Showing posts with label Hau'oli Makahiki Hou. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hau'oli Makahiki Hou. Show all posts

Sunday, December 31, 2023

Wood Dragon and Watermelon Sushi

Aloha, Hip Hapa Homeez!


Are you ready to leave 2023 behind while embracing the incoming Wood Dragon?


While we’re still over a month away from Lunar New Year, we can already feel the excitement of what the Wood Dragon year will bring.


Watermelon Sushi
For us, it’s all about Watermelon Sushi. In fact, our Executive Producer, Lowell Douglas Ing, is a Dragon!

We’re almost ready for editing all the footage that Doug is currently having digitized. Besides adding new hip hop tunes to our decades-old project, we will also be incorporating animation to complete the story.


Follow us and stay updated. We’re everywhere!


You can heck out our website here:


https://www.watermelonsushi.com/


And, you can also meet us here on Facebook:


https://www.facebook.com/watermelonsushi


There are so many folks to thank for their dedication to this project over the years. Some are no longer with us on this planet. But here’s a partial list:


b.r. Winfrey

Rob Lee

the late Derrick Holmes

the late Jaz Dorsey

Darlene Romero

Joe Calhoun

Mike Reed and friends

Mia Gonzalez

Johl Smilowski

Pearl, Jr.

Quie Bwoy

Miwa Lyric

Larry Gamell, Jr.

the late Eric Eugene Doboy Williams


Our late Facebook Friends Jeffrey Daniels and Correnna L. White


All of our Hapa*Teez t-shirt supporters, although this is an incomplete list:


Cassie Hayes

Eva Abram

Julia Baker

Teri LaFlesh

Ejiro

Z Enterprises

Lisa M. Corey

Leslie Morishita

Lola Mann Smith

Corinne D. Spector

Carol Harris

C.A. Harris

Aja Robinson

Tracy Hatico


Rob Lee

Eva Abram
Ejiro
Julia Baker

Carol Harris

Cassie Hayes

Our gratitude also goes out to all the high school, colleges, universities, newspapers, magazines, radio and TV stations, and internet websites and community organizations that have invited us to speak and/or featured us in their publications and other media.

See you at the end of March when The Dragon will be in full force.


Akemashite Omedettou Gozaimasu, Hau'oli Makahik Hou, Happy New Year!


Your Hip Hapa,


Yayoi





Friday, December 31, 2021

HAPA New Year!

Aloha, Hip Hapa Homeez!

a hip hapa homee
Akemashite Omedettou Gozaimasu! Hau’oli Makahiki Hou!

Hey, hip hapa homee, what are your New Year’s resolutions? Are any of them centered around issues of importance to BIPOC and, especially, us mixies?




















Since Your Hip Hapa began this blog in 2006 (and really moved forward with it in 2008), so much has changed in our Watermelon Sushi World.


In the old days, we rarely saw any outed multiracial images onscreen, in books, or anywhere public. There may have been actors who were mixed in real life, but they were often forced to play mono-racial characters. Except for a few pioneering films that addressed the issue of being mixed, the topic was mostly ignored.


Watermelon Sushi the Movie by B.R. Winfrey

But 2008 brought a biracial president of the U.S. into the public arena. Although he was “one-dropped” by most media, he also quietly stood apart from issues of ethnic identity. Despite having a white mother, Obama was considered to be a black man by the majority, and he went with it.


Still, there has been so much progress on the planet in the 15 years that we’ve been publishing this blog. We can hardly wait to see what’s coming next. Maybe soon, we might even stop writing this blog because, hopefully, the world will reach a point where there will be no reason to bring light to BIPOC and mixie-related topics.


featured family in Watermelon Sushi the Movie

Meanwhile, our goal for 2022 is to produce two films. One is in homage to a Japanese war bride married to an African American soldier. Her fantastic life includes her work as an artist, dancer, chef, and so much more.


Our second film is also a documentary. With major “arrigatous” and “mahalos” to VeganFlix for their generous grant, we are producing a short about Indigenous who were likely vegan before being colonized.


Here’s our VeganFlix interview:


https://veganflix.com/interview-with-2021-veganflix-video-seed-grant-recipient-yayoi-l-winfrey/


Additionally, we’re finally releasing some of our fiction. One will be a collection of short stories all featuring BIPOC, multicultural, mixed-race and interracially involved characters. Another is a novel about a multi-generational mixed-race family living in the Caribbean in the midst of race-based political turmoil.


2022 promises excitement, so please stay tuned!


Watermelon Sushi Youtube channel:


https://www.youtube.com/c/WatermelonSushi/featured


www.watermelonsushi.com


War Brides of Japan Youtube channel:


https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPemluw0stoTsx8yvz2tCrg


www.warbridesofjapan.com



making War Brides of Japan



dir. Yayoi with war bride daughter, Diana Portugal


dir. Yayoi with war bride daughter, Roleta

dir. Yayoi with war bride daughter, Yoshi


Starwheels Productions website:


https://yourhiphapa.wixsite.com/starwheels


HAPA New Year to you!


