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A Dire Topic screenshot – Philbert Lui

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A Dire & Personal Topic – A Banana’s “Embraced Contradiction” & TorontoALPHA

Posted on 22 October 2010 by Philbert Lui

TorontoALPHA Educators Conference

After working three days straight with TorontoALPHA’s historic Educator’s Conference 3 weekends ago, I had a lot to think about. There were a lot of thoughts roaming around inside my head regarding the events of World War II in Asia and how it is lost in most history books. A lost chapter in history it seems. So I tried to relate with the many scholars, speakers, and brilliant minds who voiced their thoughts throughout the conference, but ultimately, I couldn’t relate. Due to my lack of experience and knowledge with history and anything political, I did as I always did, I listened and admired. The only way I could relate is to connect with my own perspective and my own story. I had to see everything through the lens of a Banana. And thus, I wrote down a speech of sorts, and I voiced it in front of a camera. Enjoy.

A Dire & Personal Topic by Philbert Lui – A Banana’s “Embraced Contradiction” & TorontoALPHA:

The video is fairly long, but I hope you get something out of it. If you prefer reading, below is the written version of what I said (with slightly better grammar and sentence structure and more typos):

Hi there. I’m Philbert Lui of The Banana Times. This particular video blog is going to be a little different. Usually, traditional video blogs would have many cuts in the timeline to jump from shot to shot or scene to scene to make some kind of point. Well, that’s not happening today because of the nature of what I’m about to talk about, I feel that this has to be uncut just so my train of thought is evident.

For those of you who have been following my personal twitter account or the Banana Times twitter account, you might know that I have been working for TorontoALPHA. Now TorontoALPHA is a non-profit organization aiming to promote the education of the events of World War II in Asia. And three weekends ago, TorontoALPHA hosted a very significant conference for the educators of Canada and others; to help spread the word on this lost chapter of history.

Now, to summarize, or to attempt to summarize any of the topics and amazing speeches seen at the conference would do the entire event injustice. Due to the amount brilliant minds that congregated at the conference, me trying to relay any of it would be feeble and quite offensive. So in order to shed any light on the event, on what I learned and on what I feel, I would have to speak from my perspective. For the few people who actually read The Banana Times blog or watches our once-in-a-blue-moon video on Youtube, may have noticed that I take pride in recognizing my own bias and that I embrace the contradictions within myself.

When I say being a contradiction, I mean it on several levels. For one, I think many people who assimilate with the Banana identity, whether you think you’re completely Westernized on the inside or that you feel like you’re multicultural on the inside, sometimes unknowingly lack the understanding that you are on some level a contradiction. Now I say and mean this in the most inoffensive way I possibly can. When I say you or people, in this context, are a contradiction, it is not an insult or an attack. Rather I think it is something to be embraced, and is also what my team and I strives for in The Banana Times. Being a Banana requires a capacity to embody more than one set of cultural values and attitudes beyond your native Asian identity, thus making you a liaison between certain boundaries of society. Being a person of Asian descent and be influenced and inspired by Western cultures and societies, in its very basic, traditional and prejudice form, is a contradiction. But going back to the origins of the term “banana”, it was used by an older generation of Asians who considered themselves purely Asian, against a younger generation who have been brought up or influenced by Western cultures. In short, it’s a derogatory term. And yet today, we embrace it with pride. And with that pride comes an embraced contradiction. An acceptance that with this nation-less but global label, comes the ability to withstand conflicting forces of culture, society, politics, gender within yourself. A power to hold and contain contradiction, which otherwise have been deemed negative by many others.

