PRSRT STD U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 746 Seattle, WA
VOL 33 NO 35
AUGUST 23 – AUGUST 29, 2014
FREE
PICTORIAL Haute couture at Seattle Keiro Garden » P. 7
32 YEARS YOUR VOICE
Dealing with death— A history of change in Little Saigon and harassment Photo by James Tabafunda/NWAW
Zelda Williams suffers from the loss of her father and internet abuse
Intersection of 12th Avenue South and South Jackson Street in Little Saigon
By Zachariah Bryan NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY When renowned comedian and actor Robin Williams committed suicide from asphyxiation, daughter and half Filipina Zelda Williams discovered a hard truth about social media. It has two sides. There’s a nice, caring side and a downright ugly side. Zelda is the daughter from Williams’ second marriage to Filipino American Marsha Garces. Garces met Williams when she became the nanny to Williams’ son Zachary (from his first wife). Garces and Williams had two children, Zelda and Cody, before divorcing in 2010. Initially, after her father’s death, the messages pouring in from Twitter, Tumblr, and Instagram provided warmth and support for Zelda Williams. While celebrity deaths often generate a healthy number of Internet responses, it seemed that the whole world had gathered on social media channels to provide their respect for Robin Williams. After all, this was a comedian that several generations had grown up with, laughed with, and followed their dreams with. He was a crossdressing nanny, the genie, Peter Pan, the gay owner of a drag queen club, that guy who made Flubber.
But despite all the warm memories and despair, it’s never long until the Internet “trolls” come rolling in. Two anonymous Twitter users, @ PimpStory and @MrGooseBuster, started sending Zelda Williams gruesome, altered images of her father, showing bruises around his neck and blaming her for his death. “Please report @PimpStory @ MrGoosebuster. I’m shaking. I can’t. Please. Twitter requires a link and I won’t open it. Don’t either. Please,” Zelda Williams wrote in a tweet she has since deleted. Shortly after, she swore off social media for an undetermined amount of time. “I’m sorry. I should’ve risen above. Deleting this from my devices for a good long time, maybe forever. Time will tell. Goodbye,” she wrote in her last tweet on Aug. 12. Zelda Williams’ cyber bullying, and the ensuing backlash from supporters, now has Twitter officials rethinking their policy to prevent similar cases in the future. “We will not tolerate abuse of this nature on Twitter,” Del Harvey, VP of Trust and Safety, said in a statement. “We have suspended a number of accounts related to this
Like many of the city’s other neighborhoods, its first transformation took place when Seattle’s first residents and developers raised and lowered the levels of city land, known as “regrading.” It became a part of the Jackson Street regrade in 1909. Long before it was called Little Saigon, this neighborhood’s first occupants were Jewish and African American. Little Saigon’s current center – 12th Avenue South and South Jackson Street – used to be the location of
A tenuous road ahead for Oakland Mayor Jean Quan
Flying kicks everywhere!
{see LITTLE SAIGON cont’d on page 15}
Two martial arts expos enlighten and entertain
Influx of candidates suggest public dissatisfaction
Photo by Zachariah Bryan/NWAW
Zelda Williams and Robin Williams
By James Tabafunda NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Seattle’s Little Saigon neighborhood has reinvented itself several times over the last 100 years. It was not always the go-to spot for authentic Southeast Asian food or the social and economic center of the Vietnamese American community. Located at the easternmost part of the International District, it is bordered by South Main Street to the north, Rainier Avenue South to the east, South Dearborn Street to the south, and Interstate 5 to the west.
By Daria Kroupoderova NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Incumbent Oakland Mayor Jean Quan has a tough and crowded road ahead of her. Fourteen candidates are vying for her spot as she runs for re-election in November, according to the Contra Costa Times. Originally, there were 20 candidates running in total. However Mayor Jean Quan some dropped out while others did not meet the requirement of 50 signatures when filing paperwork. One candidate, Dan Siegel, is a former adviser to the mayor. Others include Councilwomen Rebecca Kaplan and Libby Schaaf, and San Francisco State Professor Joe Tuman. In the last election, there were
{see WILLIAMS cont’d on page 5}
{see QUAN cont’d on page 6}
A participant at the Second Annual International Martial Arts Championship at the University of Washington
By Zachariah Bryan NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Last Sunday, there were enough punches, flying kicks, and dancing swords to fulfill every Kung Fu fanboy’s heart. That’s because two all-day events took place, including the First Annual Seattle Martial Arts Expo at the Asian Resource Center in the International District and {see THE MARTIAL ARTS EXPO cont’d on page 14}
THE INSIDE STORY NAMES People in the news » P. 2
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WORLD Chiang Kai-shek is mainstream » P. 5
PUBLISHER’S BLOG Horsing around... » P. 10
COMMENTARY Nickelsville to move to ID? » P. 11
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