Monday, October 22, 2007
Telltale Signs/ The Disconnect
Rodel E. Rodis, October 22, 2007
If the question posed by AOL to its Internet users - whether there was “good reason for some to be offended by this (Desperate Housewives) joke”- had been asked of Filipino American and Philippine commentators, their answers would have been markedly different.
Philippine Daily Inquirer columnist Conrado deQuiros wrote that his first reaction was “to laugh out loud. Hatcher’s remark is funny, though the kind that hurts only when you laugh. It’s so because like the truly most laughable things on earth, it has much truth in it.”
Philippine Star columnist, William C. Esposo, wrote that “in typical Filipino fashion, we've over-reacted once again over what can be considered as nothing more than one issue in long line of misinformed racial slurs that are commonplace on US television.”
Another Philippine Star columnist Barbara C. Gonzales believed that “we have lost our sense of humor…That was just meant to be funny. Now we are outraged, protesting, demanding an apology.”
Their “get over it” attitude contrasts with those of Telltale Signs reader Purita Guinto who wrote a response typical of the views of many in the US: “I felt those who dismissed it did not feel the sting of that crude ABC joke, in contrast to those or us from the Fil-Am community who raged against it the instant we knew about it. Remember the thousands among us who signed that petition within a few days after it appeared on the Internet?”
At a hearing of the San Francisco Immigrant Rights Commission on October 16, where a resolution condemning the “Desperate” slur was being discussed, I was asked by an Israeli-born commissioner why Filipinos were taking this matter too seriously. “There are anti-semitic remarks in the Al-Jazeera cable channel all the time and we don’t complain about it,” he said.
There is a huge gap in the differing portrayals of Jews and Filipinos in the media, I replied. On any given night, you can view scores of Jewish Americans on network television as lead actors and actresses in TV sitcoms (“Seinfeld” for example). “But how many Filipinos do you see on TV every night?” I asked him.
Except for Cheryl Burke (Dancing with the Stars), whom even then most Americans wouldn’t know is a Filipino, you don’t see Filipinos even as doctors or nurses in medical TV shows (Gray’s Anatomy, ER, House, etc).
When someone utters an anti-semitic joke, people would generally regard it as a bigoted rant and dismiss it in the same way that Michael Richards’ racist rants against African Americans were disregarded. A ‘dumb blonde” joke would have no effect when prominent blondes like Dianne Sawyer, Barbara Walters or Hillary Clinton appear regularly on TV belying the stereotype.
It was context that made the “Desperate” slur sting. Because there is hardly any Filipino presence on network TV, any negative Filipino reference is therefore magnified because of the absence of any counterweighing positive reference.
If there are no positive images of Filipino physicians on TV, then a remark that questions the quality and competence of doctors with diplomas from “some med school in the Philippines” acquires instant credibility in the absence of TV evidence suggesting otherwise.
In contrast, Philippine commentators get to watch Filipinos on TV every night, in various roles, both positive and negative. So when they hear a negative inference about Filipino doctors, they generally don’t see what the “big deal” is as they see Philippine doctors in a positive light regularly, in reel and real life.
Many of them, like Esposo, also asked: “Doesn’t the recent Nursing Exams Leak Scandal logically create the likely impression that we produce sub-standard medical professionals? Doesn’t the reputation of the Philippines as a diploma mill justify that impression too?”
But the unfortunate reality is that Filipinos are so far removed from the radar screens of Hollywood producers and screen writers that it would give them too much credit to assume that they have any interest in knowing anything at all about the Philippine educational system. They couldn't care a whit about us.
The other reality that escapes “the truth hurts” proponents is that Filipino doctors have to pass three medical exams before they can practice in the US: the Philippine medical exams, the Educational Council for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) exams, and the Medical License Examinations (MLE) in the US, which is the only exam that holders of US diplomas have to take. It's not as easy as buying up a diploma from a sidewalk vendor.
But there is also another context that informs the attitudes of Philippine commentators. Philippine television is generally not subject to the same “fairness” standards that American TV networks are subject to.
When I was in Manila last year, I was shocked to watch a Philippine game show called “Game ka na ba?” (Are you game already?) hosted by (presidential daughter) Kris Aquino where the contestants for that evening were all “little people” (derisively referred to as ‘dwarfs”). The TV audience laughed at them the whole show. That kind of mockery of people with disabilities would never appear on American game shows like Jeopardy or Wheel of Fortune.
In the Philippines, every disability is fair game for abuse in politics and on network TV. There are no limits to what or who you can mock. When opposition politicians like Sen. Panfilo Lacson can refer to President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo as “Dwendita” (little dwarf) because of her vertically challenged disability, one can only imagine what people can say about anyone else.
Because the Philippine media culture has numbed them to feeling any sense of outrage at the utterance of degrading insults, many of these commentators just can’t understand why we’re making such a “big deal” about a "four second joke”.
The disconnect between Filipino American and Philippine commentators is evident in Historian Ambeth Ocampo’s observation of the “Division” (the title of his recent column in the Inquirer) among Filipinos in America. “I’m not a sociologist, so I don’t know the answer to the question,” he asks. “What is it in our nature that makes expatriate Filipinos divide rather unite? The answer will come in handy not just abroad but back home where every day is an exercise in forming a nation.”
From our vantage point, “expatriate” Filipinos have united on this “Desperate” issue more than any other issue in recent memory. It is a unity that our community can build on to address other pressing issues (like the FilVets issue which needs our doctors' support). While not quite an exercise in forming a nation, t is an exercise in empowering a community.
Send comments to Rodel50@aol.com.
If the question posed by AOL to its Internet users - whether there was “good reason for some to be offended by this (Desperate Housewives) joke”- had been asked of Filipino American and Philippine commentators, their answers would have been markedly different.
Philippine Daily Inquirer columnist Conrado deQuiros wrote that his first reaction was “to laugh out loud. Hatcher’s remark is funny, though the kind that hurts only when you laugh. It’s so because like the truly most laughable things on earth, it has much truth in it.”
Philippine Star columnist, William C. Esposo, wrote that “in typical Filipino fashion, we've over-reacted once again over what can be considered as nothing more than one issue in long line of misinformed racial slurs that are commonplace on US television.”
Another Philippine Star columnist Barbara C. Gonzales believed that “we have lost our sense of humor…That was just meant to be funny. Now we are outraged, protesting, demanding an apology.”
Their “get over it” attitude contrasts with those of Telltale Signs reader Purita Guinto who wrote a response typical of the views of many in the US: “I felt those who dismissed it did not feel the sting of that crude ABC joke, in contrast to those or us from the Fil-Am community who raged against it the instant we knew about it. Remember the thousands among us who signed that petition within a few days after it appeared on the Internet?”
