Last week in Austin, I got to bring up Tony Hinchcliffe. This is what he said. Happy Asian (AAPI) Heritage Month! pic.twitter.com/9XG6upit2a Peng Dang (@pengdangcomedy) May 11, 2021
The video shows Dang introducing Hinchcliffe, who immediately calls Dang a “filthy little fucking chink and begins mocking Dang s set with a fake Asian accent.
Dang says he had been asked by the show s booker to introduce the surprise guest for the night and only learned it was Hinchcliffe a few minutes prior to introducing him to the audience. The two comics had shared a bill a year prior in Plano, but there was no bad blood between them, Dang says.
Fort Worth officials may have not heard that old saying about looking a gift horse in the mouth. This is the crux of the recent conflict between local artist JD Moore and the city’s graffiti abatement program.
While painting a mural in Fort Worth last September, Moore says he was approached by a city representative and invited to join the program with a mural project.
In November, he says he accepted the proposal even though it was pro-bono and paid only for paint and materials because he was interested in contributing to the community and thought it would make a solid entry on his résumé.
Thanks to the pandemic, some trends solidified into routine parts of our lives: Zoom meetings, outdoor concerts, online shopping and an insatiable thirst for bloody crime.
As if the world wasn t scary enough, gorging ourselves on the goriest and most shocking crime stories became a common pandemic pastime. The genre s revival it had its first heyday in the 80s has raised questions about both who the audience is and why we find true-crime documentaries so fascinating. (Women like them more than men, generally, partly because women find them useful for tips about how to avoid becoming crime victims themselves,
“It is not traditional in any sense, as most of what we are doing is drawing, collages and sculpture,” Hasbany says.
Learning along with students from all over the world in a supportive environment has given Hasbany an invaluable perspective, she says, and it gave her a cultural appreciation of her own roots.
“I always thought it was super boring or relatively normal, but since moving to London and meeting so many people from so many places, it gives you an appreciation for how strange Dallas or Texas is in general in comparison to other people’s experiences growing up,” she says.
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