Your Hip Hapa,


Yayoi




Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Ringing Out the Old Year with War Brides of Japan

Aloha, Hip Hapa Homeez.

At long last, all 5 of the short films that comprise ‘War Brides on Japan, a docu*memory’ are available for rent at Vimeo OnDemand:



This has been a long and arduous project and, because of its grassroots flavor and ultra-low budget, the films will not be theatrically distributed.

Here’s a big shout-out to all our donors listed on our website:
(Scroll down to ‘our Donors’).


And, here’s the link to our trailer titled, ‘The Chase’, which has won several film festival awards.


And, we have more awards to add to the laurels above. 

Please follow our Facebook pages to stay updated:


Meanwhile, we have plans to resurrect our Watermelon Sushi project—either as a feature-length animation or narrative—next year.

We’ll also be working on another docu*memory—about the artist, or as we call her the heARTist, Yuriko:


When we meet again on March 31, 2020, we should finally have another mixed-race, multi-cultural, transracial adoptee or culture-crossing interview for you.

Hau’oli Makahiki Hou, Akemashite Omedettou Gozaimasu, Happy New Year!

Your Hip Hapa, 


Yayoi

Wednesday, January 01, 2014

HAPA New Year!

omedettou...

Hau’oli Makahiki Hou. Omedettou Gozaimasu. HAPA New Year!

In keeping with our new bimonthly format, Your Hip Hapa will return on February 5 with another interview of a hip hapa homee: a mixed-race, or interracially involved, or transracially adopted, or culture crossing person.

Until then, please enjoy this gallery of our Hapa*Teez t-shirts followed by our list of links:

Your Hip Hapa,

Yayoi









Watermelon Sushi film

Watermelon Sushi on Facebook

Hapa*Teez on YouTube

Hapa*Teez on Facebook

Hapa*Teez on Café Press

War Brides of Japan v.2 on YouTube

War Brides of Japan on YouTube

War Brides of Japan on Facebook

Yayoi Lena Winfrey fan page on Facebook (sorry, but Your Hip Hapa can’t add any more friends to her regular profile page)

Sexy Voices of Hollywood

Twitter



Wednesday, January 02, 2013

Another Year Here


Aloha, Hip Hapa Homeez.

As we say in Hawai’i, ‘Hau’oli Makahiki Hou’ for Happy Year New. Here’s wishing the best for you and yours in 2013.

Since this is Your Hip Hapa’s first blog post of the New Year, I'd like to make this month one of intermittent silence in honor of Hip Hapa Homeez that are no longer in our Watermelon Sushi World. During your busy days ahead, please take a few minutes to remember the following good folks:

Yuriko-san's first passport
First and foremost is my Mom, Yuriko-san. A Japanese war bride, she is the primary subject for the War Brides of Japan documentary. For those of you familiar with my media work spanning some 13 years now, you know that no one has had a more profound effect on my life than she did. Please join me in a sweet salute and a kind kiss skyward to the incredibly multi-talented Yuriko-san. 

Here’s one of my fave blogs about her:

Yuriko-san, left, with friend Emiko-san

Derrick-san in Tokyo












Also in November, we bid adieu to our astonishingly creative Director of Marketing and Publicity, Far East, Derrick Michael Holmes. A dancer, model, actor publicist and all-around great guy, Derrick will be missed not only for his extraordinary input as a promoter, but also for his kind-hearted generosity.


Here’s Derrick’s Facebook page: 


Ms. Muffin

On New Year’s Eve, Yuriko-san’s dog of 11 years joined her Mom on the other side of Watermelon Sushi World. Please say goodbye to our mixed-race mutt, Muffin:




Several years ago, I was dismayed to learn of the passing of a great filmmaker friend in Hawai’i. Here’s the blog I wrote about Sergio Goes, a cross-cultural Brazilian living in Honolulu, in 2008.


Since we’re taking this month to honor those who’ve left us, let’s also remember those still here who helped pioneer the mixed-race agenda.

Folks like author Teri LaFlesh:

author Teri LaFlesh




















Arana and her Topaz Sisterhood:

Arana sitting in center

Nikki and son, Daniel
Euphoria Luv (now Asian Black Community):









Jen Chau of Swirlinc.org:

The Mixed Chicks and their Mixed Roots Film and Literary Festival:

If you know a mixed-race pioneer, or anyone forwarding our Hip Hapa Homeez agenda, drop us an email so we can interview them for our next month’s blog.

Meanwhile, watch our Hapa*Teez video and buy a t-shirt, like our Hapa*Teez fan page, check out our Watermelon Sushi film, like our Watermelon Sushi fan page, check out our War Brides of Japan videos, like our War Brides of Japan fan page, and join our Hip Hapa Homeez group page on Facebook to participate in discussions about being biracial, blended, interracially involved, mestizo, mixed race, multicultural and/or transracially adopted.

100 poems cards read for New Year's
Here’s to a HAPA New Year from…

Your Hip Hapa,

Yayoi