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2007 / 2008 www.asianamericanmedia.org fromtheexecutivedirector financialstatements highlightsfrom26thsfiaaff Cover photo: viewfromagrainofsand Back cover photo: passingposton This page: shonenko caamboard&staff 20 16 18 caamannualreport07/08 6 4 2 5
Citation preview
w w w.a si a na m erica nm edi a .org
annualreport
20 07 / 20 0 8
c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8 �
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f ro mt h ee x ec u t i v ed i r ec t o r
n o t ef ro mt h eb o a r dc h a i r
c a a mb o a r d&s ta f f
c a a mproj ec t s20 0 7-20 0 8
h i g h l i g h t sf ro m26t hs f i a a f f
f i n a n c i a l s tat e m en t s
t h a n kyo ut oo u rsu pp o r t er s
contents
the mission of the center for asian American Media is to present stories that convey the richness and diversity of Asian American experiences to the broadest audience possible. We do this by funding, producing, distributing and exhibiting films, television and digital media.
Cover photo:
viewfromagrainofsand
Back cover photo: passingposton
This page: shonenko
� c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
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Greetings! I hope you are well. It’s been an eventful and extraordinary year and I thought I’d bring you up to date on our activities here at caam.
The November general election was so important for many reasons and caam in partnership with several partners in public television such as pbs’s Online NewsHour and Frontline/world, launched a special election 2008 collaboration. The initiative ensured diversity in our election coverage, tell-ing stories about communities often ignored by the mainstream media alike—stories about the disen-franchised electorate in US-occupied Guam, the mobilization of young Latino voters in Los Angeles and the at-risk youth electorate raised in the violent housing projects of suburban New Jersey. The effort was so successful we’ve been asked to keep it in place as the new Obama administration begins its work.
Early in the year, caam was awarded a prestigious Wallace Foundation Excellence Award for innova-tion and leadership in engaging new audiences in the arts through digital media. The advent of Web 2.0 is rapidly changing how we engage with each other and the world of news and entertainment. Perhaps more significantly, with the advent of technologies and websites such as iMovie and YouTube, we can each tell and share our story to millions worldwide. caam’s bold digital media initiative places us at the forefront of the innovations and transformations afoot. Be sure to visit the caam Channel at www.asianamericanmedia.org to see our latest videos and digital media projects.
caam also hosted the 26th San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival, a feast of film, music and media over 11 days in San Francisco, Berkeley and San Jose attended by over 35,000. Memorable moments included a spotlight retrospective on acclaimed director Wayne Wang, which included screenings of A Thousand Years of Good Prayers, Life is Cheap…But Toilet Paper is Expensive, and The Joy Luck Club.
Also featured at the festival were the premieres of caam’s first narrative feature productions—The Princess of Nebraska, directed by Wayne Wang and Option 3, by Richard Wong. With these premieres, caam enters the world of narrative filmmaking. Stay tuned for the third caam narrative produc-tion, Fruit Fly, a moving comedic musical by Colma: The Musical writer/composer/actor, H.P. Mendoza. We’re also excited to announce a new caam documentary co-production The Bonesetter’s Daughter: The Making of an Opera. Based on best-selling author Amy Tan’s most personal novel, The Bonesetter’s Daughter, the opera is a creative col-laboration among American composer Stewart Wallace (Harvey Milk), Chinese director Chen Shi-Zheng (The Peony Pavilion, Dark Matter) and the San Francisco Opera, with a libretto by Amy Tan.
For 28 years, caam has worked to fund, produce, exhibit and distribute rich, authentic and diverse stories of Asians in America, ensuring our histories are recorded, our stories told, our voices heard.
Looking ahead, there is still so much more to do. Your support has been a key part of our success. I ask you to step forward once again and join caam as we stake our claim in this new world that is upon us and lead the way for a diverse, thriving society for all.