Now even though I identify with this “embraced contradiction” it is only 100% guaranteed applicable to me. To say it is applicable to others is nothing less than presumptuous. With that said, I also take pride in expressing through the lens of my own bias. Everyone’s point of view, perspective or opinion is in itself a bias, and can be beneficial if embraced. Again, this is all me. I take pride in calling Craig Ferguson one of my modern day heroes because a few years back he said “I am no expert or alcoholism or anything, but I am an expert on my own story. I was there when it happened”. These two sentences stuck with me, and perhaps will continue to for as long as I live. I claim to have the ability of “embraced contradiction” and the recognition of my own bias, because this is my own story. Out of everything I will learn, or come to learn or teach in my life, I will only be an expert on one thing. Myself. And thus I take much pride in saying and indicating that I have a bias and that I walk with contradiction with whatever I express or create.

I constantly reference the “Banana” or “Banana culture” because it is a significant of my story. And being able to reflect on my own story as an expert, I discovered something. Sure, after hearing my theories on biases and inner contradictions being good things, always talking about Bananas makes a lot of sense. But this is also valid because it is a case study. Being a Banana, in my words, means you have a beneficial ability to withstand, contain, and excel with more than one set of values and attitudes within you, but this is not only applicable to Bananas. Rather, it applicable to any similar form that also has an embraced contradiction. Meaning that anyone of any race who were raised, inspired, influenced, lived in a different society or culture from their ethnic origin can have this embraced contradiction. The Banana is only a case study in which me and The Banana Times specialize in, there are many other case studies related to multicultural capacity that I would not be nearly qualified to talk about. But I urge those who are experts of their own story to explore this capacity, to embrace this contradiction, and to be proud of your own unique bias.

Now that I’ve talked a little bit about how I operate and how my mind kind of works, I’d like to return to the weekend I’ve had. TorontoALPHA held a historic and important educators conference last weekend, I believe the first of its kind since WWII, and I was lucky enough to volunteer for them as a videographer. They aim to raise global awareness on the history of WWII in Asia specifically, as many people don’t know about the atrocities that happened on that side of the world, especially those of us who grew up in the West. Many studies and books have been written about the European side of WWII with the genocide of the Jews, but there was also a similar Holocaust in Asia instigated by the Japanese Empire. And ultimately, TorontoALPHA aims to convince the Japanese government to make a sincere apology for their war crimes and admit to the atrocities they committed over 60 years ago. There were many speeches, testimonies, videos from many scholars and filmmakers, and to try to relay their knowledge would be egotistical of me.

But I would like to say this. I identify myself as a Banana. A person of Asian descent, more specifically Chinese descent, who was born in the West and have been influenced and surrounded by Western culture throughout his life, therefore creating a contradiction within myself as I said before. This contradiction is what I thrive on, and I tell stories and accounts of this contradiction through my own bias. And from this, I want to tell you something that I feel bananas are obligated to do. Learn about the events of World War II in Asia.

As members of the Banana community, we know more than one set of values and attitudes, that is our nature. But like any culture, it originates from history. The post-WWII era is a period in human history where mass-diaspora and migration increased, thus creating hybrid identities like Bananas. Not only do we need to learn about the events of WWII in Asia because of justice, but also to learn how identities such as the Banana came about. We are not only Asian or Western; we are international because of the nature of our identity. The Holocaust of Asia is not a Chinese problem, or a Japanese problem, or a Korean problem or an American problem, it is a global problem and a human problem that has yet to be resolved even after 60+ years.

Many of our grandparents were alive during WWII and without their strength and their vigor we would not be here. If there were a time where you should practice the Asian tradition of respecting your elders, this would be the time. Respect them by learning what they had to go through and what they had to endure for you to be here. Without our grandparents and their peers, Bananas would not exist. We would not exist. I would not exist.

Now what I have said comes out of the brief experience I have had with Toronto ALPHA. These are all thoughts from my own bias, and may be flawed. But if you are going to take anything way from what this contradictory, presumptuous Banana boy has said, take away this. If you believe you are a Banana, or have any other identity that enables you to have a multicultural capacity, and that you think that you have a contradiction within yourself that you can benefit and excel from, talk about it. Tell people your own story, because that’s the best tale you can tell. You are the expert of your own story. Learn more about the Holocaust in Asia and maybe that would become part of your life and part of your story as well. Banana Culture is a culture that is both local and global. If your voice is heard, it will travel far.