At a hearing of the San Francisco Immigrant Rights Commission on October 16, where a resolution condemning the “Desperate” slur was being discussed, I was asked by an Israeli-born commissioner why Filipinos were taking this matter too seriously. “There are anti-semitic remarks in the Al-Jazeera cable channel all the time and we don’t complain about it,” he said.
There is a huge gap in the differing portrayals of Jews and Filipinos in the media, I replied. On any given night, you can view scores of Jewish Americans on network television as lead actors and actresses in TV sitcoms (“Seinfeld” for example). “But how many Filipinos do you see on TV every night?” I asked him.
Except for Cheryl Burke (Dancing with the Stars), whom even then most Americans wouldn’t know is a Filipino, you don’t see Filipinos even as doctors or nurses in medical TV shows (Gray’s Anatomy, ER, House, etc).
When someone utters an anti-semitic joke, people would generally regard it as a bigoted rant and dismiss it in the same way that Michael Richards’ racist rants against African Americans were disregarded. A ‘dumb blonde” joke would have no effect when prominent blondes like Dianne Sawyer, Barbara Walters or Hillary Clinton appear regularly on TV belying the stereotype.
It was context that made the “Desperate” slur sting. Because there is hardly any Filipino presence on network TV, any negative Filipino reference is therefore magnified because of the absence of any counterweighing positive reference.
If there are no positive images of Filipino physicians on TV, then a remark that questions the quality and competence of doctors with diplomas from “some med school in the Philippines” acquires instant credibility in the absence of TV evidence suggesting otherwise.
In contrast, Philippine commentators get to watch Filipinos on TV every night, in various roles, both positive and negative. So when they hear a negative inference about Filipino doctors, they generally don’t see what the “big deal” is as they see Philippine doctors in a positive light regularly, in reel and real life.
Many of them, like Esposo, also asked: “Doesn’t the recent Nursing Exams Leak Scandal logically create the likely impression that we produce sub-standard medical professionals? Doesn’t the reputation of the Philippines as a diploma mill justify that impression too?”
But the unfortunate reality is that Filipinos are so far removed from the radar screens of Hollywood producers and screen writers that it would give them too much credit to assume that they have any interest in knowing anything at all about the Philippine educational system. They couldn't care a whit about us.
The other reality that escapes “the truth hurts” proponents is that Filipino doctors have to pass three medical exams before they can practice in the US: the Philippine medical exams, the Educational Council for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) exams, and the Medical License Examinations (MLE) in the US, which is the only exam that holders of US diplomas have to take. It's not as easy as buying up a diploma from a sidewalk vendor.
But there is also another context that informs the attitudes of Philippine commentators. Philippine television is generally not subject to the same “fairness” standards that American TV networks are subject to.
When I was in Manila last year, I was shocked to watch a Philippine game show called “Game ka na ba?” (Are you game already?) hosted by (presidential daughter) Kris Aquino where the contestants for that evening were all “little people” (derisively referred to as ‘dwarfs”). The TV audience laughed at them the whole show. That kind of mockery of people with disabilities would never appear on American game shows like Jeopardy or Wheel of Fortune.
In the Philippines, every disability is fair game for abuse in politics and on network TV. There are no limits to what or who you can mock. When opposition politicians like Sen. Panfilo Lacson can refer to President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo as “Dwendita” (little dwarf) because of her vertically challenged disability, one can only imagine what people can say about anyone else.
Because the Philippine media culture has numbed them to feeling any sense of outrage at the utterance of degrading insults, many of these commentators just can’t understand why we’re making such a “big deal” about a "four second joke”.
The disconnect between Filipino American and Philippine commentators is evident in Historian Ambeth Ocampo’s observation of the “Division” (the title of his recent column in the Inquirer) among Filipinos in America. “I’m not a sociologist, so I don’t know the answer to the question,” he asks. “What is it in our nature that makes expatriate Filipinos divide rather unite? The answer will come in handy not just abroad but back home where every day is an exercise in forming a nation.”
From our vantage point, “expatriate” Filipinos have united on this “Desperate” issue more than any other issue in recent memory. It is a unity that our community can build on to address other pressing issues (like the FilVets issue which needs our doctors' support). While not quite an exercise in forming a nation, t is an exercise in empowering a community.
Send comments to Rodel50@aol.com.
FilAms Stage Protest in Front of Disney Store in SF
Joseph Pimentel/Asianjournal.com
THE newly-formed Filipino Anti-Defamation Coalition staged a noontime rally in front of the Disney Store adjacent to San Francisco's famed Union Square last October 13 in a continuing protest to what it has termed as a "bigoted remark" about Filipino medical professionals on the ABC Television Network series Desperate Housewives.
Disney-ABC Television Group, part of Disney Media Networks, manages among others, the ABC Television Network.
Carrying placards which stated “Desperate Housewives TV Show No Class,” “Disney/ABC We Need More Than An Apology,” “Desperate Bigots,” “Filipino Medical Schools Best” and “Shame on Disney,” around 60 protesters picketed the store for about an hour, chanting anti-ABC/Disney slogans and passing out flyers to passers-by.
In an interview with Asian Journal, Coalition member Atty. Rodel Rodis said one of the main reasons for doing the protest in front of the Disney Store is to get the attention of the entertainment giant.
“What we need to do is to get Disney to wake up, to see that this is not good for Disney and this is the parent of ABC,” Rodis stated. “Sometimes you have to go to the parent in order to get the child to behave. This is what we need to do in order for Disney to say that we need to give these people more than just an anemic apology.”
“It is insulting that who they have sent so far is their Vice President for Diversity,” added Rodis. “His job is to pacify the natives, pacify the minorities. We have not gotten any apology from the President of ABC, from the producers of Desperate Housewives. In fact, the apology does not carry any recognition that they made a mistake. It’s like, ‘We’re sorry we offended you. Too bad.’”
Rodis also explained that the remark, while it may have intended to be humorous, presents a bigger problem. “This is far more serious than a racial slur. When you start putting into the minds of people that you better watch these doctors – that if they have medical diplomas from the Philippines, these are substandard and inferior – you better not trust yourselves or your relatives to them, then that’s very pernicious. This is a very serious insult to our people, and it is defamatory. The worst that I can think of or have seen in years,” he said.
As far as the class action suit discussed in a recent meeting is concerned, Rodis said they are studying every angle.
“The class action suit is being studied around the country by lawyers right now. They are coordinating through e-mails and conference calls,” he revealed. “It’s a very tricky situation so we know what the legal pitfalls are, but we are trying to find a way in order to be able to file it and make it stick.”
