Wednesday, December 10, 2008

In light of my blabberiness...

I just read my last post from 9/30. What garbage. Half of it doesn't make sense. Blabber blabber blabber.

If I'm going to be considered a serious journalist, I need to write serious, journalistic type stuff. Seriously.

As such, I aspire to write a one-page wire service article about myself and the day's occurrences. It will force me to write serious stuff. Seriously.

And it'll also get me acquainted to this AP Stylebook thingamajigger.

I would include today's KL Daily post. But it's personal. Maybe you'll get tomorrow's edition.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Random thoughts

It's been 50 days since I've posted here, and that's a travesty. A lot has happened since then, including my move to Springfield, starting college again, getting used to random weather, visiting Toby and An on their trip out here to Chicago, meeting with my PAR mates, and the like.

So in no particular order, here are some thoughts:
1) One of my freelance editors got laid off earlier today due to tightened budgets at the publication. This is a devastating blow to me. "Editor" gave me my first legitimate chance to get my name into Bay Area print while I was in college and after I graduated. If he did not provide that outlet, I'm not sure where I would be right now. Would I have worked at KQED? Would I be at UIS now? There are some people who make an indelible mark on a life, and "editor" made such a mark on mine. I wish him nothing but the best.

The situation also illustrates the grim reality for journalism: the market sucks. Our business was already on the decline with the technology gap, and now it's really taking body blows from all this financial chaos. I'm glad I'm still in school!

2) The Daily Show just aint what it used to be. Don't get me wrong, Jon Stewart 1) has impeccable delivery and 2) provides extremely astute interviews with guests. But his one-sided pandering on the show has worn on me. The Daily Show used to be an escape, a chance to laugh at mainstream news coverage and the happenings around the world. But now, it's just endless bashing on McCain and Bush. Don't get me wrong, bashing on politicians can be funny. With Stewart and gang, the schtick is getting old. Before, they recognized they were a comedy group acting as a news show. Now, they're acting more like Olbermann's Countdown, with comedy. For me, it's not quite as funny.

The Colbert Report, on the other hand, has found that balance between humor and preaching. Colbert, in his bombastic conservative caricature, has thoroughly and brilliantly satirized the right-winged media pundit. He's not directly bashing Republicans; he's insinuating their flaws by exaggerating his own delivery and appearance. Colbert's smooth and suave compared to Stewart's newfound brusqueness. With the way the shows are set up, you think it'd be the opposite.

3) Burn After Reading was...not exactly a great movie but an insightful one. I found myself writing a 500-word treatise on it afterwards, connecting characters and their personalities to my own life. The main theme resonated with me: people are impulsive, selfish, and don't really know what they're doing with their lives. It's a harrowing take on life, but the way the Coen brothers present it, it's darkly humorous, absurdist. The presentation might make the movie more frightening, because we acknowlege that we are impulsive and selfish...and willingly, laughingly accept it. In No Country for Old Men, the Coen brothers present us with a person so demonic, so sinister, that no one can hope to relate to him. In Burn, we relate to every character, be it the womanizing Clooney or the looks-obsessed McDormad or the smiling idiot Pitt.

4) I'm getting turntables! My friend Ian has been kind enough to seek out a pair for me and is in the process of shipping them out. I will resume my career as DJ extraordinare...right after I start practicing.

I do need
1) Needles
2) Mixer
3) Receiver
4) Speakers
5) Vinyl
6) Serato (possibly)

But the tanks are on their way...I just need to get the ammunition.

5) I am realllly looking forward to the Chicago trip. I've contacted some members of the Asian American Journalist Association, of which I am now a proud, dues-paying member, and I am lookin forward to meeting with some people there. I am also looking forward to doing some crate digging....and perhaps some club-hopping?

6)
Johan Vermeulen - "Third of Five" (Dyami)
What a lush track. You can chill to this on the beach, you can throw this down in a club. I just love the warm synths.

Deadmau5 and Kaskade - "I Remember" (mau5trap)
Epic and bordering on commercial...but I listen to it. And enjoy it. Great peaktime stuff. Both of them are touring right now. Ian said the mau5 played everything, from Kaskade to Audion. Eh?

Inkfish and David West - "Hello Piano" (Mistakes Music)
Uplifting cut of house music, with an addictive piano loop and some accentuating strings. Perhaps a bit over the top...the Sebastian Leger remix is good for peaktime, but the piano sample is used only on the breakdown, then disappears. I like the rearrangment of beats...then strings...then piano.

