Michael Luo Profile picture
Sep 28, 2020 5 tweets 2 min read Read on X
"the newspaper hired Edwin Chen, the first Asian American reporter to join the paper’s Metro staff. Chen, hired as a science writer in 1979, remembers being met by an editor on his first visit to the Metro newsroom with the greeting, “It’s Charlie Chan!” latimes.com/opinion/story/…
"we can’t rely only on Asian Americans to cover the full breadth of Asian America. For one thing, not everyone wants that job."
"Chen, for instance...aspired to join our Washington bureau to pursue his passion for government and politics. He got there in 1989 and subsequently covered science, the Iraq war, presidential campaigns and the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations..."
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders should be part of the warp and woof, as Matsuda says, of our overall coverage. The question isn’t really how to cover Asian Americans; it is how to cover Los Angeles, because we, along with other racial and ethnic communities, are Los Angeles
Just a note that I was briefly part of the Capitol Hill press corps (fall of 2007) and @echen32 was even then one of the few non-white reporters there.

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More from @michaelluo

Jan 14, 2023
At middle school basketball game at the Barclays center, the girls behind us are cheering for the opposing team. One bursts out: “If we lose, I’m going to smack one of those Chinese girls.” I talk to her. She denies it. Her mother comes over and gets in my face. #thisis2023
Not unusual, of course, but talking to two other Asian American parents nearby…we talked about the heart-pounding. The fear.
They’re kids. Where is this coming from? Just shows how people who seem foreign, alien, different…are perceived in America. It’s embedded in our history.
Read 6 tweets
Dec 26, 2022
Speechless at this extraordinarily brave, visceral, and important story by Luke Mogelson, who spent two weeks embedded in the front lines, documenting the unimaginable. War reportage at its finest. Journalism in its most vital function: bearing witness. newyorker.com/magazine/2023/…
Meet Doc, a former marine with a degree in computer science who worked for Google. “A thick scar spanned his neck, from a bar fight in North Carolina during which someone had sliced his throat with a box cutter.”
Many foreigners, no matter how seasoned or élite, were unprepared for the reality of combat in Ukraine: the front line, which extends for roughly seven hundred miles, features relentless, industrial-scale violence of a type unknown in Europe since the Second World War.
Read 8 tweets
Aug 23, 2021
In this week’s @newyorker, I write about Mai Ngai’s new book, “The Chinese Question.” The gold rush made California the substrate for an experiment in multiracial democracy that had little precedent in the country’s history. Hint: it didn’t end well. newyorker.com/magazine/2021/…
“The Chinese of the gold-rush era are mostly anonymous to us today. The absence of their voices from historical accounts perhaps contributes to the mistaken impression that they were passive in the face of abuse.”
“Even though several million Irish and German immigrants had streamed into American cities, it was whites’ resentment toward the Chinese that became a virulent nationwide movement.”
Read 12 tweets
Aug 2, 2021
SIREN @JaneMayerNYer⁩: a well-funded national movement has been exploiting Trump’s claims of fraud in order to promote alterations to the way that ballots are cast and counted in 49 states, 18 of which have passed new voting laws in the past 6 months. newyorker.com/magazine/2021/…
“Dark-money organizations…have relentlessly promoted the myth that American elections are rife with fraud, and, according to leaked records of their internal deliberations, they have drafted, supported, and in some cases taken credit for state laws that make it harder to vote.”
Re: the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. “Based in Milwaukee, the private, tax-exempt organization has become an extraordinary force in persuading mainstream Republicans to support radical challenges to election rules—a tactic once relegated to the far right.”
Read 7 tweets
Jul 16, 2021
Extraordinary details here via @sbg1. Beginning in late 2020, Milley began having daily 8 am calls: “…both engines are out, the landing gear are stuck, we’re in an emergency situation. Our job is to land this plane safely...” newyorker.com/news/letter-fr…
“Milley repeatedly met in private with the Joint Chiefs. He told them to make sure there were no unlawful orders from Trump and not to carry out any such orders without calling him first…”
In the months after the election, with Trump seemingly willing to do anything to stay in power, the subject of Iran was repeatedly raised in White House meetings with the President, and Milley repeatedly argued against a strike.
Read 6 tweets
Jul 3, 2021
So much here in @williams_paige investigation in this week's @newyorker: harrowing scenes from Kenosha; what happens when guns are everywhere; revelations about Rittenhouse family's meeting with Enrique Tarrio six days after the Capitol insurrection. newyorker.com/magazine/2021/…
Rittenhouse, holding his rifle, reached some parked cars just as a protester fired a warning shot into the sky. Rittenhouse whirled; the bald man lunged; Rittenhouse fired, four times. The man fell in front of a Buick, wounded in the groin, back, thigh, hand, and head.
The nearest bystander was Richie McGinniss, the video chief at the Daily Caller, the online publication co-founded by Tucker Carlson. McGinniss, who had been covering protests all summer, had been following the chase so closely that he had nearly been shot himself.
Read 7 tweets

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