The coalition, Rodis said, will decide on further protest actions during future meetings. He revealed that a summit on November 10 is planned where doctors, organizations, nurses, professionals and all groups who were mobilized due to this issue will talk on what direction they will take.
The summit may even determine the final position of the Filipino medical community. “Hopefully, there will be a unified voice led by an executive committee composed of the associations of Filipino physicians in America. We hope that there will be a coordinating body which will speak with one voice on the issue,” Rodis said.
Rodis is convinced that the medical community and the Coalition will take the fight to the end.
“There were doctors in a recent meeting who said they have been in the profession for 30 years, but felt like their contributions were devalued because of what ABC did,” Rodis said. “They were really hurt… this is a very deep wound that cannot be cured with a band-aid. That’s why it may take a long time to resolve.”
Dr. Carmelo Roco, former president of the Philippine Medical Society of Northern California, meanwhile, said that it may be too late even if ABC has deleted the offensive scene from the season opener.
“The damage has already been done,” he stated. “Many Americans have seen the episode that degraded Filipino American doctors. It was like a subconscious suggestion to the minds of all these people.”
“We need to cure this, not with just an apology, but for ABC to have a program that has a positive impact on the future of our countrymen. We need not only an apology but constructive television programs as well that will be good for everybody,” Dr. Roco added.
Dr. Roco said he talked to his American colleagues, who expressed sympathy with their plight. “Many American doctors have called me to say that we should fight for our rights… so that this mistake, which took a swipe at our honor and dignity, will not happen again. This is not only for our children, but also for those educated in the Philippines who want to go to America. We need to remove the doubt from the American people that we have a defective education [system],” Roco explained.
Like Atty. Rodis, Dr. Roco expects this issue to be a continuing struggle and present an opportunity for the Filipino people to be united.
“This is not just for now,” Dr. Roco said. “We will continue to safeguard our rights. Our community and our heritage should not be taken for granted.”
On the September 30 episode of the widely-viewed TV series, Teri Hatcher’s character expressed apprehension about the diagnosis of her doctor, saying that she needed to look at the diploma to make sure that it is not from some med school in the Philippines.
The remark triggered protests within the Filipino community, calling for ABC and the producers of Desperate Housewives to apologize for what was perceived as a slur against medical professionals who obtained their education from the Philippines.
ABC had issued an apology which did not appease many members of the Filipino community. It has also since edited the line from the episode, which can be viewed on abc.com.
THE newly-formed Filipino Anti-Defamation Coalition staged a noontime rally in front of the Disney Store adjacent to San Francisco's famed Union Square last October 13 in a continuing protest to what it has termed as a "bigoted remark" about Filipino medical professionals on the ABC Television Network series Desperate Housewives.
Disney-ABC Television Group, part of Disney Media Networks, manages among others, the ABC Television Network.
Carrying placards which stated “Desperate Housewives TV Show No Class,” “Disney/ABC We Need More Than An Apology,” “Desperate Bigots,” “Filipino Medical Schools Best” and “Shame on Disney,” around 60 protesters picketed the store for about an hour, chanting anti-ABC/Disney slogans and passing out flyers to passers-by.
In an interview with Asian Journal, Coalition member Atty. Rodel Rodis said one of the main reasons for doing the protest in front of the Disney Store is to get the attention of the entertainment giant.
“What we need to do is to get Disney to wake up, to see that this is not good for Disney and this is the parent of ABC,” Rodis stated. “Sometimes you have to go to the parent in order to get the child to behave. This is what we need to do in order for Disney to say that we need to give these people more than just an anemic apology.”
“It is insulting that who they have sent so far is their Vice President for Diversity,” added Rodis. “His job is to pacify the natives, pacify the minorities. We have not gotten any apology from the President of ABC, from the producers of Desperate Housewives. In fact, the apology does not carry any recognition that they made a mistake. It’s like, ‘We’re sorry we offended you. Too bad.’”
Rodis also explained that the remark, while it may have intended to be humorous, presents a bigger problem. “This is far more serious than a racial slur. When you start putting into the minds of people that you better watch these doctors – that if they have medical diplomas from the Philippines, these are substandard and inferior – you better not trust yourselves or your relatives to them, then that’s very pernicious. This is a very serious insult to our people, and it is defamatory. The worst that I can think of or have seen in years,” he said.
As far as the class action suit discussed in a recent meeting is concerned, Rodis said they are studying every angle.
“The class action suit is being studied around the country by lawyers right now. They are coordinating through e-mails and conference calls,” he revealed. “It’s a very tricky situation so we know what the legal pitfalls are, but we are trying to find a way in order to be able to file it and make it stick.”
The coalition, Rodis said, will decide on further protest actions during future meetings. He revealed that a summit on November 10 is planned where doctors, organizations, nurses, professionals and all groups who were mobilized due to this issue will talk on what direction they will take.
The summit may even determine the final position of the Filipino medical community. “Hopefully, there will be a unified voice led by an executive committee composed of the associations of Filipino physicians in America. We hope that there will be a coordinating body which will speak with one voice on the issue,” Rodis said.
Rodis is convinced that the medical community and the Coalition will take the fight to the end.
“There were doctors in a recent meeting who said they have been in the profession for 30 years, but felt like their contributions were devalued because of what ABC did,” Rodis said. “They were really hurt… this is a very deep wound that cannot be cured with a band-aid. That’s why it may take a long time to resolve.”
Dr. Carmelo Roco, former president of the Philippine Medical Society of Northern California, meanwhile, said that it may be too late even if ABC has deleted the offensive scene from the season opener.
“The damage has already been done,” he stated. “Many Americans have seen the episode that degraded Filipino American doctors. It was like a subconscious suggestion to the minds of all these people.”
“We need to cure this, not with just an apology, but for ABC to have a program that has a positive impact on the future of our countrymen. We need not only an apology but constructive television programs as well that will be good for everybody,” Dr. Roco added.
Dr. Roco said he talked to his American colleagues, who expressed sympathy with their plight. “Many American doctors have called me to say that we should fight for our rights… so that this mistake, which took a swipe at our honor and dignity, will not happen again. This is not only for our children, but also for those educated in the Philippines who want to go to America. We need to remove the doubt from the American people that we have a defective education [system],” Roco explained.
Like Atty. Rodis, Dr. Roco expects this issue to be a continuing struggle and present an opportunity for the Filipino people to be united.
“This is not just for now,” Dr. Roco said. “We will continue to safeguard our rights. Our community and our heritage should not be taken for granted.”
On the September 30 episode of the widely-viewed TV series, Teri Hatcher’s character expressed apprehension about the diagnosis of her doctor, saying that she needed to look at the diploma to make sure that it is not from some med school in the Philippines.