Devilfish and Roel Salemink - "Manalive" (Bush)
The original is a good old techno mix, but Jon Rundell provides almost a dub with a staggering breakdown in the middle. Perfect for raising your hands.

Bassnectar - "Art of Revolution"
Man, I listened to this thick dubstep track on their Myspace...and can't wait for the track's imminent release. They're in Chicago on Thursday! Maybe I'll go check them out...

Brightblack Morning Light - "Hologram Buffalo"
Kinda bluesy, kinda loungy, a little psychadelic... this is one of those songs I could imagine in my head as I'm walking back home from a long night out. I seem to like a lot of those types of songs.

I do need to check out the new Fujiya & Miyagi CD. Must...temper...expectations.

That is all.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Here we go...

I'm a little tired, a little buzzed off adrenaline. The day of the triathlon is here.
Save for a short half-hour ride on my bike, I've done very little the past few days in hopes of resting my body. I hope it doesn't come back to bite me in the ass.

The wetsuit I bought from some Orinda-based college student cost $60. I bought it from him on Friday after he decided to drop by Buffalo Exchange, saving Sofie and me a drive. The bike I inherited from my uncle on Wednesday...I've pumped the tires, but my adjustments to the brakes have proven mostly inadequate. Basically, whenever I squeeze on them, the actual pads just kind of stick to the wheel. Not good.
My basic goal is to ride without braking. Yeah, smart I know. I'm hoping I can find somebody to bail me out.

I hear Sofie getting ready in the background, and the immediacy of the moment kind of hits. A lot of things could go wrong. I could drown. I could fall off the bike and cause a pile-up crash. But I have to shut that all out. Michael Phelps! Think Michael Phelps. (400m in 3:43? C'mon...)

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Hoo boy

Triathlon training, 4 days to go.
I've been swimming with some consistency.
I swam 600m in the warm pool over at Hearst Gym a few days ago. Overall, I'm feeling pretty good. I think I can swim the distance, I know I can bike and run the distances. It's just a matter of putting it all together.

I feel like the swim will still cause me the most troubles. 600-700m in cold water with tides.

Doing a triathlon is kind of rough on the wallet. $95 for registration, $60 for running shoes, goggles, swimcap. And I still need,

-A bike
-A helmet
-A wetsuit
-A watch

Almost as much as tuition for grad school...

I spent the weekend with Dan and his SDSU buddy Steve over in LA. We went to the Kollaboration acoustic show on Saturday and the ProjektNewSpeak sketch comedy show on Sunday. Both were great and provided reminders of the importance of Asian American participation in the arts. As the Kollaboration motto goes, "Empowerment through Entertainment." I look at Dan and sometimes feel like I'm not involved enough with the Asian American community, so seeing Dan so energetic and invested provides an impetus. He derives great enjoyment out of it because he has this group of people to share his passion.

Top ten moments from the weekend:
1) ProjektNewSpeak: Creative, fun-filled, would do it again in a heartbeat.
2) Kollaboration Acoustic 2: Displayed a tremendous amount of variety and talent throughout the show.
3) Meeting Karin Anna Cheung: She showed up at both events, and I finally worked up the courage to talk to her, praising her for her involvement with Project Michelle. Not that she needs the praise.
4) Participating with Project Michelle: Four cotton swabs might help save a life? Count me in.
5) Pink's: I had some sort of ridiculous Poli-Burrito Dog- 2 polish dogs wrapped in a flour tortilla, stuffed with bacon, chili, onions, and cheese. One of the great greasy late night joints I've experienced. Dan, Steve, and I waited for an hour in line, the group wrapped around the place. I can see why. Did I mention I had fries with that?
6) Free Ugly Dolls! Advertising director for ProjektNewSpeak and good friend of Dan, Gina Lee was kind enough to pass me along a gift bag. One for my sis, one for Sofie, one for Dan...and all the rest for me!
7) Catch up with the family: Dim Sum, all four aunts on my mother's side, a little relaxation time with the folks...not a bad way to start off the weekend.

The Iron Giant just finished. What a great movie.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Triathlon Training, Day 10

Swim: 200-250m
Stationary Cycle: 20 min., 6.5 mi., Level 10 random

Today I doubled the effort because I didn't run on Sunday. So...
Sunday 6/15: Ran around campus for 18 min., just in time to catch the end of Game 5 of
the NBA Finals.

