When Asians who grew up in the United States attended school by bus, the air is always wet and stuffy, and children will be thrown like salads with a slight influence on the road. The rear seats support all popular and tough children who cry out on the street towards the pedestrians or settle for the driver of the bus. I despise those children behind. While growing up in an American school they are living my life.
Many of my friends know that I moved to Los Angeles four years ago but in fact I did a lot of acting in junior high school ... I became the leader in more than a dozen games on the Gulf Coast It was. However, I grew up in America with Asians and began to believe that this was a dead end ... "There is no one not wanting to see me on a movie or television." So during high school, I was completely I quit and decided on a more responsible career. That is engineering. After getting a degree and working for a while, I started the company with a few friends. As a sort of guilty pleasure, I also started doing again with my toes ... I did not work every second at our startups who are doing our performance. Working hard, our small company got an investment from Google.
Growing up as an Asian American in the United States is not a single experience. In addition to the numerous cultures that this term actually covers (see image below), everyone has their own life experience. Asian Americans on the East Coast will experience different experiences from those on the West Coast. Growing in the South is very different from growing in the north. Each region has different tolerance depending on Asian culture and community. Depending on the location, individuals may be subjected to extreme racial discrimination or racial discrimination. In my previous example of yoga, some said that there is no problem with yoga practice, others said that they would never go to a yoga studio. There are some color related complexities I do not mention, but they exist and play a role in shaping the experience.
Locate the systematic racial issue behind the China dress incident: As white gates of national culture
Asian or Asian Americans make up about 4.8% of the population of the United States. As immigrants from China, Vietnam, the Philippines, and other parts of Asia are increasing more and more, Asians have become one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in America. If media research on the expression of Asian or Asian Americans is inadequate, research on minorities is used because minority groups have similar problems in media expression. America's largest ethnic group and African-Americans play an important role in the American entertainment industry Asian and Asian Americans are often excluded and in most cases seem to be "invisible". As communication professor Darrell Hamamoto (1994) wrote, "Asian or Asian Americans, their presence is primarily for their convenience and profits from the major players in Europe and America .