sincer ely,
Stephen Gongex ec uti v e dir ector
fromthee xecutivedirec tor
de a r fr i en d,
e x e c u t i v ed i r e c t o r �
� c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
notefromtheboardchair
Mike Hsieh
Glenn Osaka
Johnnie D. Giles
Dipti Ghosh John Chung
Gaurav Dhillon
Lisa Hsia
Philomena King
Roger Kuo
David Lei
Susie Jin Pak
Parmila Ramchandani
Ann Sung-Ruckstuhl
Jean Tsien
France Viana
L. Ling-chi Wang
Mona Lisa Yuchengco
a dm i n i s t r at i o n
Stephen Gong
Karen Schiller
d e v el o pm en t
Rina Mehta
Shelly Kim
Theresa Navarro d i g i ta l m ed i a
Michella Rivera-Gravage
ed u c at i o n a ld i s t r i b u t i o n
Pam Matsuoka
Nicole Tse
Larnie Capistrano
f i l mf e s t i va l
Chi-hui Yang
Taro Goto
John Fong
Christine Kwon
Kar Yin Tham
m ed i af u n d
Sapana Sakya
Ellen Park
pu b l i c b ro a d c a s t
Donald Young
ch a ir pr esiden tv ice ch a irsecr eta rytr e a su r er
ex ec u ti v e dir ectordir ector of fi na nce & a dm i n istr ation
dir ectorm ember serv ices & donations m a nager
cor por ate r el ations m a nager
dir ector
dir ectora ssoci atea ssista n t
dir ectora ssista n t dir ector
m a r k eti ng m a nagerprogr a m & pu blications m a nager
a dm i n istr ati v e & oper ations m a nager
dir ectora ssoci ate
dir ector of progr a m m i ng
sta ff
board
because a bunch of street hoodlums shouted racial slurs and threw rocks at me. Without hesitation my brother stormed out of the house in search of my tormen-tors. We never found them but I learned the important lesson that family and community support is critical when one is faced with adversity. Until then I was under the illusion that I could fight my own battles.
I witnessed the same phenomenon this Fall when the collapse of the credit markets made the entire country feel vulnerable. As a result, groups of people who rarely saw eye-to-eye came together to make a landmark historical decision by voting the first African American into the White House. This was followed by coordinated actions by countries around the world to guarantee bank deposits, lower interest rates, and support financial institutions so that we can all fight this financial contagion together.
It was a stark reminder that we are interconnected and must work together as a community in order to succeed in life. It is this sense of community that brought me to caam, where I found kindred souls who share a common passion and
goal of telling Asian American stories. In a country where we are still often mistaken as foreigners, sharing our rich heritage through media with our children and with our neighbors helps prevent attacks that I faced as a frightened child not so many years ago.
Great strides have been made in the past year by the wonderful team of people at caam. We witnessed peak attendance at the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival, co-produced a feature film with renowned director Wayne Wang—Princess of Nebraska—expanded online outreach with the help
of the Wallace Excellence Award, and continued expansion of our educational distribution to colleges and universities.
However, this wonderful momentum is threatened by cutbacks at all levels of government, foundation and corporate grants on which we depend for funding. We can weather this storm only by pulling together as a community. What can you do? Bring your friends to our annual film festival, continue your membership and spread the word about our mission. Your individual efforts keep this organization alive and thriving!
With mixed feelings I end this letter with a personal farewell to you as Chair. I have had the wonderful honor of serving on the board for six years which is my term limit. During this time I have learned a tremendous amount from my fellow board members and the staff at caam. Although I will miss the camaraderie built over the years, I leave with the comfort of knowing that the organization is in strong stewardship, and I am confident that it will reach new heights. Needless to say I will always be a member of this wonderful community, and look forward to seeing all of you at future screenings and events.
Mike Hsiehch a ir pr esident
b o a r d&s ta f f �
a s a child i never felt closer to my older brother than the day when I came home crying
caam staff and interns at the Closing Night Party held at
Bambuddha Lounge: (L-R) Kevin Wong, Christine Kwon,
Amara Dan, Joie Tran, Leanne Koh. Photo jayjao
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� c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
pr
oje
cts
a d r e a mi nd o u b t
by Tami Yeager
There’s no question that the terrorist attacks of 9/11 damaged the American psyche. For Rana Sodhi, that fateful day would shatter his long-held image of the United States. A Dream in Doubt documents the murder of Rana’s brother Balbir Singh Sodhi; on September 15, 2001, while working at his gas station in Mesa, Arizona, Sodhi was fatally shot by a man who mistook him for an Arab Muslim because of his turban. A Dream in Doubt follows Rana Sodhi as he seeks to reconcile his brother’s death with the success that the family has enjoyed since immigrating to the United States. f u n ded � 0 0� broa dca st � 0 08 distr ibu tion � 0 08
an o m a d’sl i f e