Mon 6/16L: Stopped by a used bike shop on Telegraph. Initial estimates have me at $230 - $300 for a used road bike. I think the guy is overcharging.
Went to a Berkeley public pool and swam 25m each way. Ran out of breath after 4 rounds for a grand total of 100m. Stopped. Regained breath. Did another 100m.
Complained. Wept. Looked enviously at the pretty lifeguard effortlessly stroking through the water. She has it so easy.

Tues 6/17: Biked for 5-10 minute spurts. 3.6 mi per 10 min. 1.8 mi. per 5 min. Level 10, random. With breaks I do 2 10-min runs and 2 5-min runs for a grand total of 10.8 mi.

Wed 6/18: It's my birthday! I celebrate by running for 20 min. after work, weaving inbetween Dwight and Parker, from College down to Shattuck, then back up to my place. Stifling heat accompanies serious doubts about this training.

Th 6/19: I watch some YouTube vids of famous swimmers like Ian Thorpe and Alexander Popov, then head over to Hearst North after completing an application for my 30-day free staff RSF membership. My strokes feel a lot better, and I'm able to loosen up and cut through the pool. Too bad my breathing cadence still sucks.

Fri 6/20: Biked for a 5-min warmup, then a 30-min monster ride on Level 10 random. 9.06 miles, followed by another 5-min cooldown. I get close to 11 mi. upon completion. But 30-min straight of riding was pretty tough. 18mi./hr puts me at about a 45-min
ride. I think I can get up to 20mi./hr if I keep it up. Cycling definitely feels best
so fr, even if it is only stationary.

Sat 6/21: Rest day. Drink beer. Eat German foods. Talk and dance with friends. Throw up.

Sun 6/22: Inadvertent rest day. Yeesh. No discipline. Further, a donut nearly ruins
my digestive system.

Of course, today I had Naan and Curry at 11pm, so go figure. I need a little more help
with the whole nutritional disciplining thing. I'll probably have to take a lesson
with swimming, I just feel awkward with it. Running I can work on. Maybe start
combining training methods? I did some core work today, which should help everything, and after all the crap I've eaten lately, it was good to get some crunches and leg lifts in.

What would help:
Waterproof watch
Swim cap
Goggles
Speedo
Running shoes
Bike shoes
Bike shorts/outfit
Bike helmet
An actual bike

Tomorrow: Clark Kerr run (10 laps), some pull ups and push ups.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

It's time to do something

I'm sitting here at about 11:30 AM on a Saturday morning, biding my time. The girlfriend went home to Southern California, I'm organizing some of my previous clips
from the Guardian...and a sad realization struck me. I woke up at 9, went straight to
my laptop, and have done very, very little for the last 2-and-a-half hours. I talked
to my roommate's friend Tessa for a little bit, who is visiting. She and Katie went on
a run on the fire trail east of the Berkeley campus. A run! At 7:30 in the morning! On a Saturday!

Tessa is the type of girl who seems like she has limitless energy, always wanting to do something. She had hiked Half Dome over in Yosemite a few days ago, and she told me just now that she runs pratically every day. Yowsa.

She also told me she wanted to do a triathlon over here near Angel Island. Which got me thinking: a triathlon is something I've always wanted to do. Just yesterday, during another stretch at work, I noted "Triathlon" as something that I should do before I head off to grad school. I view a triathlon as the ultimate challenge, a synthesis of man and machine, of land and water, of physical grit and mental endurance. You can run 20 miles? Try cutting through efficiently through water stroke after stroke. Expert biker? Let's see how your legs feel on the run to the finish.

Tessa also gave me some sites to look up, and after some browsing, I found some events calendars:
http://www.envirosports.com/events/
http://www.theschedule.com/

Which led to me finding a sprint triathlon! It looks like a perfect goal, although the turn around time is short: 7-8 weeks.

http://www.tbfracing.com/events/tri4fun3.html (Herald, CA on Aug. 2)
or
http://www.theschedule.com/EventInfo.cfm?EventID=18905 (Santa Cruz, CA on Aug. 10)

There are plenty of websites to facilitate training:
http://www.beginnertriathlete.com/discussion/training/trainingplans-list.asp?h=1
http://www.menshealth.com/cda/article.do?site=MensHealth&channel=fitness&category=triathlon&conitem=51dff28c348e4010VgnVCM100000cfe793cd____&page=3

But I need to get a bike.
Here we go!

