- рдлрд┐рд▓реНрдо рдФрд░ рдПрдирд┐рдореЗрд╢рди
- рд╕рдВрдЧреАрдд
- рдкрд╛рд▓рддреВ рдкрд╢реБ
- рдЦреЗрд▓
- рдпрд╛рддреНрд░рд╛ рдФрд░ рдХрд╛рд░реНрдпрдХреНрд░рдо
- рдЬреБрдЖ
- рд▓реЛрдЧ рдФрд░ рдмреНрд▓реЙрдЧ
- рдХреЙрдореЗрдбреА
- рдордиреЛрд░рдВрдЬрди
- рд╕рдорд╛рдЪрд╛рд░ рдФрд░ рд░рд╛рдЬрдиреАрддрд┐
- рдордиреЛрд╣рд░ рдврдВрдЧ рд╕реЗ рдХреИрд╕реЗ рдХрд░реЗрдВ
- рдЧреИрд░-рд▓рд╛рднрдХрд╛рд░реА рдФрд░ рд╕рдХреНрд░рд┐рдпрддрд╛
- UMYO рд╡реАрдбрд┐рдпреЛ рдЧрд┐рдлреНрдЯрд╡реЗ
- (Y┼л─Уmav─Бy┼Н Vijeta)
- рдпреВрдПрдорд╡рд╛рдИрдУ рдкреНрд░рддрд┐рднрд╛ (UMYO Pratibha)
- рдпреВрдПрдорд╡рд╛рдИрдУ рдПрд▓рдЯреА рдПрдХреЗрдбрдореА
- рдЕрдиреНрдп
Conversations in Context: Media ЁЯОе Hosted by Yoonj Kim | Smithsonian Channel
In 1960, Chinese-American Hollywood star Anna May Wong appeared in the last film of a long Hollywood careerтАУfar too much of it spent battling discrimination and roles that typecast Asian American actors in a negative light. Today, a new generation of media stars, such as tennis icon Naomi Osaka, is challenging those stereotypes and paving the way for change. Join MTV News correspondent Yoonj Kim and National Museum of American History Curator Theodore S. Gonzalves as they trace depictions of Asian Americans in media from Old Hollywood to now.
Rated: TV-14
From the Series: Conversations in Context: https://bitly.com/2OSUMWT
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