by Lynne True
A Nomad’s Life is a feature-length documentary shot in the high grasslands of the Tibetan plateau. A small team of American and Tibetan filmmakers document the lives of a young nomadic family—Locho, Yama and their infant daughter—over three months as they struggle with survival in the midst of modernization. f u n ded � 0 08
as o n gfo ro u r s elv e s
by Tadashi Nakamura
In the wake of the civil rights movement when Asian Americans were touted as the model minor-ity, the late Chris Iijima’s music and passion fueled the emergent Asian American Movement that transformed the exotic image of the Oriental into a rich multi-dimensional American identity and ex-panded the concept of civil rights beyond black and white. A Song For Ourselves conveys the excitement of this little known movement through a teenage son’s search to know his father’s legacy. f u n ded � 0 08
av i l l a g ec a l l edv er s a i l l e s
by Leo S. Chiang
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the Vietnamese community from New Orleans East impressively rises to the challenges by returning and rebuilding before any other neighborhood in the city, only to have their homes threatened by a new government-imposed toxic landfill just two miles away. A Village Called Versailles recounts how this group of people turns a devastating disaster into a catalyst for change and a chance for a better future. f u n ded � 0 08
a h e a do ft h em a j o r i t y
by Kimberlee Bassford
Ahead of the Majority is an hour-long documentary about the life and times of the late Patsy Takemoto Mink, the first Asian American woman and woman of color in the U.S. Congress and the co-author of Title IX, the landmark legislation that expanded equal educational opportunities for women with a profound impact on women’s athletics. f u n ded � 0 08
b i t t er s w ee tro o t s :
t h ec h i n e s e i nc a l i fo r n i a’s h e a r t l a n d
by Corita Gravitt & kvie
The California Delta, in the heart of the state, is the only place in America where the Chinese have maintained a sustained presence for nearly a century and a half. Here, immigrants from China transformed swampland into one of the richest agricultural regions on earth. Bittersweet Roots is the story of how they came and thrived despite hardship and discrimination—an experience that has been both bitter and sweet. distr ibu tion � 0 07
c a a mprojec ts20 07–20 08
c a a mp r o j e c t s 7
newyearbaby
8 c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
c a l av er ah i g h way
by Renee Tajima-Pena & Evangeline Griego
Premiered September 16, 2008 on “P.O.V.”
When brothers Armando and Carlos Pena set off to carry their mother’s ashes to south Texas, their road trip turns into a quest for answers about a strangely veiled past. As they reunite with five other brothers, the two men try to piece together their family’s shattered history. Calavera Highway is a sweeping story of seven Mexican American men grappling with the meaning of masculinity, fatherhood and a legacy of rootless beginnings. f u n ded � 0 07 broa dca st � 0 08
c a m b o d i a nb a s eb a l l
by Mike Siv
Cambodia is known for its Killing Fields, and, for the most part, the country has been viewed through the prism of Pol Pot’s genocide. But, if Joe Cook, a Cambodian American chef from Alabama has his way, all that will change. Hailed as the “father of Cambodian baseball”, Joe returned to his native Cambodia five years ago with a quintes-sentially American dream: to introduce baseball to Cambodia by establishing Cambodia’s first National Baseball Team. Joe’s American dream rap-idly turned into a nightmare. His makeshift team was massacred, this time on the baseball field, by powerhouses of Asian baseball—Japan, Philippines, Malaysia, and others—in the Asian games in Thailand. Joe’s dream of putting Cambodia on the map of baseball was left in tatters, but he does not give up. He turns to an American Coach, Tom Dill, whose high school team, Notre Dame, had made history winning the California State Championships on Dodgers Field. Dill, a devout Christian with a deep love for South East Asia, accepts. Set in the pristine village of Baribo, we
follow Coach Dill and the team as they prepare for a comeback in the Asian Games in Manila. Playing baseball in the Asian games not only provides an international language that connects America and Cambodia to the rest of Asia, but also serves a device for exploring the lives, dreams and struggles of young Cambodian villagers, poor kids whose courage and resilience can redefine the face and future of Cambodia. f u n ded � 0 08
c h i n e s eco u pl e t
by Felicia Lowe
Chinese Couplet is part memoir, part history, part investigation as the filmmaker and former journal-ist explores the meaning of identity by uncovering her mother’s secrets and dissecting the lies that upheld the secrets. The journey reveals the power-ful effect on ones’ sense of place and belonging; within families, communities, even countries. It is a story that is both old and new, a cautionary tale of an unwanted immigrant who realizes the American Dream. f u n ded � 0 08
c a m pa i g n
by Kazuhiro Soda
Funded as part of the 2008 “P.O.V.” Series