Monday, June 2, 2008

Everything's kind of a mess

I've just moved into my summer sublet over on Dwight, where I'll dwell for two-and-a-half months before I head over to UIS. I began a new job at the Survey Research Center over at UC Berkeley. Back when I was a sociology student, Professor Kristin Luker would always talk about a survey method called CATI, or Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing. Basically, people read a meticulously thought out questionnaire that pops up on the computer screen, and record results according to particular coding. Anyone who took a methods course knew of this method, but I never thought that I'd be participating in something like it.

While pay is a lot more, I have nearly no connection with the people there. I basically isolate myself in a cubicle and listen to everyone read the same prompt to different potential respondents. At the Cal Student Store, I at least had people my age whom I could talk to and relate to. The SRC is more mundane. It's difficult to perceive the great social and academic impact of the study while you're reading the same prompt over and over again. Prof. Luker (who has a new book out) always noted that surveys are important for getting small amounts of information from a broad group of people. I definitely think I'm more about the great amounts of information from a few people.

Anyway, I just moved all my stuff into the Dwight sublet. Yesterday was most of the hard work, today was more follow-up...and pie! Phil, Sofia, and I went to Walnut Creek and Marie Callender's. Sofie got Blueberry Cream, Phil got Pumpkin, and I got Key Lime. I don't think the Key Lime agreed with me.

We walked around after that, looked through H&M, the Build-a-bear Shop, and a Barnes & Noble. The BBS is the craziest thing, they take these empty, hollow shells and anally probe them with a machine, then stuff them silly. The bears come out looking brand new...but the whole process seems mechanically sadistic. But I guess lieele children would get a kick out of it.

I got the SparkNotes version for "How to get a job in Magazines." I feel a little ashamed that I have to resort to guidebooks when I'm going to grad school, but at $13 it seemed like there was enough information to justify the cost. I guess I'll find out soon enough.

I'm going to try and work on my rice post, but inbetween moving my stuff, helping with Phil's stuff, and my new job, it's been tough to freelance. I do need to re-devote myself, because I have been slacking and lackadaisical for a while now.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Some Serious Choices

Well, I have to figure out if I'm going to grad school.

IF YES, then
...I need to figure out where I'm living.
...I need to organize my class schedule.
...I need to move all my stuff.
...I need to determine if I need a car.

IF NO, then
...I have to figure out where I'm living (two choices!)
...I have to determine job prospects.
...I have to start writing more.
...I have to start writing more for pay.

At the very least, the small streak of rejections has ended and made way for a brief series of acceptances. This provides a greater number of options, or to put it in sports lexicon when a coach has too many good players (see: Carroll, Pete), "It's a good problem to have."

What's been going on:

1) Sasha and Digweed, Friday 4/25 at the Warfield. Mind blowing. Granted the Warfield is not the best dance venue ever. It was kind of nice to have that amplitheater effect with the Warfield...and nice for chilling out during the dancing. Why not the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, with a bigger floor and still some seats for the...uhh...resting crowd? I guess, even though they were Sasha and Digweed, there were still so many shows going on, including Danny Tenaglia at 1015 and Booka Shade/MANDY on the Get Physical tour at Mezzanine. If you are an electronic fan, 4/25 was your day in nirvana.

2) UIS Travel, 4/26, 4/28. To be discussed soon.

3) UIS Interview 4/27. Likewise.

4) Mike Birbiglia on Friday 5/2 at Cobb's Comedy Club...was hilarious! His show was the hardest I've laughed at Cobb's. It wasn't even close. He did some skits from his DVD and his CD, so it felt kind of like a live concert...you could anticipate his key hits and recite each line. The fact that Birbiglia could not only incite laughter, but belly-aching guffaws was a true testament to his storytelling abilities.
(For more, see my recent clips!)

5) Ellen Allien on Friday 5/2 at Mighty. Cool beats, nice XLR8R giveaway. I think at some point, I would love to write for XLR8R. Hell, why not right now?

I've also started a new feature on AsianWeek, focusing on the international rice rationing and price hikes. Editors want something daily from me for the blog. Yeesh. But hopefully it all comes together into some majestic feature article that I can hone in on. It's been actually fun, asking people about why things are the way tjey are. It tickles my curious bone.

