Category Archives: interview

Captive in North Korea with Laura Ling

Captive in North Korea with Laura Ling

Recently, Laura Ling was on Oprah, Larry King, and Today Show promoting her story and book. She opened up on what happened to her and Euna Lee while imprisoned in North Korea. While we only posted clips, we found this 22-minute interview between Laura Ling and Mariana van Zeller. She reveals details about the human trafficking story she and producer Euna Lee were investigating before being apprehended and then held in North Korea.

Get Laura and Lisa Ling’s book “Somewhere Inside: One Sister’s Captivity in North Korea and the Other’s Fight to Bring Her Home”.

Captive in North Korea with Laura Ling

Heather Park interview with channelAPA.com

Heather Park interview with channelAPA.com
channelAPA.com connected with singer/songstress Heather Park on our East Coast Tour. Learn about how she got into music and the type of music she creates. See some of her music videos including Leave Me to Dream off the West 32nd soundtrack and Trust You off her upcoming album Stay. We also get the scoop on her Stay, which was five years in the making. Look out for her song Woman Warrior on the struggles of Asian American artists trying to break into the music industry. Also a collabo in the works with Magnetic North.

Heather Park interview with channelAPA.com

A Moment in Time

A Moment in Time
We had a chance to watch “A Moment in Time” during the 2010 SF Asian American International Film Festival. The documentary is now hitting PBS this month. Here’ a synopsis of the film:

A Moment in Time, a new film by Oscar-winner Ruby Yang, is a one-hour documentary about the experience of the Chinese in America through the films they loved. It harkens back to a time when six movie theaters in San Francisco’s Chinatown crystallized the memories, the beliefs, the sorrows and aspirations of Chinese immigrant families.

The principal speakers in A Moment in Time grew up here: Irene Dea Collier, Jimmie Lee, Chuck Gee, Cecilia Wong, Amy Chung, Norman Fong. As children they associated Chinese movies (and the Chinese language) with their parents’ alien, backward world. Chinese mothers loved Cantonese Opera films in which tyrannical parents wrench young lovers apart. For them, movies were a rare break in an endless workweek. Chinese movies also translated national disasters – World War II, for example – into personal dramas of separation and loss. For Chinese immigrants they were true to life, unlike the sunny family shows on American TV.

The immigrants’ American kids eventually found their own reasons to appreciate Chinese film. Partly in self defense — because they were seen as Chinese — the children developed a pride in Chinese things. The heartbeat of A Moment in Time is a series of clips from films that were hits in Chinatown. Hollywood Westerns were always popular. Wong Fei Hung, a Robin Hood character from Hong Kong, defended the weak with a smile and a bullwhip. Films from revolutionary mainland China sparked battles in Chinatown between long-haired youths and a conservative older generation. 1950s bobbysoxer films from Hong Kong proved that Chinese girls can be cool. 1960s martial arts films, notably those of Bruce Lee, sent Chinatown boys to kung fu school. Before long all American boys were going.

Chinatown movie theaters have closed. Chinese movies have broken into mainstream culture. Hong Kong directors like John Woo and Wong Kar Wai, movie stars like Chow Yun Fat and Jackie Chan are known around the world. A Moment in Time recalls the period when Chinese movie theaters marked a dividing line between the
generations, but were also a school where American kids came to appreciate their Chinese roots.

Ruby Yang and her producer husband, Lambert Yam, are Americans born in Hong Kong. Lambert Yam managed the World Theater in San Francisco’s Chinatown from 1985 to 1995, an interlude of dramatic change in Chinatown and in Chinese films. Ruby Yang’s Oscar-winning documentary The Blood of Yingzhou District, produced by Thomas Lennon, was filmed in China, where she and Lambert Yam are now based. Yang has directed two other documentaries for American public TV – China 21 and Citizen Hong Kong. She edited Bill Moyers’ PBS series Becoming American: The Chinese Experience and Spencer Nakasako’s Emmy-award-winning documentary A.K.A. Don Bonus. She edited two of Joan Chen’s feature films, Xiu Xiu and Autumn in New York, and has worked on many other features and documentaries. For both Ruby Yang and Lambert Yam, A Moment in Time wraps up a great deal that is close to their hearts.

A Moment in Time draws parallels on the history of San Francisco Chinatown and how the community evolved over time. Look for this documentary on your local PBS station.

A Moment in Time Trailer

A Moment in Time interview with director Ruby Yang

director Gary King Interview with channelAPA.com

director Gary King Interview with channelAPA.com
On the channelAPA.com East Coast Tour, we connected with director Gary King. He talks about how he got into filmmaking and how he’s funded some of his films. Without a traditional filmmaking background, he’s already created a couple films (What’s up Lovely and New York Lately) along with a bunch of shorts. Currently, he’s shooting “How to Write a Joe Schermann Song“. Learn more about Gary King and his work here.

director Gary King Interview with channelAPA.com

Hawaii Five-0 with Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park

Hawaii Five-0 with Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park

An all-time TV favorite gets reloaded. From the writers behind the blockbuster “Star Trek” (2009) comes a clever, adrenaline-fueled update of one of the most iconic shows in television history. When there’s trouble in paradise, Steve McGarrett returns to the islands and joins fish-out-of-water Danny Williams to launch an elite branch of the Hawaii State Police. Also in the mix is Daniel Dae Kim as Chin Ho Kelly and Grace Park as Kono Kalakaua. In this ultimate adventure series, complete with big action and charming characters, the team hunts down ruthless criminal kingpins, who inevitably hear those three feared words: “Book ’em, Danno.” BTW – The theme song stayed the same.

Look for Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park in this action-packed new drama. Surf’s up on Hawaii Five-0 – This Fall on CBS!

Hawaii Five-0 (behind the scenes)

Hawaii Five-0 Opening Credits

Hawaii Five-0 2.0 interview

dumbfoundead interviews Hopie Spitshard


While out in the San Francisco Bay Area, dumbfoundead had a chance to chop it up with female hip hop artist Hopie Spitshard. (see some of her music videos Yummy and Trunk – The Remixes) Not only does she spit rhymes, but she also studies law. Props to her for pulling double duty! She’s got collabos going with Rocky Rivera (aka EyeASage), Bambu, del the funky homosapien, and alexander spit.

Check out some of her music. You can download Trunk for FREE here. Support Hopie Spitshard by getting her album The Diamond Dame on or

dumbfoundead interviews Hopie Spitshard