This is democracy—Japanese style. Campaign provides a startling insider’s view of Japanese electoral politics in this portrait of a man plucked from obscurity by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (ldp) to run for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Kazuhiko “Yama-san” Yamauchi’s ldp handlers are unconcerned that he has zero political experience, no charisma, no supporters and no time to prepare. What he does have is the institutional power of Japan’s modern version of Tammany Hall pushing him forward. Yama-san al-lows his life to be turned upside down as he pursues the rituals of Japanese electioneering—with both tragic and comic results. f u n ded � 0 08 distr ibu tion � 0 08 broa dca st � 0 08
themosquein
morgantown
�
princessof
nebrask a
unnaturalc auses
�0 c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
dau g h t er so ft h ec l o t h
by Seung Hyun Yoo
Daughters of the Cloth is a stirring portrait of a Korean immigrant family, working in the down-town Los Angeles garment industry. Mr. and Mrs. Bang worked for over 17 years in the business, starting out as sewing laborers and later founding and operating their own sewing contracting com-pany. Now retired, they watch as their three daugh-ters, who decided to strike it out on their own, struggle anew. Navigating at various levels of the industry—from a retailer at the top, a manufacturer and a contractor in the middle, to workers at the bottom—the Bang daughters search to find their place within a cutthroat apparel business. What unfolds are the challenges of their small business ownership, family unity and their very survival. distr ibu tion � 0 08
l i t t l em a n i l a
by Marissa Aroy
Premiered May 2008 on national public televisionThe “Little Manilla” section of Stockton, California filled with chop-suey houses, gambling dens and dance halls, served as the de facto hometown for displaced Filipinos at the turn of the 20th century. In its heyday, this lively area contained the largest population of Filipinos outside of the Philippines. Little Manila: Filipinos in California’s Heartland details the impact of Filipino immigrants on the community from the 1930s to the present. broa dca st � 0 08 distr ibu tion � 0 08
m i g h t ywa r r i o r so fco m edy
by Sung H. Kim
Hailed as one of the most devastatingly funny troupes of the past decade, the “18 Mighty Mountain Warriors” are an audacious Asian-American sketch comedy troupe from San Francisco. This documentary not only provides a rousing introduction to the group but also offers an entertaining examination of the social ramifications of why a troupe like the Warriors, no matter how funny, may never have the mainstream popularity they deserve. f u n ded � 0 0 � broa dca st � 0 08 distr ibu tion � 0 0 �
n e wy e a rb a by
by Socheata Poeuv
This film traces the family history of filmmaker Socheata Poeuv who was born on Cambodian New Year in a refugee camp in Thailand. Her family was among thousands of refugees who fled their homeland after the fall of the Khmer Rouge. New Year Baby is a personal documentary—a search for truth about who her family is and how they survived the Khmer Rouge genocide when so many Cambodians died. f u n ded � 0 0� , � 0 0 � broa dca st � 0 08
o h , s a i g o n
by Doan Hoang
Airlifted out of Vietnam on April 30, 1975, Doan Hoang’s family was on the last civilian helicopter out of the country at the end of the war. Twenty-five years later, she sets out to uncover their story. The film follows her family as they return to Vietnam after decades of exile, where her father, a former South Vietnamese major, meets his broth-ers again to confront their political differences: one was a Communist, the other a pacifist. Meanwhile, Hoang tries to reconcile her own difficult past with her half sister, who was mistakenly separated from the family during the escape. f u n ded � 0 0 � broa dca st � 0 08
Principal Edward Tom in
whateverittakes.
c a a mp r o j e c t s ��
c a a mprojec th i g h l i g h t
w h at e v er i t ta k e s
by Christopher Wong
Whatever It Takes chronicles the triumphs and struggles of the inaugural year of an innovative small high school set in nyc’s noto-rious South Bronx. This deeply emotional, cinema verité documen-tary follows the lives of two characters: Edward Tom, a brash Asian American, rookie principal, and Sharifea Baskerville, a ninth-grade girl with big dreams but even bigger obstacles. A dramatic uplifting story with uncommon personal access, Whatever It Takes reveals a community born into hardship but rising to excellence. f u n ded � 0 07, � 0 08
“ t h e c en t er fo r a s i a n a m er i c a n m ed i a has meant every-
thing for my film Whatever It Takes. caam funded my project at
every stage of production, responded with crucial advice for all of
my first-time filmmaker questions, and gave me encouragement
at every step of the way. With caam, I feel like I have a real fam-
ily behind me, one that believes in my film completely and trusts
my creative judgment. In addition, caam assisted me in finding an
award-winning Executive Producer to help shepherd my project,
something I never could have done by myself. I look forward to
working with caam for the rest of my filmmaking career.”