I'm starting to like writing alot again. I'm almost in The Zone...that one place where you feel like you could write anything and it'd be gold. No editing needed. Fingers move a little more lithely over the keyboard. The mind easily outraces the body. Focus comes naturally. I'm not quite there yet. I think this rice beat might put me over the top. We'll see.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

From Sickness to Shunsuke

I've been sick since Saturday. I worked through the day, then felt headache-y on Sunday, collapsed on Monday, rested Tuesday, and am now gaining some semblance of health.

I still can't eat though. Campbell's soup? I ate one of those microwaveable bowls...then watched a few YouTube videos...only to feel that irrepressible urge to go. I'll spare you the details.

That bowl of soup was the only thing save water, tea, cough drops, and cough syrup to enter my body, and it didn't even last that long. 72 hrs now (Sunday's dinner at 9pm, pork with bell peppers and spinach on pasta) since my last solid-food meal...sad.

The videos I watched were of one brilliant football player. He plays for Celtic Football Club, which is pretty much the New York Yankees of the Scottish Premier League. Celtic is playing their rival Rangers (NY-Boston) in what's called the "Old Firm Derby." To open the scoring...well, I'll let Shunsuke Nakamura introduce himself:



More where that came from...a series of free kicks and lobs against the Celtic Premier League, and a pair of sweet goals against Manchester United during the group stages in last year's Champions League.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

A sensitive interview

At KQED, I interviewed a father who lost his daughter to suicide. I had to ask some really tough, emotionally sensitive questions. I think I did OK considering I had never asked questions from somebody who had been through that sort of experience, but it was still a grinding 50+ minutes. The father seemed much stronger and more resolute than I.

I am stoked about tomorrow's show, which features SF Chronicle columnist Ray Ratto, baseball scholar Jules Tygiel, freelance writer Dan Fost (from the UC Berkeley freelance panel!)...and potentially a special guest. We're going to be talking about the SF Giants and their 50 years in the city, which should provide some great insight into baseball, the Bay Area, and America.

I sometimes like to stay in the office because I like to take it in, put on some basketball, read some magazines and books in peace...but as of late it's felt kind of suffocating after-hours. Too much basketball, haha.

Today I also met Asian American filmmaker Arthur Dong...his new film, Hollywood Chinese, can be found here: http://www.deepfocusproductions.com/HollywoodChinese/index.html.

I also listened to a new band on NPR named Pacifika on Six Degree Records.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

The Concert Agenda

And now a very difficult slate of decisions that calls for attention.
Sofia and I headed out to see China Forbes perform at the Great American Music Hall. Forbes sounded not unlike Sheryl Crow, which makes sense since her producer has worked with Crow among others (anybody remember the Wallflowers?). A lot of twangy guitars and alternative rock vocals, different from anything Forbes' does as lead vocalist of worldly mini-orchestra Pink Martini. Indeed, Forbes traded cocktail dress for cowboy boots, and seemed to enjoy the intimacy and lo-fi mood of the night.

Sofia and I first bonded over a Pink Martini concert, so it seemed fitting to see Ms. Forbes live. After the show, we ruminated over tempting future presentations:

Sat 5/10
Pink Martini
Pink Martini @ Lincoln Theater, Napa Valley

Thu 5/15
The Bad Plus
The Bad Plus @ Palace of Fine Arts

Wed 5/28
Flight of the Conchords
Flight of the Conchords @ Nob Hill Masonic Center

Wed 5/28- Sun 6/1
Russell Peters
Russell Peters @ Cobb's Comedy Club

Speaking of good music, there is an insane amount of good music coming through in the Bay Area, if you're an indie rock / electronic junkie like myself:


Wed 4/23
:
Caribou
Caribou @ Independent

Death Cab for Cutie
Death Cab for Cutie @ Fillmore


Th 4/24

Hot Chip
Hot Chip @ Fillmore

Fri 4/25
Sasha and Digweed
Sasha and Digweed @ Warfield

Booka Shade
Booka Shade /MANDY @ Mezzanine

Sat 4/26
Mum
Mum @ Independent

Simian Mobile Disco
Simian Mobile Disco @ Mezzanine

Goldfrapp
Goldfrapp @ Warfield


Mon 4/28

Devotchka
Devotchka@ Fillmore (of Little Miss Sunshine fame)


Tue 4/29

Minus the Bear
Minus the Bear @ Bimbo's 365

VHS or BETA
VHS or Beta @ Mezzanine

I mean, that is a friggin' carnival of musicians there. You give me one of those shows, I'd be a happy man. Sasha and Digweed proved too tempting not to buy...It's like Mick Jagger and David Bowie teaming up, two heavyweights with a rare reunion (last time on tour for Sasha and Digweed? I believe 2002, during their Delta Heavy tour).