The remark triggered protests within the Filipino community, calling for ABC and the producers of Desperate Housewives to apologize for what was perceived as a slur against medical professionals who obtained their education from the Philippines.
ABC had issued an apology which did not appease many members of the Filipino community. It has also since edited the line from the episode, which can be viewed on abc.com.
Sunday, October 14, 2007
Senator Leland Yee Lends Support to Filipinos
ABC’s Desperate Housewives Desperate Attempt at Humor Offends Community
Thursday, October 04, 2007
SACRAMENTO – Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) issued the following statement regarding the offensive comments recently broadcast on the ABC show Desperate Housewives:
“As a Senator who represents the largest Filipino community outside of the Philippines, I am appalled that the producers and writers at ABC found this type of humor acceptable. As a human being, I am disheartened to see that these stereotypes continue to permeate our airwaves and entertainment media. This desperate attempt at humor is offensive and has no place in our community. Filipinos, including those trained outside of the United States, have made invaluable impacts on the medical field, and should be valued, not disparaged. While I am pleased to see the network issue an apology, I encourage them to do so publicly during the show’s next broadcast and work with the community to heal the wounds caused by this insulting reference.” Contact: Adam J. Keigwin (916) 651-4008
Thursday, October 04, 2007
SACRAMENTO – Senator Leland Yee (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) issued the following statement regarding the offensive comments recently broadcast on the ABC show Desperate Housewives:
“As a Senator who represents the largest Filipino community outside of the Philippines, I am appalled that the producers and writers at ABC found this type of humor acceptable. As a human being, I am disheartened to see that these stereotypes continue to permeate our airwaves and entertainment media. This desperate attempt at humor is offensive and has no place in our community. Filipinos, including those trained outside of the United States, have made invaluable impacts on the medical field, and should be valued, not disparaged. While I am pleased to see the network issue an apology, I encourage them to do so publicly during the show’s next broadcast and work with the community to heal the wounds caused by this insulting reference.” Contact: Adam J. Keigwin (916) 651-4008
Saturday, October 13, 2007
‘Desperate’ Slur: A good reason for Filipino American History Month
By: Emil Guillermo, Oct 12, 2007, ASIANWEEK
The sad part about the Desperate Housewives slur on Asian Americans of Filipino descent is that few people got it: not the perpetrators from ABC, and incredibly, not even some Asian American watchdogs.
But the Filipino community felt the sting, and that’s all that matters to make a simple throwaway line unacceptable.
In case you were watching PBS’ The War (which had great Filipino stories), here’s the cause of the latest media transgression.
On the Sept. 30th episode of Desperate Housewives, the Teri Hatcher character is about to see a doctor and says, “OK, before we go any further, can I check those diplomas? Because I would just like to make sure they are not from some med school in the Philippines.”
Ouch. And right on the eve of Filipino American History Month, the month we celebrate the first time a Filipino ever step foot on America, just off California’s Morro Bay on Oct. 18, 1587.
After all this time, people are still ignorant about Asian Americans of Filipino descent.
What is known is the typical cultural shorthand that informs the ignorance of writers at Desperate Housewives and then reinforces the collective ignorance among TV viewers.
That’s how stereotypes fester and become part of the accepted bigotry of modern America. You can’t make a joke out of Filipino med schools unless you believe in the inferiority of everything Filipino.
That such a line could get past the standards officials at ABC is truly amazing.
Using the math principle of substitution (all you APAs should know that one), if the show featured a Passover Seder, you wouldn’t hear stereotypical Jewish jokes bandied about, I assure you.
More frustrating, the true butt of the joke here is not the Filipino but the white American.
They’re the ones not smart enough to find a spot in a U.S. medical school and desperately seek a placement anywhere they can.
But the Desperate writer didn’t know that Filipino medical schools generally are among the best foreign schools, and that Filipino doctors educated both here and in the Philippines are among the most respected in the world.
Other countries do have medical schools that fall well below the U.S. standard. Remember when Reagan invaded the tiny country of Grenada in the ’80s?
The only Americans there were medical students not smart enough to get into a U.S. med school.
EVEN ASIAN AMERICANS MISSED THE MARK
But here’s a truly frustrating thing: when I contacted MANAA, the Media Action Network for Asian Americans, I figured it would be leading the fight against the networks.
Incredibly, even MANAA, which has fought Hollywood for years on these sorts of issues, didn’t feel any outrage.
When I contacted Guy Aoki, the MANAA guru, he e-mailed, “You’ll probably hate me for saying this, but we didn’t think it was a big deal. If they mention any foreign country, people descended from that country are going to be upset. We have no idea about the caliber of doctors from the Phillippines [sic], only that there are a lot of Filipino nurses. Besides, we don’t usually get involved when foreign countries are involved.”
Now, I love Guy Aoki, have publicly praised his efforts in general and still want to work with him.
But his reaction is troubling because I’m sure he’s not the only non-Filipino who felt that way. To many, Filipinos still don’t rate on the “offend-o-meter.”
Fortunately, Karen Narasaki, another legendary community advocate who works with a coalition of media diversity activists, recognized the slur and helped in the peacemaking between ABC and the Filipino community last week. The network has agreed to remove the slur from all repeats and DVD compilations.
But that’s not enough. Removing the slur sounds like a nice gesture, but it only erases the incriminating evidence.
It doesn’t deal with the insensitivity.
It whitewashes the episode and shines up ABC’s image, like it never happened. ABC is left smelling like a rose.
And the Filipinos? To ABC and to the millions who bought into the slur in the first place, we smell the same as ever.
Nothing is done to restore our lost esteem.
In fact, ABC merely erases us totally from memory and returns us to our natural state — invisibility.
It wouldn’t be an issue if there were simply more references, positive or benign, just not negative. For now, that’s all there is.
That’s why the protest should continue — at least through Filipino American History Month – until ABC truly makes amends. Me, I’d like to see a Filipino on Desperate do something heroic — like teach Teri Hatcher’s character a lesson. I’d volunteer for that.
The sad part about the Desperate Housewives slur on Asian Americans of Filipino descent is that few people got it: not the perpetrators from ABC, and incredibly, not even some Asian American watchdogs.
But the Filipino community felt the sting, and that’s all that matters to make a simple throwaway line unacceptable.
In case you were watching PBS’ The War (which had great Filipino stories), here’s the cause of the latest media transgression.
On the Sept. 30th episode of Desperate Housewives, the Teri Hatcher character is about to see a doctor and says, “OK, before we go any further, can I check those diplomas? Because I would just like to make sure they are not from some med school in the Philippines.”