Christopher Wong / Whatever It Takes
�� c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
o u to ft h ep o i s o nt r ee
by Beth Pielert An American survivor of the Cambodian genocide hopes to unlock the mystery of her father’s disap-pearance in 1975. Thida Butt-Mam’s quest for the truth stirs up the fractured pieces of one family’s nightmare, unearths an unimaginable heart-break, and ultimately shines light on a people’s broken silence. f u n ded � 0 0� broa dca st � 0 08 distr ibu tion � 0 07
pa s s i n gp o s t o n
by Joe Fox & James Nubile
During World War II, almost 120,000 Japanese-Americans were forcibly relocated to intern-ment camps located in remote and desolate areas throughout the country—one such camp was the Poston Relocation Center in the Arizona desert. Passing Poston is set against the backdrop of Ruth Okimoto’s journey as she seeks to answer questions about Poston that have haunted her since child-hood. Woven with stories of other former Poston internees, the documentary is a story of wounded individuals still searching, in their seventies and eighties, for their identity and still questioning what their place in America is. distr ibu tion � 0 08
proj ec tk a s h m i r
by Geeta Patel & Senain Kheshgi
Two friends travel to Kashmir’s war zone and confront their own personal identities and explore key issues of religious and cultural conflict, human rights, freedom of expression, revealing the roots of a divided South Asian immigrant community in the U.S. f u n ded � 0 0�, � 0 0 � , � 0 07
s h o n en ko
by Liang-Yin Kuo & Shuhei Fujita
Shonenko reveals the untold stories of Taiwanese child laborers (Shonenko), from 12 to 14-years-old, who manufactured fighter planes in the Japanese naval arsenals during World War II. They left their families, homelands, and childhoods behind with the dream of receiving an education; but their dreams were only to be shattered—first by the war and again by cruel post-war politics in Taiwan, Japan, and China. distr ibu tion � 0 08
s i k h s i na m er i c a
by Marissa Aroy & Niall McKay
Sikhs in America profiles the Sikh community in the United States. This documentary follows Sikh families in Yuba City, Sacramento, Fremont and San Jose, California. Sikhs in America provides a portrait of what it means to be a Sikh in the US to-day, examining their journey from immigrant farm worker to business owner in a single generation. The documentary will show how Sikhs maintain their cultural traditions while also participating in the American dream. broa dca st � 0 08 distr ibu tion � 0 08
t h el a s tg h o s to fwa r
by Janet Gardner & Pham Thai Quoc
na r r ated by Kevin Kline
Thirty years after the end of the Vietnam War, four Vietnamese families are among the several million victims of Agent Orange filing a class action suite against 32 multinational chemical companies. From Vietnam, they tell their stories while lawyers battle it out in court over evidence. The question is who should be held accountable in the wake of the largest chemical warfare operation in history. f u n ded � 0 0 � broa dca st � 0 08 distr ibu tion � 0 07
Ph
otos
alb
ert
ch
au
Left and right: Spotlight
filmmaker Wayne Wang
(right) discusses his aesthetic
influences with New York Times
film critic Dennis Lim (left) at the
Sundance Kabuki Cinemas.
c a a mproduc tionh i g h l i g h t
o p t i o n3
by Richard Wong
A CAAM Production
The director of Colma: The Musical returns with a very different kind of film: a dream-logic thriller about a man who searches for his girl-friend after receiving a phone call from a mys-terious man. Option 3 is a dark and whimsical ride through the streets of San Francisco.
t h epr i n c e s so fn eb r a s k a
by Wayne Wang
A CAAM Production
The Princess of Nebraska follows twenty-four hours in the life of Sasha, a young Chinese woman who is four months pregnant through a fling back in Beijing. Interrupting her first year of college in Omaha, Nebraska, she travels to San Francisco to abort the child and confront her lover’s male friend.
�� c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
1
2
3
5
A soldier surveys the
aftermath of war in view
fromagrainofsand.
Pandit Chitresh Das
rehearses inupaj.
Socheata Poeuv conducts
an interview about the
Cambodian Genocide in
newyearbaby.
Senain Kheshgi and
Geeta Patel speak
with a police officer in
projectk ashmir.
Kazuhiko Yamauchi and
his supporters pose for a
photo in c ampaign.
Principal Edward Tom in
whateverittakes.