Speaking of good music, I met one of my musical heroes a couple of days ago. It happened while I was on my break from work, and I heard these wicked beats emanating from Lower Sproul at UC Berkeley. I see this red-haired guy with a scruffy beard, and nice black shoes pounding away at a sampler/drum machine. I mean, he was playing all sorts of breakbeats, trip-hop, even hip-hop with a little MCing...He sounded much like a local producer I had known named Odd Nosdam. I first heard about Nosdam through his collaboration with Clouddead, a now-defunct group consisting of Why? and Dose One. I was moderately stirred by Clouddead's beats and vocal droning at first listen, with the neo-Neu sounds of "Pop Song" garnering the most repeat clicks. But I admired the beats and kept Clouddead in mind.

The more I listened to the red-head guy, the more I was convinced I was listening to Nosdam. He maneuvered with impeccable rhythm through these increasingly intricate drum structures. I was also convinced that this guy should be playing nationwide, opening for some big band, putting his name out, because this guy had just a great energy and liveliness. People were attracted to the big white tent because it was grad week at Berkeley, and a few people were munching on lunches. But people were bobbing their heads, genuinely curious about the guy pounding on a square foot of metal and producing this beautiful music.

A guy approached the red-haired maestro, shook his hand, adjusted a few knobs on the speakers, and sat down on a bench. I quickly approached him, needing to satiate my curiosity.

"Do you know who this is?"
"Yeah he's one of my best friends."
"What's his name?"
"Well, he goes by Joe."
"Does he perform around here?"
"Yeah, have you every heard of Anticon records?"
"Yeah. There's this guy named Odd Nosdam he sounds like. Is this guy him?"
"No, actually, I go by Nosdam."

And so goes the story of how I met Odd Nosdam, who was kind enough to drop me a copy of his newest CD...all the while responding to the questions of inquisitive passerbys who wanted to know what the hell Jel (the red-haired dude) was pounding. Jel was mesmerizing, and I don't doubt Nosdam would have been equally hypnotizing had he played that day. He didn't, but he did give me this link that everybody should check out:

Sunday, April 6, 2008

I really do underappreciate KQED

1) I met Lewis Lapham, currently of Lapham's Quarterly fame and formerly of Harpers Magazine fame. From San Francisco, Lapham is one of this generation's finest writers and editors. His Quarterly collect the works from past greats and aggregates them under one large, unifying theme. Volume 1 released in November revolved around War, Volume 2 around Money.

2) Groove Armada played at Mezzanine, and I almost did not get in because I submitted their performance under the wrong date. Aye, rookie mistake. I apologized profusely to Mezzanine's marketing director. Have to be more careful with these things. GA played a great set, Mezz was rocking, especially for a $40 at the door ticket! But the railigs were filled, the floor was packed, the bathrooms were damp...you know a place is busy if the bathroom floors are nice and slick...

3) The Asian American Journalism Association had a panel of journalists discuss freelancing: http://aajasf.org/. The panel provided some illuminating points, namely have a lot of ideas, continue to network, and stay persistent. The group gave me the false hope that I could succeed at freelancing alone. False? Maybe not...

I'm debating whether or not it would be practical to try to shift more of my time and resources into freelancing. Basically, I would have to pitch and submit more articles for AsianWeek and would probably have to find some sort of extra publication. Where? In any case, I gained some insight and hope to keep plugging away. I have to read more!

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Festivals and Jobs

Uh hello.
I might as well reacquaint myself with this site, seeing how it's been nearly two months. What's happened since then? A lot. And a little. I can run down the career highlights later, but needless to say, I'm still freelancing.