Ouch. And right on the eve of Filipino American History Month, the month we celebrate the first time a Filipino ever step foot on America, just off California’s Morro Bay on Oct. 18, 1587.
After all this time, people are still ignorant about Asian Americans of Filipino descent.
What is known is the typical cultural shorthand that informs the ignorance of writers at Desperate Housewives and then reinforces the collective ignorance among TV viewers.
That’s how stereotypes fester and become part of the accepted bigotry of modern America. You can’t make a joke out of Filipino med schools unless you believe in the inferiority of everything Filipino.
That such a line could get past the standards officials at ABC is truly amazing.
Using the math principle of substitution (all you APAs should know that one), if the show featured a Passover Seder, you wouldn’t hear stereotypical Jewish jokes bandied about, I assure you.
More frustrating, the true butt of the joke here is not the Filipino but the white American.
They’re the ones not smart enough to find a spot in a U.S. medical school and desperately seek a placement anywhere they can.
But the Desperate writer didn’t know that Filipino medical schools generally are among the best foreign schools, and that Filipino doctors educated both here and in the Philippines are among the most respected in the world.
Other countries do have medical schools that fall well below the U.S. standard. Remember when Reagan invaded the tiny country of Grenada in the ’80s?
The only Americans there were medical students not smart enough to get into a U.S. med school.
EVEN ASIAN AMERICANS MISSED THE MARK
But here’s a truly frustrating thing: when I contacted MANAA, the Media Action Network for Asian Americans, I figured it would be leading the fight against the networks.
Incredibly, even MANAA, which has fought Hollywood for years on these sorts of issues, didn’t feel any outrage.
When I contacted Guy Aoki, the MANAA guru, he e-mailed, “You’ll probably hate me for saying this, but we didn’t think it was a big deal. If they mention any foreign country, people descended from that country are going to be upset. We have no idea about the caliber of doctors from the Phillippines [sic], only that there are a lot of Filipino nurses. Besides, we don’t usually get involved when foreign countries are involved.”
Now, I love Guy Aoki, have publicly praised his efforts in general and still want to work with him.
But his reaction is troubling because I’m sure he’s not the only non-Filipino who felt that way. To many, Filipinos still don’t rate on the “offend-o-meter.”
Fortunately, Karen Narasaki, another legendary community advocate who works with a coalition of media diversity activists, recognized the slur and helped in the peacemaking between ABC and the Filipino community last week. The network has agreed to remove the slur from all repeats and DVD compilations.
But that’s not enough. Removing the slur sounds like a nice gesture, but it only erases the incriminating evidence.
It doesn’t deal with the insensitivity.
It whitewashes the episode and shines up ABC’s image, like it never happened. ABC is left smelling like a rose.
And the Filipinos? To ABC and to the millions who bought into the slur in the first place, we smell the same as ever.
Nothing is done to restore our lost esteem.
In fact, ABC merely erases us totally from memory and returns us to our natural state — invisibility.
It wouldn’t be an issue if there were simply more references, positive or benign, just not negative. For now, that’s all there is.
That’s why the protest should continue — at least through Filipino American History Month – until ABC truly makes amends. Me, I’d like to see a Filipino on Desperate do something heroic — like teach Teri Hatcher’s character a lesson. I’d volunteer for that.
Thursday, October 11, 2007
ABC’s ‘DESPERATE’ apology is not enough!
When Terri Hatcher’s character in ABC’s "Desperate Housewives" expressed scorn and distrust of physicians who receive their diplomas from "some med school in the Philippines", she unfairly cast a shadow of doubt over the professional competency of all Philippine-educated professionals in the United States. After the offending episode was shown, ABC was righteously besieged with angry phone calls, emails and letters from Filipino-American viewers throughout the US, causing ABC to issue a patently insincere letter of apology. The serious damage to the reputation and integrity of our Philippine-educated professionals cannot be undone with a simple PR issued piece of paper. ABC must do more to undo the damage. Until it does, we urge everyone to BOYCOTT ABC and its parent company, DISNEY.
Join hands with the Filipino Anti-Defamation Coalition which includes members of the Philippine Medical Association (PMA), the Philippine Nurses Association (PNA), the National Federation of Filipino American Associations (NaFFAA), the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP)-California, and other organizations in our fight against bigotry, group defamation, ignorance and arrogance!
What: Protest action against the Disney Corp. & ABC!
When: Saturday, October 13, 2007, from 11:30AM to 1:30PM.
Where: The Disney Store (corner of Powell & Post) across from
Union Square in San Francisco
Join hands with the Filipino Anti-Defamation Coalition which includes members of the Philippine Medical Association (PMA), the Philippine Nurses Association (PNA), the National Federation of Filipino American Associations (NaFFAA), the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP)-California, and other organizations in our fight against bigotry, group defamation, ignorance and arrogance!
What: Protest action against the Disney Corp. & ABC!
When: Saturday, October 13, 2007, from 11:30AM to 1:30PM.
Where: The Disney Store (corner of Powell & Post) across from
Union Square in San Francisco
Monday, October 8, 2007
Desperate Apologies
Telltale Signs by Rodel Rodis
When Terri Hatcher’s character in “Desperate Housewives” flippantly remarked in the premiere episode of the 4th season of the hit TV show that all physicians who receive their diplomas from “some med school in the Philippines” should be viewed as quacks, it exposed not just the anti-Filipino bigotry of the producers, scriptwriters and cast of that ABC show but the absence of the Filipino community’s clout in Hollywood.
Certain groups in Hollywood have clout. If the “Desperate” writer had used Israel instead of the Philippines, he would have been immediately denounced as anti-semitic and his offending script dumped in the garbage along with him. If the script attacked the integrity of African Americans, the writer would have received the Don Imus “nappy-headed hos” award and be gone in a New York minute.
If the script denigrated someone’s sexual orientation, then people will cite the example of actor Isaiah Washington who used the “F” word to describe fellow actor T.R. Knight in “Grey’s Anatomy”. The producers of the ABC hit show compelled Washington to publicly apologize for the homophobic slur and to educate himself about gay issues. After he did all that, ABC fired him from the show.
The offending script of “Desperate Housewives” was probably written about ten months ago before it went through a vetting process with the writers, producers and the director of the show, as well as the cast, commenting on it, before shooting of the episode was done around April or May. After it was edited, it was then shown to the ABC executives who approved it and readied if for showing on September 30.
Throughout this whole 10-month process, not one person in the ABC chain said “Wait a minute, folks, this isn’t right, we’re maligning every Philippine-educated physician in the US. What are we saying here? That they’re all quacks, that they can’t be trusted to make a proper medical diagnosis about menopause?”