Good luck.

If you have any questions, feel free to shoot them my way – philbertlui@thebananatimes.com – I’ll be happy to answer them. I have to stress that everything I have said is only 100% applicable to me, for others it may be different. But even so, this is just a gathering of thoughts from a person who is trying to tell his own story, but I hope it connects with people in any way possible. Because what happened to our grandparents and forefathers during World War II in Asia must be heard and learned.

I wish you luck.

-phibz.

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The Cove

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The Cove – A Film We All Need To Watch

Posted on 28 June 2009 by Philbert Lui

I have heard in passing about the dolphin killings in Taiji, Japan but never got the grasp with the whole situation until a friend sent me this trailer. I am not a huge animal-hugger and I do believe that natural selection or survival of the fittest applies somewhat to modern life. This film is dolphins, conspiracy theories, poison, public jeopardy and ultimately, a documentary. This I have to see.

Critics say its a cross between Flipper and The Bourne Identity, because of all the state-of-the-art surveillance equipment they use. I can’t even picture how Flipper and Bourne are able to intertwine, which is why I need to watch this.

I don’t think you have to be an activist or a documentary-phile to enjoy this movie. Its about a real issue and a group of people who break the law for the greater good. Then again, the situation in Taiji should not be seen as a generalization for the whole of Japan. Every country has its secrets.

I haven’t been so excited about a documentary since Fahrenheit 9/11.

-phibz.

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WALL-E

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Oscars to have 10 Best Picture nominees, why not LAST year!

Posted on 24 June 2009 by Philbert Lui

Variety reports in next year’s Academy Awards ceremony, there will be 10 Best Picture nominees. That is twice more than the usual five. Sid Ganis of the Academy says that it will give other types of movies a chance at gold, such as documentary, foreign-language, animated feature and “maybe even a comedy”. In this economy it also won’t hurt films to have more credibility and coverage at the box office.

Since the recession I always thought the film industry, especially Hollywood, was one of few still reeling in the big bucks. I mean, I definitely did not stop going to the theaters when Wall Street crashed, and movie tickets aren’t cheap in Canada. After reading the article, I wasn’t sure if I was happy or angry.

First, after reading that a comedy now has a shot at the Best Picture nomination brought much joy to my heart. I was big supporter of Juno two years ago and I look forward to film of similar caliber to join the big drama boys again. Also, having ten nominations gives the good old indie films a chance as well. Although Slumdog Millionaire certainly proved that an independent picture can win without having to double the nomination slots.

On the other hand – why couldn’t this have happened last year! Last year would have been a great year to have ten Best Picture nominations. I really think the Academy made this decision in response to the huge fan criticism one how they omitted The Dark Knight and Wall-E from the Best Picture category. Lets take a look at last year:

2008 Best Picture nominees:
Frost/Nixon
Milk
Slumdog Millionaire
The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
The Reader

In my opinion, these are the five other films I would’ve included if there were ten slots, and with reason:

Gran Torino

Why this movie failed to received a single nomination is beyond me. Clint Eastwood directed himself in another memorable performance. Eastwood plays Korean war veteran with a very racist vernacular and appears as the antagonist at the beginning of the film but shifts to touch your hearts towards the end. What struck me most was Eastwood’s choice of casting genuine Hmong people who have no acting experience to play the supporting cast. When you watch their performance you don’t notice bad acting, but rather their reactions in real life.

The Dark Knight

TDK got snubbed. Big time. The world was not ready for such an epic film, which is why the Academy is now compensating by doubling the Best Picture nominees. For those of you who’ve seen the film, you know why it should have been nominated. For those of you who haven’t, f*** you. Get off your ass and go watch it. Watching Heath Ledger as The Joker leaves you breathless and wondering if the film should have been called The Joker.

