Check out the new HalfKorean.com Spotlight on independent hip hop recording artist Jeremy Namkung. Jeremy hails from Oakland, California and goes by the emcee name J. Lately. When not making music, Jeremy holds down an important job in society as he teaches the youth as a public high school teacher. He released a new album titled One Way Ticket this past January and has other projects planned for later this year. Please check out the Spotlight here: |
HalfKorean.com Spotlight: Jeremy Namkung / J. Lately
Harvard Half-Asian People’s Association Hosting “So…What Are You, Anyway?” (SWAYA) Conference
We just heard about a mixed-race conference going on this upcoming weekend at Harvard University. “So…What Are You, Anyway?” (SWAYA) is being hosted by the Harvard Half-Asian People’s Association (HAPA) and will take place on April 6-7, 2012. If you are in the Boston area, we highly recommend you check it out. Here are the details about SWAYA: The conference will include lectures given by actress and writer Diane Farr, Associated Press journalist Jesse Washington and former president of Harvard Hapa, James Fish, as well as discussion groups led by experts on modern race relations. Last year, the event drew over one hundred students and other guests from colleges and cities around the Boston area. SWAYA will culminate in a special gala dinner* in honor of the 2011 recipient of the Cultural Pioneer Award, celebrity mixed-race artist Diane Farr, author of Kissing Outside the Lines, and actress in Numb3rs and Rescue Me. The conference will begin with breakfast at 10:00 am, and community members are invited to attend and participate. Please register for the conference here. *Tickets to the gala dinner honoring Diane Farr are $7 for students, $15 for others. Registration for the gala dinner is separate from conference registration. Tickets for the gala dinner can be found here and tickets for the conference can be found here (Harvard students are given free entry to the conference and those who are eligible can purchase gala tickets through SEF here). For more information, contact Eliza Nguyen (enguyen@college.harvard.edu), Elizabeth Double (double@college.harvard.edu), or Jodi Balfe (jbalfe@college.harvard.edu). This conference is hosted by the Harvard Half-Asian People’s Association (HAPA), an organization founded in the 1990′s promoting celebration and discussion of multiracial identity. Feel free to follow us on our blog. Please consider donating! We are a student group with limited financial funds, and every little bit will be very greatly appreciated.
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Interview with Nyesha Arrington (3/23/2012)
Nyesha Arrington, the Executive Chef at Wilshire Restaurant in Santa Monica, California, is most recently known for being a competitor on the completed season nine of Bravo’s reality cooking show Top Chef.
Prior to the exposure from participating in Top Chef: Texas, this quarter-Korean chef had risen quickly in the culinary world and is considered a promising chef to watch. In fact, she was recently listed on Zagat’s 30 Under 30: LA’s Hottest Up-and-Comers list.
Although Nyesha did not win Top Chef: Texas, she did finish very respectably as one of the top 16 finalists. In addition, she placed fifth in the online Top Chef: Texas Fan Favorite contest (out of 18).
We were able to cover Nyesha’s background, career, Top Chef experience and are pleased to present this interview with her.
2011 HalfKorean.com Interviews
Even though we are already almost a quarter of the way through 2012, we wanted to take a moment to review our interviews from 2011. If you’ve missed any interviews from last year, now would be a perfect time to check them out. We’d love to get feedback from all of you to let us know what interviews you enjoyed, what you disliked and what you would like for us to improve on. As most of you frequent visitors know, the core content we have focused on for HalfKorean.com during the past few years have been our interviews with various prominent and notable people. We feel that sharing their mixed Korean experiences with all of us a great way for not only our community to learn about them but for everyone (including non-Koreans) to learn about us. We appreciated all of the interviewees for spending their time with us and allowing us a look at their mixed Korean experience and we will continue to provide the community with insightful interviews in 2012! HalfKorean.com Interview with Jackie Chain While his first full length major label debut album I Ain’t Slept in Weeks still has not released yet, he has kept busy by releasing another mixtape titled After Hours this past February. On a personal note, my favorite quote from all of last year’s interviews was from Jackie when he proudly stated, (pardon the language) “I’m a kimchi eating motherf*cker!” HalfKorean.com Interview with James Yun The veteran wrestler has wrestled for practically all major North American promotions during his career including WWE, WCW, TNA and ROH. HalfKorean.com Interview with Meg & Dia Frampton Although Dia did not win the competition, she was runner-up and gained huge amounts of exposure for not only herself but her band, Meg & Dia. Our interview didn’t contain anything related to The Voice but we could sense that they had something big planned for the future. We were also able to touch on Meg’s side endeavor that she had just debuted, the Chandler the Robot jewelry line. HalfKorean.com Interview with Michael Horton He clicked with fellow UPT group member Snacky Chan and together they left UPT in late 2010 to set up their own duo, New Dynasty. Their first album, Body Language, released last May. HalfKorean.com Interview with Tony Rutland He had played basketball worldwide including one stop in the Korean Basketball League (KBL) in 1998. At the time of our interview he was not playing professionally but was considering making a return to the KBL as an “ethnic” player. HalfKorean.com Interview with Scotty Curlee He had left his lucrative career in the pharmaceutical industry and decided to jump full force into the faith-based film industry in 2007. His very first feature length film, The Potential Inside, was an award winner and played at many worldwide film festivals throughout 2010-11 and was released on DVD in April 2011. HalfKorean.com Interview with Greg Pak Along with comic books and graphic novels, he is a highly regarded film director who has done many short films and also the 2003 feature film, Robot Stories. Greg can be seen at numerous comic conventions and events as he is a frequent featured discussion panel guest. HalfKorean.com Interview with Marja Vongerichten Not only was she putting Korean cuisine on the culinary map as host of the new PBS TV series Kimchi Chronicles, but she had a fascinating and compelling personal story that we enjoyed learning about and presenting with the interview. Kimchi Chronicles is still airing on PBS so make sure to check your local listings if you haven’t seen an episode yet! HalfKorean.com Interview with Priscilla Ahn When we talked with the singer-songwriter, she had just released her second full length album, When You Grow Up, in May and was in between tours and promoting the album. HalfKorean.com Interview with Safiya Johnson She competes in the bikini division of the International Federation of Bodybuilding (IFBB) and is the younger sister of veteran fitness competitor Tanji Johnson. At the time of our interview, Safiya had only recently switched from IFBB Fitness to IFBB Bikini (in 2010) and had been an IFBB pro since 2008. |
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Support “Mixed Match” Documentary Film Project
We recently learned about a new documentary film titled Mixed Match that is planned for release in 2013. The film, directed by Jeff Chiba Stearns and produced by Meditating Bunny Studio Inc. and Mixed Marrow, will explore the critical and important issues related to the need for bone marrow and cord blood donors by mixed race people. While the film production has already started, the production team has set up a fundraising website at Indiegogo to help fund the project to completion. Please take a look at this film project and help out however you can, even if only by spreading word about it. About Mixed Match: Mixed Match is an important human story told from the perspective of youth who are forced to discover their identities through their deadly illnesses and how their mixed backgrounds threaten their chances at survival, thus highlighting why in this day and age, race still matters. With the help of Mixed Marrow and first-hand stories from patients and their supporters, we hope to spread awareness about the need for multiethnic donors worldwide.
Trailer for Mixed Match:
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Image courtesy of Meditating Bunny Studio Inc. |