PRSRT STD U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 746 Seattle, WA
VOL 38 NO 9 FEBRUARY 23 – MARCH 1, 2019
FREE
37 YEARS YOUR VOICE
Oscar-nominated One Small Step pays tribute to dream chasers and unsung heroes By Evangeline Cafe NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY
NAMES IN THE NEWS API peeps in the news
A dream took flight as a starry-eyed child sat in front of a television set, reveling in the glow of images flashing on-screen. The opening scene of “One Small Step” exudes the same wonder that drew co-director Bobby Pontillas to his lifelong passion. For Pontillas, an ordinary childhood ritual gave rise to an extraordinary dream. “I was really attached to watching cartoons when I was young,” said Pontillas. “I just liked drawing on the living room floor in front of the TV, not being disturbed for hours.” As an only child raised by his mother, Pontillas spent a lot of time keeping himself entertained. “It was just me and my mom. Drawing is one of the things that I latched onto early on,” he said. “You can sort of get lost in it, like reading a good book.” Pontillas was born in Guam, but spent much of his childhood in Bremerton, Wash. His mother, Corazon Pontillas, had emigrated from the Philippines to serve in the U.S. Navy. “As a young boy, he was already into drawing just about anything,” said Corazon Pontillas. She remembers when other people started taking note of her son’s work. When he was in junior high, without his mother’s
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AT THE MOVIES
Why we loved Alita: Battle Angel
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ON THE SHELF
Books featuring love stories
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Bobby Pontillas on his drawing tablet
knowledge, Pontillas entered one of his drawings into a contest. “When we went to a comic store, a man at the counter said that a fellow Bremertonian had won a drawing contest and that it was featured in the comic book,” she said. “Bobby scanned it, and, to his surprise, it was his
Byun returns home to continue a career of advocacy By Jessica Kai Curry NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Michael Byun is happy to be home and part of an organization that has been at the forefront of advocacy for Washington’s Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community for 45 years. As the newly installed executive director for Asian Counseling and Referral Service (ACRS), Byun is mindful that he has stepped into a position of honor and obligation. “My main goal in coming in … as executive director is to honor the incredible work that has been done before I came onboard and also to honor the incredible team here [and] the amazing support that we receive from our communities.”
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drawing.” Pontillas graduated from Central Kitsap High School in 1997. As his friends were preparing to enter college or the military, Pontillas felt unsure of what to do with his see PONTILLAS on 13
PUBLISHER’S BLOG
Eating out in the Chinatown-ID and why it’s so awesome
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Immigration or citizenship status could be added to antidiscrimination law By Emma Epperly WNPA OLYMPIA NEWS BUREAU
Michael Byun
Byun is not one of those people that’s going to make changes just see BYUN on 5
Senate legislation would add citizenship or immigration status to the “law against discrimination.” The law against discrimination currently outlaws discrimination against individuals based on race, creed, color, national origin, families with children, sex, marital status, sexual orientation, age, veterans status, or disability. The bill does not differentiate immigration or citizenship status from the areas in which see IMMIGRATION on 15
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