The Wrestler

One of the best slice-of-life dramas I have ever seen. Daron Aronofsky used subtle documentary techniques to show a segment of a post-prime wrestler’s life without having to elaborate a vast backstory. All you needed to know is that he’s old, out of work and clearly has issues, but you love him. Mickey Rourke’s comeback is definitely complete.

Vicky Cristina Barcelona

The needed comedy to every Best Picture roster. VCB was a sexy romantic comedy that truly stayed away from its sappy, gut-wrenching conventions. There was no ideal happy ending or a scene with an unnecessary long kiss with a sunset in the background. There was foreign, fun, erotic romance to the point where there was a three-person couple. The dynamics of the relationships between characters accompanied with an optimistic narrator made the picture controversial, questionable but over all stimulating. If you know what I mean.

WALL-E

Arguably the best Pixar animated feature, and this is includes Up. I’d hate to discredit traditional animated classics such as Aladdin or The Lion King, so I would rank WALL-E as the best 3D animated feature film of all time. I would have never imagined an animated film to even dare to have such vivid documentary characteristics. But the environmental context of the film made it work wonderfully. There was no dialogue in first half hour of the film and I assure you, no one found that boring or unnecessary (I think). Our human race is relentlessly trying to create artificial intelligence to assimilate human characteristics, but we’re still very far from succeeding. After watching WALL-E, I can tell you this – Andrew Stanton, is the first to breathe true life, personality and love into robots.

There’s my make-belief list of the Ten 2008 Best Picture nominees.

Don’t stop watching movies, please.

-phibz.

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Steven Daldry of “The Reader” to edit for Chinese audiences.

Posted on 21 June 2009 by Philbert Lui

Oscar-nominated British director Steven Daldry, known for Billy Elliot and The Hours, have considered editing his most recent Academy Award-winning picture, The Reader, for Chinese audiences. The sexually explicit film will not be released in theaters across China, but is currently part of the 12th Shanghai International Film Festival. Full story at Hollywood Reporter.

China lacks a ratings system for different age groups, therefore the government requires censorship and re-edits so that every movie that is released caters to all ages. Daldry states that he would consider editing the film depending on “how much they want to take out”. I have respect for Stephen Daldry’s unstubborn attitude towards China’s uptight censorship laws. For a director to go back to the drawing board and redo a piece of work that is already considered complete, in order for the wider world to experience, gets a lot of respect from me. It also makes sense financially as well. China is a billion-person audience that has not been fully tapped into, I’d say its a smart move.

Imagine if Basic Instinct was re-edited and released across China. How boring would that movie be? No leg spreading scene? But then again, the Chinese and Sharon Stone already have beef (around the 0:22 mark):

I hate to weigh out and put numeric value to human life, I really do. But what could justify a person to say an earthquake that killed 80,000+ people to be equivalent to a political struggle for independence between Tibet and China? Something in the back of my head just keeps screaming “Its a dumb blonde comment! Just leave it be!”. Speaking of dumb blondes, here’s a short film I made a couple years back – enjoy:

-phibz

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Chinese People Can’t Have Names Anymore

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Chinese People Can’t Have Names Anymore

Posted on 17 June 2009 by Philbert Lui

First, the Texans are telling Chinese people to change their names, now the Chinese government is commanding their own people to change their names. We/they can’t catch a break, can we/they?

China has been working towards modernizing their enormous database of 1.3 billion citizens by replacing their hand-written identity cards to computer-readable versions. One major downfall of this system is that the program that scans these high-tech cards can not register all Chinese characters. Meaning that citizens whose names are more obscurely written than others, due to the individuality their parents wanted them to embody, cannot get the new identity card. Much more at New York Times.

Well of course, unless they change their names, which is what the government wants them to do. Miss Ma in the image below you has a obscurely written Chinese name (her name is very cool).

Her surname, Ma, is the character that means horse. The other character of her name is Cheng, which means “galloping steeds” and is essentially written exactly like the character for horse but three times and squeezed together. So the new card-reading system cannot read the Cheng character, so they want her to change her name into something more simple.

