ON THE CLOCK Ep.3 – Kamikaze Guys
On The Clock Episode 3, Kamikaze Guys is out now!
On The Clock Episode 3, Kamikaze Guys is out now!
In this week’s episode of ON THE CLOCK, Shelly and RJ get hyped up for the Mr. Hyphen Contest.
Asian Pacific American and Asian filmmakers are making history again at this year’s 2010 Sundance and Slamdance Film Festivals in Park City, Utah.
New America Media Ethnic Elders Fellowships for Ethnic Media Journalists: Ethnic Elders Today and Tomorrow, underwritten by a grant from The Atlantic Philanthropies.
The new episode of ON THE CLOCK, “Michella and Ellen Go Halfsies” is here!
This year’s DIVERSITY IN PLACE FILM FESTIVAL invites submissions addressing the Diversity of Places that compounds our urban realities. These include nourishing places as well as unsettling, even frightening, places.
Applications are now available for the 2010 Producers Institute for New Media Technologies. The Institute is a ten-day residency for eight creative documentary teams with the shared goal of developing and prototyping an interactive, multiplatform project that has social justice and human rights impact.
Hyphen and the Oakland Asian Cultural Center (OACC) present the fourth annual Mr. Hyphen competition on November 14, 2009, celebrating the men of the Asian American community.
As summer comes to a close our Superfan Ravi Chandra blogs about Maya Lin’s sclupture “What is Missing”, both a memorial to endangered species and a call to save them.
Taking place during the 31st annual Independent Film Week, IFP’s Independent Filmmaker Conference is the must-attend event for film and media professionals to learn how today’s creative choices and business decisions are impacting tomorrow’s artists, industry and audiences.
Frameline’s latest home video, ASIAN QUEER SHORTS is now available for purchase. ASIAN QUEER SHORTS is a sexy compilation of the best of Asian shorts from Frameline featuring: Still, Last Full Show, Dissolution of Bodies, A Crimson Mark, and Yellow Fever.
This ferociously funny, utterly unreliable memoir chronicles David Henry Hwang’s struggle to define racial identity in the mixed-up melting pot of contemporary America.