Not one of them even sought to show the script to Alec Mapa, a Filipino-American actor who has a recurring role in the series, to get his reaction. If they did, he would have told them, as he did after it aired: "It's unfortunate that the Philippines was used as a punch line. My family is filled with doctors and medical professionals. I know first hand from them, that the medical schools in the Philippines are top notch.”
After the offending episode was shown, ABC was besieged with angry phone calls, emails and letters from Filipino American viewers throughout the US. An online petition drafted by Kevin Nadal drew 30,000 signatures in 48 hours (130,000 in 5 days).
In response, ABC predictably issued the most insincere apology a PR hack could have written. "The producers of `Desperate Housewives' and ABC Studios offer our sincere apologies for any offense caused by the brief reference in the season premiere. There was no intent to disparage the integrity of any aspect of the medical community in the Philippines," the ABC statement said.
The PR person’s apology showed incredible ignorance of the issue. The integrity of the “medical community in the Philippines” was not disparaged, it was the Filipino “medical community in the US” that was defamed by the “brief reference” to their quack credentials.
As Manila columnist Conrado DeQuiros explained, “it doesn’t just cast aspersion on—or worse doubts, which affect employment opportunities of—Filipino doctors, it does so on Filipino professionals generally. What applies to the diplomas of Filipino doctors applies as well to the diplomas of Filipino engineers, accountants and lawyers. Left unprotested, a single line like that in a hugely popular TV series can do more harm by the incalculable power of suggestion than whole reams or airtime of diatribe in a newspaper or talk show.”
What kind of harm can this show that is watched by more than 125 million viewers in more than 75 countries do?
One physician, Dr. Arsenio Martin, a pulmonary and critical care specialist who has a diploma from “some med school in the Philippines”, wrote to say that he regularly sees terminal patients and knows that family members try to get the best specialist they could find and they find him.
“If that patient dies because of his or her terminal illness, the family members will either accept it or second guess themselves… If you try to inject negative things in their minds, like what Terry Hatcher did, then they will forever torture themselves wishing they had called another physician or, the worst scenario, they will file suit against that Filipino doctor.”
When ABC’s anemic apology failed to mollify the Filipino community, ABC was compelled to dispatch Robert Mendez, its Senior Vice President for Diversity, to “reach out” to the National Federation of Filipino American Associations (NaFFAA). According to NaFFAA’s Jon Melegrito, Mendez wanted “to assure the Filipino American community that ABC takes our concerns seriously and is taking the necessary steps to make amends.”
Based on just one telephone conversation with Mendez, Melegrito announced that “ABC is making a good faith effort to seriously make amends, and that Mr. Mendez is sincere in wanting to open a dialogue with us.”
But others were not so quick to accept ABC’s promises as they recalled a similar promise made by ABC in the past over an episode of Frasier where Filipino women were referred to as “mail order brides from the Philippines.” Filipino community protests over that offensive remark resulted in a similar public apology by ABC and a similar promise to remove the offending dialogue from the scene. ABC reneged on the promise and the offensive remark was left intact in the DVDs and in the endless syndicated reruns of Frasier.
Over the past week, pickets by Filipino American groups in Burbank, California and in New York and Washington DC caused Mendez to arrange a face-to-face meeting with Filipino community leaders in New York on October 5. In that meeting, Rico Foz, a spokesperson for the National Alliance for Filipino Concerns (Nafcon), asked ABC to broadcast its public apology during the show’s next episode. “It will be tough,” Mendez said (“In your dreams” is what he meant).
Foz also demanded that Mendez arrange a meeting with Marc Cherry, the producer of “Desperate Housewives”, to discuss their concerns. He wanted ABC to initiate cultural sensitivity training for its network writers and producers and for ABC to produce shows that depict Filipinos and other minority groups as "prominent, positive role models." The group also demanded an explanation on how the bigoted remarks in the episode got past everyone and wanted to know what ABC will do to ensure that such ugly scenes will never happen again. Mendez promised to discuss these demands with the network management.
To ensure that ABC will follow through on its promises, continuous pressure by the Filipino community must be applied. Pickets of ABC offices and a boycott of Disney products will focus ABC’s attention to the problem. We will not be fooled again.
Folks can send letters to Mr.. Mark Pedowitz, President; ABC Television Network; 500 S. Buena Vista Street Burbank, CA 91521-4551; email: abc7@abc.com) or sign the online petition (http://www.petitiononline.com/FilABC/).
Send comments to Rodel50@aol.com.
When Terri Hatcher’s character in “Desperate Housewives” flippantly remarked in the premiere episode of the 4th season of the hit TV show that all physicians who receive their diplomas from “some med school in the Philippines” should be viewed as quacks, it exposed not just the anti-Filipino bigotry of the producers, scriptwriters and cast of that ABC show but the absence of the Filipino community’s clout in Hollywood.
Certain groups in Hollywood have clout. If the “Desperate” writer had used Israel instead of the Philippines, he would have been immediately denounced as anti-semitic and his offending script dumped in the garbage along with him. If the script attacked the integrity of African Americans, the writer would have received the Don Imus “nappy-headed hos” award and be gone in a New York minute.
If the script denigrated someone’s sexual orientation, then people will cite the example of actor Isaiah Washington who used the “F” word to describe fellow actor T.R. Knight in “Grey’s Anatomy”. The producers of the ABC hit show compelled Washington to publicly apologize for the homophobic slur and to educate himself about gay issues. After he did all that, ABC fired him from the show.
The offending script of “Desperate Housewives” was probably written about ten months ago before it went through a vetting process with the writers, producers and the director of the show, as well as the cast, commenting on it, before shooting of the episode was done around April or May. After it was edited, it was then shown to the ABC executives who approved it and readied if for showing on September 30.
Throughout this whole 10-month process, not one person in the ABC chain said “Wait a minute, folks, this isn’t right, we’re maligning every Philippine-educated physician in the US. What are we saying here? That they’re all quacks, that they can’t be trusted to make a proper medical diagnosis about menopause?”
Not one of them even sought to show the script to Alec Mapa, a Filipino-American actor who has a recurring role in the series, to get his reaction. If they did, he would have told them, as he did after it aired: "It's unfortunate that the Philippines was used as a punch line. My family is filled with doctors and medical professionals. I know first hand from them, that the medical schools in the Philippines are top notch.”
After the offending episode was shown, ABC was besieged with angry phone calls, emails and letters from Filipino American viewers throughout the US. An online petition drafted by Kevin Nadal drew 30,000 signatures in 48 hours (130,000 in 5 days).
In response, ABC predictably issued the most insincere apology a PR hack could have written. "The producers of `Desperate Housewives' and ABC Studios offer our sincere apologies for any offense caused by the brief reference in the season premiere. There was no intent to disparage the integrity of any aspect of the medical community in the Philippines," the ABC statement said.
