

In this TV show, everyone made up some foreigners. From the left side starting with the person who is sitting, we can associate them with American, Indian, Chinese, and Mexican. I think if Japan airline’s was a racist issue, then this TV show would also be a big issue, yet it wasn’t. Far from it, this series was really famous in Japan.

I think that people who sue these things might be racist. This is because people who are not racist didn’t care about these news. I believe that these racist acts are formed by those who are jealous of people with different backgrounds and looks. The reason why I think is easy to explain. This is because when people making of look like foreign, they put some characteristics that they don’t have with themselves. Today, it is easy to immigrant to other countries and we can see a lot of different people anywhere. Then, we also can find many things which we don’t have. For example, some Asian people have mono eyelids. I know some of these people don’t like their own eyes and want to change to double eyelid. However, one of my American friend said she wanted the single eyelid because it looks younger. “The grass is always greener on the other side” As we know from this word, we want to get something we don’t have. So, I think these news is made just from jalousies, and I don’t think these ones are not racism.

Notes-Continued

When we were talking on Thursday morning about the racialicious. This made me think of all of us. We are all of different races and are learning and probably have our own perspectives of popular culture. We all come a different background, we may come from different places and have different interests, but we are all learning about popular culture and what it means to us and our obsessions. I think its great that we all have different and similar obsessions and to share them with everyone is awesome to me. I liked that we have learn so much over a little bit of time and can’t wait for what’s next.

Yellowface in the Film Cloud Atlas

cloud-atlas-yellowface-1082012-120802

Walking by the rental films while in my local Safeway the other day, I came across a film entitled Cloud Atlas. I hadn’t heard much on the film so when I got home I decided to look up some reviews to see if it was worth watching. What I found was astonishing because of its correlation to the yellowface issue we had been learning about in our program, as well as through our post on the show “How I Met Your Mother.”

I discovered that this film blatantly used yellowface when it casted Jim Sturgess and Keith David in roles depicting Korean characters in a futuristic setting of Seoul Korea. The actors were given slanted eyes to give them the appearance of being Korean. These were the only notable changes made to the actors appearances, making it seem that slanted eyes are the only feature and characteristics that make-up a Korean persons appearance. Which is completely offensive to all Koreans and realistically anyone who has a conscious.

Hollywood has had a long history of using white actors to appear as characters of different races. However it is very disturbing to find that in today’s movies, with so many talented Asian Actors, the film could not utilize there talents and still proceed to cast white males in these roles.

Due to these findings I’m still debating if I want to even bother watching the film, and would highly appreciate anyone else’s thoughts on the film if they have seen it. Below I will give a link to a site with an article on the film.

http://http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/alden-habacon/cloud-atlas-yellowface-diversity-racism-hollywood_b_2050368.html

The Language of Music

Since I’ve embarked on this new adventure– learning the bass guitar– I’ve found inspiration in many different, unexpected places. One of the best parts of being in an Evergreen program is exploring other cultures and learning to see things from a different/new perspective.

I am experiencing the same thing when trying to learn songs on the bass. Simply listening to a favorite tune is one thing… listening to what each musician is doing is something else. Now that I am specifically paying attention to what the bassist is doing, a whole new world has been revealed to me. The songs are the same, but I am listening to them from a completely different/new perspective. It’s much like hearing the song for the first time.

Along the way I came across a musician named Victor Wooten. Many bass players already know him– as one friend explained to me, “he is to the bass, what Carlos Santana is to the guitar.” I first became aware of Wooten through his book, “The Music Lesson: A Spiritual Search For Growth Through Music.”  Then, as if a guardian angel was paying attention to my musical journey, I received this TedTalk video through Facebook of Victor Wooten describing music as a language.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Here are a few excerpts from the video. Consider these ideas yourself and how you might integrate them into your life– musical, or otherwise:

“Although many musicians agree that music is a language, it is rarely treated as such. Many of us treat it as something that can only be learned by following a strict regimen, under the tutelage of a skilled teacher…”

“Think about the first language you learned as a child. More importantly, think about how you learned it. You were a baby when you first started speaking, and even through you spoke the language incorrectly, you were allowed to make mistakes. And the more mistakes you made the more your parents smiled.

Learning to speak was not something you were went somewhere to do only a few times a week. And the majority of the people you spoke to were not beginners. They were already proficient speakers. Imagine your parents forcing you to only speak to other babies until you were good enough to speak to them. You would probably be an adult before you could carry on a conversation with them.

To use a musical term, as a baby you were allowed to jam with professionals. If we approach music in the same natural way we approacehed our first language we will learn to speak it in the same short time it took to speak our first language.”

So not only am I leaning to listen and hear music differently, my perspective on music– and learning– has changed.

Just get out there and play. The more you play, the more you will want to practice. Before long you will be able to express yourself through your instrument. As Victor puts it, 

“Music comes from the musician, not the instrument.”