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In 2016, Chin launched the YouTube channel “Asia Minute with Curtis S. Chin” to help bring his message about the importance of the Asia-Pacific region and its development issues to a younger, global audience. Chin is the author of the Japanese bestseller, “Writing your way into business and law school,” published by ALC Press.
Vincent Chin was a victim of brutal, racial violence, but from that tragedy emerged “a chorus of Asian American voices,” Curtis Chin says. Considerable work ahead. The autoworkers who attacked Chin blamed foreign vehicle manufacturers for hardships in the U.S. auto industry.
Curtis Chin grew up in 1980s Detroit around his family's Chinese restaurant, Chung's. In a new memoir, he explains how it taught him everything he knows.
A 2022 documentary, Dear Corky, about Lee's life and community activism was made by director Curtis Chin. [25] On May 5, 2023, Lee was honored with a Google Doodle. [26] On October 22, 2023, a street sign for Corky Lee Way was unveiled in New York's Chinatown, at the corner of Mott Street and Mosco Street. [27]
The Committee to Protect Journalists, a New York-based NGO, said on Thursday that on Jan. 5 police in Shanghai arrested Chen, who produced and released a film called “Not the Foreign Force” in ...
The film tracks the incident from the initial eye-witness accounts through the trial and its repercussions for the families involved, and the American justice system at large. [7] After an outcry from the Asian American community, led by Vincent's mother Lily Chin, the case becomes a civil rights Supreme Court case.
The landmark documentary explores the fight for justice for Vincent Chin, who went into a coma and died in 1982 after being beaten by two white autoworkers.
Vincent Who? is a documentary film that was released in 2009. It details the 1982 murder of Vincent Chin that occurred in Detroit, Michigan.. Chin was a 27-year-old Chinese-American who was beaten to death with a baseball bat by two Detroit autoworkers, who had mistakenly thought that he was Japanese and, in their minds, was responsible for the loss of jobs in the U.S. auto industry.