41
2
3
4
5
6
c a a mprojec th i g h l i g h t
Director Senain Kheshgi
and cinematographer Ross
Kauffman set up for a shot
in projectk ashmir.
u n n at u r a lc au s e s
by California Newsreel (a National Minority
Consortia collaboration)
Unnatural Causes, for the first time on film, investigates the sources of our huge and alarming socio-economic and racial disparities in health. The four-hour series sifts through the evidence suggesting that there’s more to our health than bad habits, health care, or unlucky genes. The social environment in which we are born, live and work profoundly affects our well-being and longevity. f u n ded � 0 0 0 broa dca st � 0 08
u pa j
by Hoku Uchiyama
upaj documents the unnatural relationship that developes between renowned Kathak master, Pandit Chitresh Das and tap star, Jason Samuels Smith as their phenomenal cross cultural collaboration, India Jazz Suites (ijs), tours the nation and India. f u n ded � 0 08
u pt h eya n g t ze
by Yung Chang
Nearing completion, China’s massive Three Gorges Dam is altering the landscape and the lives of people living along the fabled Yangtze River. Countless ancient villages and historic locales will be submerged, and 2 million people will lose their homes and livelihoods. The Yu family desperately seeks a reprieve by sending their 16-year-old daughter to work in the cruise ship industry that has sprung up to give tourists a last glimpse of the legendary river valley. With cinematic sweep, Up the Yangtze explores lives transformed by the big-gest hydroelectric dam in history, a hotly contested symbol of the Chinese economic miracle. f u n ded � 0 08 broa dca st � 0 08
v i e wf ro mag r a i no fs a n d
by Meena Nanji
View from a Grain of Sand is a journey across 30 years of Afghani history as lived by three Afghan women. Shot over the last three years in Pakistan and Afghanistan, a doctor, teacher and social activist tell how their lives were violently affected by wars of international making and three different regimes in Afghanistan. Yet through all their loss, and the destruction of their homes and country, these women have endured. With courage, convic-tion and hope they continue to work on improving the lives of the people around them, against all odds, in this brutalized and divided nation. f u n ded � 0 0� , � 0 0 � broa dca st � 0 08
w h eni wa l k
by Jason DaSilva
After working as a filmmaker for ten years, I put my experience with multiple sclerosis to the screen with When I Walk. The film uses my personal narrative as an anchor point to weave in and out of interviews, explanations, and findings on ms. The film builds a narrative journey that is as informa-tive as it is entertaining. The film carries the unique perspective of a young South Asian film director going through a life change. f u n ded � 0 08
proj ec tk a s h m i r
by Geeta Patel & Senain Kheshgi
Two friends travel to Kashmir’s war zone and confront their own personal identities and explore key issues of religious and cultural conflict, human rights, freedom of expression, revealing the roots of a divided South Asian immigrant community in the U.S.
“c a a mi s e v eryf i l m m a k er ’s
d r e a m . caam genuinely cares
about the film and the filmmaker.
No matter what the issue or how
dark the hour, they always had
time to share their expertise and
consultation. This type of support
is priceless and we are indebted
to everyone at caam. We can’t
thank them enough.”
Senain Kheshgi & Geeta V. Patel /
Project Kashmir
6
h i g h l i g h t s
n a r r at i v e c o m p e t i t i o nBest Narrative Feature a m a l
dir ected by Richie Mehta
Special Jury Prize (tie) a lway sb eb oy z
dir ected by John Kwon
s a n tam e s a
dir ected by Ron Morales
d o c u m e n ta r y c o m p e t i t i o n
Best Documentary Feature pl a n e tb - b oy
dir ected by Benson Lee
Special Jury Prize w i n g so fd ef e at
dir ected by Risa Morimoto
comc a s taudienc eawa rd
Narrative Feature o ms h a n t i o m
dir ected by Farah Khan
Documentary Feature pl a n e tb - b oy
dir ected by Benson Lee
Santa Mesa
Wings of Defeat
Amal
Always Be Boyz
Om Shanti Om
Planet B-Boy
1
2
3
4
5
6
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$2 ,558,210
10 .8%
4 .9%
4 .8%
7.5%
20.8%
36.5%
7.4%
7.3%
100%
a s s e t s
Current Assets
Cash and cash equivalents Accounts receivable Grants receivable Pledges receivable Prepaid Expenses
tota l c u r r en t a ssets Property and equipment, less accumulated depreciation (Note 3) Investment (Note 4)
Note receivable (Note 5)
tota la ssets
l i a b i l i t i e sa n dn e ta s s e t s
Current Liabilities
Accounts payable and accrued expenses Grants payable Deferred revenue tota l c u r r en t li a biliti es Commitments and contingencies (Note 6 and 7)
Net Assets Unrestricted Temporarily restricted (Note 8) tota l n et a ssets
tota lli a bi li i esa n dn eta ssets
september30, 20 08
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4 .9%
25 . 2%
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11 . 4%
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5 .5%
1 .9%
4 .9%
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0 . 2%
6 .1%
0 .1%
0 . 4%
100%
f i n a n c i a l s tat e m e n t ���8 c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
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4Fifteen ClothingAcademyXAudrey MagazineBoutique BonanzaCharles ChocolatesCoi Lounge & RestaurantDr. Kim Makoi, D.C., C.Ad.Film Arts FoundationGaylord Restaurant
Hyphen I.B.I BoutiqueIndie IndustriesKirin Brewery of AmericaKoreAm JournalLe SoleilLolonis WineryLost Weekend VideoMaharaniMochi MagazineNumi Organic Tea
oc tober1 , 20 07 – september30, 20 08
Oola Restaurant & BarSudachiTheme MagazineWhite RabbitZaza Nail Spa
A capacity audience of 1400
watches the Centerpiece
Presentation of West 32nd at
the Castro Theatre.
