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Photo
Credit: Mark Yashihiro
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AC
(DENNIS):The Christmas season is drawing near. Describe the Christmas
experience in the Wang family.
LINDA: When I was a kid, my father would take us to his brother's
houses out of state during every holiday season. Each year would be
a different household hosting the event and all the families would
exchange gifts and would update us on news about one and another,
since most of them lived extremely far away from New York. So to the
members of my family it would be considered as a short winter vacation
and I had lots of great memories from it. We have always been a very
closed knitted family and I think the Christmas and Thanksgiving celebrations
were a bridge that maintained it.
AC
(DENNIS): If you had one distinct memory of Christmas in the
past, what would that be?
LINDA: It has to be the last time spending Christmas with
my Grandfather. On Christmas Eve, this is what he whispered in my
ear: "One can have all the success and money and yet one can't
buy happiness. So follow your heart, do what makes you happy because
life is short and none of us are forever young." Although my
grandfather was extremely ill at the time, he still managed to have
a positive spirit. I think it was much easier for me to communicate
with him because of all his grandchildren I was the only grandchild
who was fluent in Mandarin Chinese. I just love listening to his
life philosophy and the awful wars he went through. He was close
to 100 years old when he passed away and he out lived all three
of his wives. My grandfather spent the last two years of his life
at my parent's house in New York and he will always be greatly missed.
AC
(DENNIS): Let's now talk about Linda Wang, the model. I wrote
an article on runway modeling and the glass ceiling that continues
to exist. What kind of struggles have you faced in the print model
industry?
LINDA: This is a business where having the right look and
skill is essential, but often the lack of work and opportunities
can be extremely discouraging. That is the major reason why I have
always appreciated every booking I get, regardless of how trivial
the job can be and treat it as gold. My own memories of personal
struggles as well as my discussions with other commercial print
models have prompted me to have a positive attitude. Each
struggle I surmount makes me a stronger and better person. Every
individual struggle and mistake is a great learning experience for
me.
AC
(DENNIS): I recall looking at different publications such as
Cosmopolitan, and seeing that out of the models featured in the
ads and editorial content, over a hundred were Caucasian, 12 were
black and three were of other ethnic backgrounds. No Asian models
whatsoever. As a model yourself, how does that make you feel?
LINDA: It saddens me tremendously. I think over all Asians
in general definitely have the "buying power." So all
of us must take time or make time to speak out and take proper action(s)
regarding the issues above so we all can move forward towards equality.
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Photo
Credit: Proctor & Gamble
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AC
(DENNIS): Do you think it's really disturbing that there is a
facade promoted by talent agencies that there is this "heavy-demand"
for Asians in print ads and TV commercials when there actually isn't?
LINDA: I don't know about this "heavy-demand"
for Asian talent, but I believe in recent years TV commercials and
the print market industry have improved tremendously in terms of using
more Asian types of characters as opposed to 20 years ago. But it
sure could be better.
AC
(DENNIS): I was wondering if your brother gets a lot of requests
from friends..."Can you introduce me to your sister?"
LINDA: (Laughter) My brother is the "bright"
and "attractive" one. Trust me on this, that question
is definitely in reverse.
AC
(DENNIS): You worked with the veteran actor Stacy Keach in this
movie. What was it like to work with him and did it seem that he
was more or less tolerable of what occurred on this ship?
LINDA: I remembered the very first night when Stacy Keach
came onboard the ship. Since his room was next to mine, I heard
loud banging noises on the wall within that room all night long.
The following day, I was informed by the crewmembers that Stacy
had used his sneakers and killed over 20 Asian flying cockroaches
in his room that night. (Laughter) He had worked on other film projects
in the Philippines before so he was well prepared for the trip.
I greatly admired Stacy for his professionalism and he was very
down to earth with everyone. He gave me a lot of valuable advice
that prompted me to make the decision on possibly relocating to
California.
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