Communist China borders on totalitarianism in many cases, but how much more can you strip from your people? I remember reading a passage in the bible that says that people would be recognized as nothing more than numbers. According to the NYTimes article, there are enough Zhang Wei’s in China to populate Pittsburgh. If this continues, the Chinese people will be simplified into something very similar to plain numbers. Is it too difficult to input the missing Chinese characters into the new system?

With a loud shout calling “Chan Ming”, 50 million would turn to react. Chaos? I only dare to think of conspiracies regarding the simplification of identity.

Thanks to Val for the article.

-phibz.

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28 Days Later

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Japan to Simulate Effects of Pandemic in School

Posted on 12 June 2009 by Philbert Lui

Japanese company SoftBank will be picking a school with 1000 students to experiment and track how a virus spreads across a concentrated community, writes SCMP. Every student will be given a cell phone with GPS tracking capabilities so their locations and movements can be recorded. A few are chosen to be the “infected” (wait, what?) with the digital virus and their movements compared with others to see who they crossed paths with and are at risk of contracting the disease. The families of the infected will be notified so that they can take their children to the doctors, hence reducing the rate of infection in an outbreak situation.

Okay. First thing I thought of was Battle Royale versus 28 Days Later. I swear Danny Boyle added too many zombie connotations to the word “infected”.

This experiment was devised before the outbreak of the Swine Flu and has resurfaced now that Japan has the most confirmed cases of the disease outside of North America.

Umm. How about privacy? Oh right, zombies don’t care about that. Also, the WHO recently elevated the Swine Flu to the “pandemic” level. Meaning it is a disease new to a population, that infect humans and causes serious illness while spreading easily. An epidemic on the other hand is subjective as it describes something that is expected and at times local rather than global. Epidemics can even describe something non-infectious such as obesity (thank you Morgan Spurlock).

Wait. Wasn’t the Swine Flu new, infects humans quickly, and fatally since the first we heard about it? Sugarcoating a pandemic, are we now? Hmm.

-phibz.

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Japan China Pledge for Economy

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China and Japan join forces against failing economy

Posted on 08 June 2009 by Philbert Lui

The following post exemplifies the type of image we try to deliver at The Banana Times. Although not necessarily in the same political and serious tone as news pieces like this, but we try our humorous best.

China and Japan pledged to save the diminishing economy hand-in-hand yesterday as Vice-Premier Wang Qishan and Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone concluded after a meeting in Tokyo. This Sino-Japanese agreement responds to the consensus at April’s G20 summit in London. As the countries involved at G20 aim to commit US$1 trillion to help under-developed countries in light of the failing economy, Japan and China agree on elevating each other’s economy as well. More at SCMP.

As a Chinese person who has heard many prejudiced opinions of how they hate the Japanese, and also as a person who passionately studies Japanese culture, this piece of news brings peace to my heart. Many Chinese people discriminate against the Japanese for their crimes during World War II, which is valid due to the brutality many veterans and families experienced back then. Even in a modern age such as ours where globalization evaporates the constraints of language, distance and culture, the history of war and death is not easy to forget.

But at the same time, forgetting is not the solution but rather understanding, and I think this Sino-Japanese pledge is a start to something. I hope it won’t fade away as a temporary solution just to fulfill the capitalistic greed of the economy. I guess in times of need, differences of race, history and culture cease temporarily in order to overcome a conflict. But then again, bringing up my cynicism, once the conflict is over will these differences resurface again?

Here at The Banana Times we attempt to provide news, analysis and a little bit of humour to all Asian-Western related topics. And we try not to favor a certain culture even though sometimes it seems that way. Many Asian nations gather in North America and Europe with countless experiences that involve both their ethnicity and the Western influences that surround them. At TBT, we try to project those experiences.

This piece of news in a way validates what we do. So we hope that the few who log onto this website can help us with their voices and experiences, to add fuel to our fire while bringing others along for the ride.

-phibz.

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