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v isiona ry goldGlenn & Sherri Osaka
v isiona ry si lv erJohnnie D. GilesG. Scott HongMichael and Tonia HsiehRoger KuoDavid and Linda Lei
a dvocateRoland ChiDipti Ghosh & Meggy GotuacoBill ImadaAnn Sung-RuckstuhlFrance VianaMona Lisa Yuchengco
ben efactorDesmond D. ChinDerek ChungStephen GongJohn C. & Chara C. HaasBernadette Kim & Len ChristensenPhilomena KingSusie and Greg PakParmila RamchandaniBarclay & Sharon SimpsonThe William Penn FoundationJean TsienL. Ling-chi Wang
dir ector’s circleLalit BalchandaniKurt BegayeM. Lucey BowenTom & Dorothy Chin, in memory of Janice SakamotoYi-Lun DingKai FujitaLisa HsiaDai Sil Kim-GibsonAmy K. LeeJennie Lew & Cary FongCharles LinHarry LinPeter R. McGrath & Han Y. WangSumit RoySabrina SmithCalvin & Emma YeeLaura & Wallace Young
patronAnonymousCreigton AsatoRavi Chandra, MDAlbert ChauEunice CheeWillard M. ChinGrace EngDr. Weylin G. Eng FamilyRodney J. GedeyEvelyn GeeAmy Lee & Steve HomDavid & Cheryl JacksonTakuji & Harumi KasamatsuLawrence KimStefani KomaruSylvia Komatsu & George StoneAlbert LeeDeanna LeeEdward Lee & Cindy LiuRussell & Sherlyn LeongDeann & Paul LiemDr. Zee LoPatrick LuiSchuyler McGrawDr. Dennis M. Ogawa / Nippon Golden NetworkCaren ParkLeroy & Claudia QuanAdolph RosekransArthur RothsteinJoanne SakaiDr. Marvin SommerRobynn TakayamaVictoria S. TaketaDiane TokugawaHo Chie Tsai & TaiwaneseAmerican.orgBob & Yvonne UyekiSusan Willemsz-GeeromsWongAnna Whittington & Eddie WongBryan YagiErik Young
su pporterAnonymous (2)Calvin AbeIn memory of Janice SakamotoTony AnChristopher Au & Cindy LeeMatthew BrictsonJimmy ChanJudy Chang EngelDarrin ChangTom & Jeanette ChangEd & Janet ChenYoung Whan ChoiAndrey ChowCatherine ChoyMadeline Chun, in memory of Betty Quan & James YeeCelia ChungJohn ChungKevin T. CrillyCrosby & KanedaWei Ming DariotisGlenn Davis & James TakagiTom DonaldRobert & Carole EdelsteinNetta F. FedorPauline FongSteve FujimuraThomas FujisakaJayasri M. HartLeon HartwigHannah HawkinsThomas HicksDonna HoLiz Hoadley & Marsha GaleAlina HuaJolene HueyKathy ImSatsuki InaDon JoeLewis KawaharaSookie KunstBonnie KwongStephen LawsonFrancis LeeMay G. LeeFelicia LoweChris MaliwatPaolo MeleHarry MokPeggy Nagae
Jim NawrockiNoel & Penny NellisOakland Film OfficeBetty OenSteven Okazaki / Farallon FilmsJeffrey OsbornTheresa OwyeongChristina PehlArmando & Renee Tajima-PenaMark B. PratherGail SilvaRaymond & Maia SiuIndigo Som & Donna OzawaPeter L. SteinRoy TakaiIn Honor of Jim YeeJonathan ToJanet TomFred TsuiWayne WadaMarianne WaltersStephen B. Wilson, JrMargaret Yamamoto & Mark HopkinsXY3D, Inc.Steve YodaStan YogiAlon & Margo YuDaniel YuPhil YuLaDonna Yumori-Kaku
fr i en dAnonymous (6)Jennifer AbelleraMarissa Aroy & Niall McKayShaun AuNaina Ayya & Linda J. WellsLeah BeckChas BelovLynn Myers BergerE.B.S. BockrathDiane CarlsonMay-Lee ChaiDarrin ChambersHowell ChanDavid ChangMitzi ChangSeng Chen
