11-13-17

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The Pitt News

The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | November 13, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 66

Asian-American entertainer talks representation, mental health

Hannah Schneider For The Pitt News

After her sister committed suicide in 2007, Anna Akana felt she had no purpose in life — until she was drawn into the world of stand-up comedy. “It’s the only thing that made me feel alive,” Akana said. But she wasn’t even aware comedy was a viable career path for her until she saw Asian-American comedian Margaret Cho performing on Comedy Central. Seeing someone who looked like her on television made Akana realize she could become an entertainer, too. “And that is the power of representation in media,” Akana said. “Being able to identify with someone on screen who looks like you ... affects everything that you believe that you can do from when you’re a child onward.” More than 200 students gathered in the William Pitt Union Friday night to listen to Akana speak about Asian-American representation in entertainment. Akana, who was invited by the Asian Student Association, is a rising Asian-American filmmaker, producer, actress and comedian. She is most well known for her weekly YouTube show, which has more than 1.9 million subscribers. Besides Cho, Akana also cited Lucy Liu, Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee as the handful of childhood role models available to her. She attributed both “yellowface” — a white person playing an Asian character — and the casting of white people in roles originally meant for people of Asian descent as causes of the lack of Asian representation in media.

Sophomore Nika Markovic celebrates during the volleyball team’s victory over Duke Sunday afternoon. Thomas Yang | SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

PANEL SHEDS LIGHT ON REFUGEE MENTAL HEALTH Amanda Finney Staff Writer

If you had to make a list of your four most important things, tangible or intangible, what would they be? This is the question panelist Sarah Faulx posed to 40 audience members Friday night in William Pitt Union Dining Room B. After encouraging them to take out their phones and make the list, she said to imagine America is in crisis, and to then delete one item from the list. The audience members deleted each item until only one remained. Faulx then said to imagine having to flee the country and to imagine how dear the last item becomes — whether it be friends, family, education or See Akana on page 4 security.

This activity intended to help the audience understand the gravity of the panel’s discussion topic — mental health in the refugee community. The panel, which the student club Facilitating Opportunities for Refugee Growth and Empowerment put together, included three speakers — Faulx, Ashok Gurung and Gemma Marolda — who all discussed refugee mental health. Caroline Smith, a junior international and area studies and political science double major, is the co-president of FORGE. She said FORGE hosts two events each year outside of their general body meetings, including a fall panel, which is typically related to political issues. “I was like ‘what can we focus on that

would be interesting to our organization members, because most of them aren’t polisci majors?’ Most of them are biological science majors, so I thought that it would be really interesting to do it from a mental health perspective,” Smith said. Marolda, a Pitt political science professor, gave background information about international immigration to preface the discussion. She said immigration shouldn’t have a negative connotation because it moves the global economy — and the pushback against globalization is rooted in fear. “The greater the flow of migration, the greater the risk that you are going to lose your identity,” Marolda said. Faulx, a licensed clinical social worker of See Refugees on page 3


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11-13-17 by The Pitt News - Issuu