The PR person’s apology showed incredible ignorance of the issue. The integrity of the “medical community in the Philippines” was not disparaged, it was the Filipino “medical community in the US” that was defamed by the “brief reference” to their quack credentials.
As Manila columnist Conrado DeQuiros explained, “it doesn’t just cast aspersion on—or worse doubts, which affect employment opportunities of—Filipino doctors, it does so on Filipino professionals generally. What applies to the diplomas of Filipino doctors applies as well to the diplomas of Filipino engineers, accountants and lawyers. Left unprotested, a single line like that in a hugely popular TV series can do more harm by the incalculable power of suggestion than whole reams or airtime of diatribe in a newspaper or talk show.”
What kind of harm can this show that is watched by more than 125 million viewers in more than 75 countries do?
One physician, Dr. Arsenio Martin, a pulmonary and critical care specialist who has a diploma from “some med school in the Philippines”, wrote to say that he regularly sees terminal patients and knows that family members try to get the best specialist they could find and they find him.
“If that patient dies because of his or her terminal illness, the family members will either accept it or second guess themselves… If you try to inject negative things in their minds, like what Terry Hatcher did, then they will forever torture themselves wishing they had called another physician or, the worst scenario, they will file suit against that Filipino doctor.”
When ABC’s anemic apology failed to mollify the Filipino community, ABC was compelled to dispatch Robert Mendez, its Senior Vice President for Diversity, to “reach out” to the National Federation of Filipino American Associations (NaFFAA). According to NaFFAA’s Jon Melegrito, Mendez wanted “to assure the Filipino American community that ABC takes our concerns seriously and is taking the necessary steps to make amends.”
Based on just one telephone conversation with Mendez, Melegrito announced that “ABC is making a good faith effort to seriously make amends, and that Mr. Mendez is sincere in wanting to open a dialogue with us.”
But others were not so quick to accept ABC’s promises as they recalled a similar promise made by ABC in the past over an episode of Frasier where Filipino women were referred to as “mail order brides from the Philippines.” Filipino community protests over that offensive remark resulted in a similar public apology by ABC and a similar promise to remove the offending dialogue from the scene. ABC reneged on the promise and the offensive remark was left intact in the DVDs and in the endless syndicated reruns of Frasier.
Over the past week, pickets by Filipino American groups in Burbank, California and in New York and Washington DC caused Mendez to arrange a face-to-face meeting with Filipino community leaders in New York on October 5. In that meeting, Rico Foz, a spokesperson for the National Alliance for Filipino Concerns (Nafcon), asked ABC to broadcast its public apology during the show’s next episode. “It will be tough,” Mendez said (“In your dreams” is what he meant).
Foz also demanded that Mendez arrange a meeting with Marc Cherry, the producer of “Desperate Housewives”, to discuss their concerns. He wanted ABC to initiate cultural sensitivity training for its network writers and producers and for ABC to produce shows that depict Filipinos and other minority groups as "prominent, positive role models." The group also demanded an explanation on how the bigoted remarks in the episode got past everyone and wanted to know what ABC will do to ensure that such ugly scenes will never happen again. Mendez promised to discuss these demands with the network management.
To ensure that ABC will follow through on its promises, continuous pressure by the Filipino community must be applied. Pickets of ABC offices and a boycott of Disney products will focus ABC’s attention to the problem. We will not be fooled again.
Folks can send letters to Mr.. Mark Pedowitz, President; ABC Television Network; 500 S. Buena Vista Street Burbank, CA 91521-4551; email: abc7@abc.com) or sign the online petition (http://www.petitiononline.com/FilABC/).
Send comments to Rodel50@aol.com.
Sunday, October 7, 2007
Letter to ABC from Dr. Legaspi
October 7,2007
Mr. Stephen McPherson
President, ABC Entertainment, ABC Television Series
500 South Buena Vista Street
Burbank, CA 91521-0001
Dear Mr. McPherson,
On behalf of myself and all my Filipino colleagues in the medical community, I express our extreme displeasure and outrage at the inappropriate and uninformed line in last Sunday's episode of "Desperate Housewives". When Teri Hatcher disparaged the validity of the medical degrees from the Philippines, you and your network scarred the reputation of the Filipino educational system and insulted each and every Filipino-American who has dedicated their lives to serve those in medical need. Writers as talented as those employed by ABC should be witty enough to devise a clever line that conveys the character's dismay without denigrating one of the largest and most talented sub-populations in the United States. While freedom of speech is one of our fundamental rights, blatant racism strikes against the very fiber of the United States, where equality and racial tolerance are pillars of our great society..
Please be aware that the line has greatly offended
1. Philippine trained physicians
2. Filipino-American Professionals
3. The Philippine Educational System
AND the millions of patients who have received first-rate professional care from Filipino doctors.
Filipino-Americans are sometimes referred to as the "Invisible Minority". However, be aware that in the United States, there are at least 22,000 Philippine-American physicians, who have earned the trust and loyalty of their patients. These doctors have served thousand, even millions of Americans combined, not to mention as physicians to U.S. Presidents Bush and Clinton (under the care of Rear Admiral Eleanor Mariano) and former President Ronald Reagan (Dr. Honorato Nicodemus was his anesthesiologist when he got shot in 1981). Moreover, there are about four million Filipino-Americans living in this country, accounting for 21% of the Asian-American population. Among Asian-Americans, we possess the highest median household income. We patronize each and every one of your advertisers and represent a large component of your viewing audience. If need be, we can bring our collective efforts together, informing advertisers that we shall no longer purchase products and services that pay a network that supports racism.
Mr. McPherson, I commend you and your network's first steps towards rectifying this matter by issuing a public aplogy and removing the offensive line from any future airings of the episode in the medium. However, given the gravity of the insult, you must agree such measures alone are terribly insufficient. We believe that a real dialogue between you and leaders of the Filipino-American medical community should take place as soon as possible, such that we can discuss proper remedial steps. We also ask that the copy writers and /or actress directly involved be sufficiently sanctioned either through monetary penalty or another equally effective measure.
"First, do no harm" We swear thin in our medical profession. Please respect our culture and our education.
Sincerely,
Amante G. Legaspi, M.D.