Corey ChengMichael ChengBrian CheuLinda Cheu & Andrew YanMichael CheungS. Leo ChiangKevin ChinSusan ChinsenAdena ChungMariko CorellaRojack Cruz & Rachelle FernandezGeorgette DarcyAnne del CastilloLorraine DongHeather DonnellLiza Marie S. ErpeloRosanne S. EstwanickMaria FedelAnushka FernandopulleSteve FongBernard FungRoger Garcia & Lydia TanjiPhan Quoc Thai & Janet GardnerPaul GarlowJohn F. GhizzoniMaryan & Bill GongJoyce L. GuanDarrell Y. HamamotoDr. David B. HashDebra Hatanaka &\ Edwin EndowGeorge A. HeymontHoward HoTan HoYunah HongBryan HsuanJudy HuAnne HuangJennifer HuangGregory C. HunterJenny JangDaniel S. JurafaskyKeith KamisugiCynthia KaneDaniel KaplanHiroshi KashiwagiDana KawanoMark KeneippJeanie KimLarry Kitagawa
oc tober1 , 20 07 – september30, 20 08
d o n o rl i s t ��
�� c a a ma n n u a lr e p o r t0 7/0 8
Lucy KohAkshay KrishnaiahJulie KuwabaraAlbert LaiDean LambRichard LarrabeeEdward LeeJinny S LeeMarjorie LeeSylvia LeeJames LiAnne Soon Neo LimJohn LinFrako LodenFrancis Lu, M.D.Kim MakoiJulie MallozziJoshua MaremontJonathan MarlowLucia MatzgerNadine MayStephen McRitchieRina MehtaCindy MendozaCher MinMona NagaiSrihari NamperumalNguyen Chi DucVictoria NguyenDan NishimuraVictoria NorthridgeJason NouEunice NuvalSusan ObataEric OhwaMarie OuanoJames ParkDavid P. PerlinHoi Yung PoonSarah ProjanskyRamey RamziGlenn RamsdellSteve ReilingMichael ReillyCarole L. RutherfordMimi Sasaki PratherKaren SchillerKen SchneiderSarah X. Shang & Daniel T. ChaoSharon Silva
William SmockJulie D. SooBonnie SoohooMichael SoonJoey SorianoAnthony St. GeorgeJohn M. StrongJackqueline TabbMabel M. TampincoJalyn Tani LangChris TashimaJeffrey Ting & Winnie KooDiane TomGrant Din & Rosalyn TonaiJC TudorLily Tung CrystalNancy Mabel ValdiviezoPhu VoSindy WanAli WongDanny WongJune Woo WongKaren WongPeter WongTam & Adolphus WongWinny WongKaifu WuGayle K. YamadaFae YamaguchiRobert Yamauchi & Barbara ParkynFrank Yee Jr.J.B. YeeKatharine J. YeeJennifer Terng YinRoni YipRyan E. YipKai YoungChun YuConnie & Kou-Ping YuMike Zimmerman
st u den t/sen ior Anonymous (2) Melissa Abrams Argentina Andoni Linda Blackaby Janet Y. L. Chan Joyce Chang Dr. Art Charles Gloria Cheng Dexter Chiang Diana B. Chun
Jeff Clark Katie Concepcion Jerry Dear William Dere Eleanor M. Farrell Maxine FongMarvin J. HalpernKathryn HashimotoKellie JoeAsian Americans for Community InvolvementJane KimChris KimuraBernard LauCharles LeeEthan LeeCorrinee LevyAdrienne LieuMatt LinPhilip LyJilma MarshallMaimounah MasudiRacy MingSylvia NamLan-Huong NguyenAnthony PanBenton PangQuachKumiko SakamotoBill SatoAlvin ShenMike ShenBruce SteirStevensRoselyne SwigCalvin TajimaLee TheisenMichael ThomsonTisBest PhilanthropyTimothy TsaiYue TuJulia W. TungStephen WedgleyJason WienerDarren T. WongWooMable WooDaniel J. YeeJennifer Yoon
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