I've been looking up a lot of websites lately for jobs, and I figured I might as well post them onto here just to make sure I have all of them in one nice convenient list:

Job websites
  • Craigslist
  • JournalismJobs
  • MediaBistro

    Academic Programs
  • University of California, Berkeley Grad School of Journalism
  • New York University Dept. of Journalism

    Journalism resources
  • From the Detroit Free Press
    American Society of Newspaper Editors
  • Poynter Institute
  • Asian American Journalism Association

    Journalism grants and fellowhsips
  • Asian American Journalists Association
  • American Society of Newspaper Editors
  • Michigan State University links

    A list to come about some of the festivals I want to visit,
    including Coachella, SFIAAFF, NoisePop, SF Sketchfest, Pitchfork festival, SXSW,
    Treasure Island, Winter Music Conference...too many to name!
  • Monday, January 14, 2008

    My first co-produced show!

    Well, the focus sheet for Monday, January 14, 2008, 9AM, "Proposition 93- Term Limits" says I'm a co-producer, when really what I did was background research and pre-interviewing. But I learned a lot about local politics, and I got some folks up on the political pyramid to call in and talk. I'm expecting a spirited discussion, and can't wait to hear what Steve Westly and Kevin Spillane have to say. To have a tangible, notable contribution to something that's going to be on-air...it's kind of like having a by-line in the Guardian, small but no less important than any other contribution. I am proud to have my notes and research in the capable hands of producer Dan Zoll and guest host Rachael Myrow of The California Report. For the first time, I feel like my background work and my hours will prompt public discourse, induce conversation, which is really why I wanted to get into journalism in the first place.

    Hopefully, both pundits call in on-time...

    Thursday, January 10, 2008

    First Day at KQED...

    I should preface this by noting there's a hilarious article in The Onion concerning internships...but no web version yet, I'll be sure to post it later.

    I woke up at 5:30 this morning to finish some clips for the Guardian, and that was fun. I didn't get out the door until about 7, almost falling behind schedule on the first day. What a great impression that would have turned out to be.

    Luckily, after maneuvering through the Mission District and some direction from an elderly garage worker, I found the KQED studios. Julia, my fellow Thursday-Friday intern, quickly familiarized me with documents and tasks. I basically followed her around like a lost sheep for the first hour.

    My first uneasy moment came when Clara Jeffery, an editor from Mother Jones magazine came in to talk about gender politics and Hillary's run for the presidency. I told her that I had visited the Mother Jones office before...then let loose that I had interviewed for an internship there. Uh...awkward! Smooth, Kevin. Reeaal smooth. Mother Jones rejects end up at KQED apparently.

    I was going to give a spiel about how I would be interested in applying for MJ but figured Ms. Jeffery, a stern-faced thirty-something, had more important things on her mind. I figured I had blown it with my "rejected intern" small talk.

    The next meeting with guests at the 10AM hour went a little more smoothly. Jared and Susan Diamond came in, the former a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer, the latter an author and former contributor to the New Yorker and the Los Angeles Times. I managed to actually engage in small talk this time around, touching on their appearance at the Herbst Theatre the night before. They seemed like genuinely nice people, towards the elderly side, experienced and wizened to the world. They remembered my name on the way out, which was nice to hear, a graceful endnote to remember them by. I even traded contact info with Ms. Diamond so she could drop some notes of wisdom for me and my green writing skills.

    From 11AM onward, producer Dan Zoll had me work on getting guests for next Monday's 9AM show, featuring proponents and opponents for Proposition 93. I did not think one proposition could sustain my attention, but I took off on the project and was still going pretty strong by 5PM, especially considering I had been up nearly 12 hours.

    Background research went rather well. I'd post some links, but I'm afraid I'd start arguing both sides, getting into messy details, yadayadayada. But I'll say this: "Keep your friends close and your enemies closer" really REALLY applies to politics. Folks on each side knew their counterparts like the back of their hands. The media contacts for the Yes and No sides had ideas on the hierarchy for the opposite campaign. It was interesting to note.

    The recent presidential primaries, my first day at KQED, and numerous viewings of The Daily Show and The Colbert Report clips have got me more excited about politics than at any other point in my life. I feel like politics are more riveting than sports right now in terms of drama, highlights, scorekeeping, competition...You can't take your eyes off it! Too bad these wide-open national elections only happen after an incumbent leaves, which for the presidential races, is pretty much once every eight years...

    Waking up tomorrow at 6:30 again. Hopefully I can secure some guests for next week's show...