Chairman, Board of Trustees
Far Eastern University
Dr. Nicanor Reyes Shool of Medicine Alumni Foundation, USA
Past President, Association of Philippine Physicians
President, ChesapeakeVirginaMedical Society
Copy:
Ms. Anne Sweeney (Co-Chair, Disney Media networks & President, Disney ABC Television Group)
Mr. Marc Cherry (Creator & Executive Producer, Desperate Housewives)
Mr. Mark Pedowitz (President,ABC Studios)
The Honorable Willy Gaa (Ambassador to the United States, Republic of the Philippines)
Mr. Libertito Pelayo (Publisher, The Filipino Reporter)
Mr. Stephen McPherson
President, ABC Entertainment, ABC Television Series
500 South Buena Vista Street
Burbank, CA 91521-0001
Dear Mr. McPherson,
On behalf of myself and all my Filipino colleagues in the medical community, I express our extreme displeasure and outrage at the inappropriate and uninformed line in last Sunday's episode of "Desperate Housewives". When Teri Hatcher disparaged the validity of the medical degrees from the Philippines, you and your network scarred the reputation of the Filipino educational system and insulted each and every Filipino-American who has dedicated their lives to serve those in medical need. Writers as talented as those employed by ABC should be witty enough to devise a clever line that conveys the character's dismay without denigrating one of the largest and most talented sub-populations in the United States. While freedom of speech is one of our fundamental rights, blatant racism strikes against the very fiber of the United States, where equality and racial tolerance are pillars of our great society..
Please be aware that the line has greatly offended
1. Philippine trained physicians
2. Filipino-American Professionals
3. The Philippine Educational System
AND the millions of patients who have received first-rate professional care from Filipino doctors.
Filipino-Americans are sometimes referred to as the "Invisible Minority". However, be aware that in the United States, there are at least 22,000 Philippine-American physicians, who have earned the trust and loyalty of their patients. These doctors have served thousand, even millions of Americans combined, not to mention as physicians to U.S. Presidents Bush and Clinton (under the care of Rear Admiral Eleanor Mariano) and former President Ronald Reagan (Dr. Honorato Nicodemus was his anesthesiologist when he got shot in 1981). Moreover, there are about four million Filipino-Americans living in this country, accounting for 21% of the Asian-American population. Among Asian-Americans, we possess the highest median household income. We patronize each and every one of your advertisers and represent a large component of your viewing audience. If need be, we can bring our collective efforts together, informing advertisers that we shall no longer purchase products and services that pay a network that supports racism.
Mr. McPherson, I commend you and your network's first steps towards rectifying this matter by issuing a public aplogy and removing the offensive line from any future airings of the episode in the medium. However, given the gravity of the insult, you must agree such measures alone are terribly insufficient. We believe that a real dialogue between you and leaders of the Filipino-American medical community should take place as soon as possible, such that we can discuss proper remedial steps. We also ask that the copy writers and /or actress directly involved be sufficiently sanctioned either through monetary penalty or another equally effective measure.
"First, do no harm" We swear thin in our medical profession. Please respect our culture and our education.
Sincerely,
Amante G. Legaspi, M.D.
Chairman, Board of Trustees
Far Eastern University
Dr. Nicanor Reyes Shool of Medicine Alumni Foundation, USA
Past President, Association of Philippine Physicians
President, ChesapeakeVirginaMedical Society
Copy:
Ms. Anne Sweeney (Co-Chair, Disney Media networks & President, Disney ABC Television Group)
Mr. Marc Cherry (Creator & Executive Producer, Desperate Housewives)
Mr. Mark Pedowitz (President,ABC Studios)
The Honorable Willy Gaa (Ambassador to the United States, Republic of the Philippines)
Mr. Libertito Pelayo (Publisher, The Filipino Reporter)
Saturday, October 6, 2007
Boycott ABC, Disney, Fil-Am groups urge
By Nimfa U. Rueda (Philippine Daily Inquirer)
October 6, 2007
LOS ANGELES--Filipino-American groups in the United States have called for a boycott of the ABC television network and its parent company, Walt Disney, after a top network executive said a broadcast apology for the perceived racial slur on the "Desperate Housewives" show was unlikely.
"I don't think they [ABC] are taking us seriously," Rico Foz, spokesperson for the National Alliance for Filipino Concerns (Nafcon), has said following a meeting that he and several other Filipino-American community leaders had in New York City with Robert Mendez, the network's senior vice president for diversity and talent development.
Foz said they had asked ABC to broadcast a public apology during the show's next episode, and "Mendez told us, 'It's going to be tough.'"
A broadcast apology was one of the demands presented to Mendez at the hour-long meeting that was followed by a protest rally in front of the ABC studios in New York City. More than a hundred protesters denounced the remark made in a recent episode by the character played by Teri Hatcher maligning Filipino health professionals.
Foz said they also demanded a cultural sensitivity training for network staff, more shows depicting Filipinos and other minority groups as "prominent, positive role models," and support for Filipino-American projects that will strengthen diversity awareness.
Mendez said he will discuss these demands with the network management, he said.
One of the speakers at the protest rally was New York City council member John Liu, the first Asian-American to be elected to citywide office in New York. Liu called on other minority groups to support the groups' demands.
In California, a Fil-Am council member of Walnut, a Los Angeles county suburb, also threw his support behind the Fil-Am groups and said all minority groups should come together to combat racism. "We don't want this to happen to any community," said Tony Cartagena, who has served as city mayor for two terms.
October 6, 2007
LOS ANGELES--Filipino-American groups in the United States have called for a boycott of the ABC television network and its parent company, Walt Disney, after a top network executive said a broadcast apology for the perceived racial slur on the "Desperate Housewives" show was unlikely.
"I don't think they [ABC] are taking us seriously," Rico Foz, spokesperson for the National Alliance for Filipino Concerns (Nafcon), has said following a meeting that he and several other Filipino-American community leaders had in New York City with Robert Mendez, the network's senior vice president for diversity and talent development.
Foz said they had asked ABC to broadcast a public apology during the show's next episode, and "Mendez told us, 'It's going to be tough.'"
A broadcast apology was one of the demands presented to Mendez at the hour-long meeting that was followed by a protest rally in front of the ABC studios in New York City. More than a hundred protesters denounced the remark made in a recent episode by the character played by Teri Hatcher maligning Filipino health professionals.
Foz said they also demanded a cultural sensitivity training for network staff, more shows depicting Filipinos and other minority groups as "prominent, positive role models," and support for Filipino-American projects that will strengthen diversity awareness.
Mendez said he will discuss these demands with the network management, he said.
One of the speakers at the protest rally was New York City council member John Liu, the first Asian-American to be elected to citywide office in New York. Liu called on other minority groups to support the groups' demands.
In California, a Fil-Am council member of Walnut, a Los Angeles county suburb, also threw his support behind the Fil-Am groups and said all minority groups should come together to combat racism. "We don't want this to happen to any community," said Tony Cartagena, who has served as city mayor for two terms.
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