Untitled Document
StrangeTango.com is a multilayered art installation in cyberspace…the documentation of a life in three iterations: as a film treatment, a book, a blog.
“What remains as documentation of a life?”
Strange Tango haunts the boundaries of digital streams and visceral storytelling, where pixels and dreams flow together.
Video, reportage, and nonlinear narrative meld in captured moments from the life of A. D. Tejada, artist - traveler - citizen of the world.
Life is a strange tango...
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 John Psaropoulos
John Psaropoulos is the Editor of The New Athenian; he is also a correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR) and CNN in Greece. We had met at the start of our journalism careers working at CNN International in Atlanta. John had studied at King’s College in London, and I had a master’s degree in broadcast journalism from Boston University’s top-ranked College of Communication. At the time, Riz Khan was an anchor and top executives Eason Jordan, Chris Cramer, and Rena Golden were at the forefront of CNNI’s regionalization strategy. A decade later, John and I reconnected on Facebook through a web site set up for CNN alumni. As a guest columnist, John shares his sensibility as a modern day Athenian.
Continue reading Cloudburst
 Erin Yoshimura and Gil Asakawa
Gil Asakawa and I first met at a multimedia presentation during the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) convention in Boston this past summer. As a former AAJA/New England National Board member and National Scholarship Chair, the launch of the personal website StrangeTango.com: Life as Art in my former hometown of Boston was personally significant to me. I had been chatting with a new friend, Henry Fuhrmann, the Assistant Managing Editor at the “Los Angeles Times,” who had learned of the website prior to its launch from a Facebook post broadcasted by Filipino/Asian American activist Rene Astudillo in San Francisco, when Gil took the empty seat next to me. Henry and Gil knew each other so introductions were made.
Strange Tango is a labor of love, I explained to Gil. He mentioned that he and his wife were working on something that was for them also a labor of love: a project involving Asian American leaders. He wished me luck and said he hoped the website paid off for me. I replied that Strange Tango―non-commercial and non-monetized―already had.
I have been involved with social media for less than half a year. As a newcomer to Facebook, Gil Asakawa, a nationally known Asian American writer and online content and SEO expert, became one of my first cyber friends. His informative and personable posts would range from music, to Asian American culture, and even dining reviews. Since I was planning a trip to Denver, I thought Gil would be an interesting subject and emailed a request for an interview. He agreed but also let me know his wife Erin Yoshimura was working on a new project and would I interview her instead? This suggestion gave me the best of both worlds, so we all arranged to meet for lunch at Domo, an authentic, Japanese country restaurant that he had posted about on #twEATs.
This is how I found myself in downtown Denver on a warm and sunny day, inside a beautiful, traditional Japanese garden on the edge of a commercial district. Continue reading Erin Yoshimura, Gil Asakawa, and visualizAsian.com
 Me, at the time I began writing Strange Tango.
The destinies of a pantheon of gifted Cornell graduates unfold through the internet.
After my niece had graduated from pre-kindergarten several years back, she started summer classes at vacation bible school where she saw Luke, a former classmate who had left the class to be home-schooled in anticipation of his father’s deployment to Iraq.
“Do you remember me?” she asked him.
“Yes,” he shyly replied. “I do.”
The weeklong pattern of rainy and gray New England weather inspired me to remain in my cocoon and to revisit my early adulthood. Once a person has entered my orbit and been a significant part of an era in my life, a bond of shared experiences is created. There is history between us. I carefully choose the people I invite into my space, so relationships have been of long duration. I can recall only one significant disappointment.
Prompted by a vivid dream, I sought to reconnect with someone who once mattered to me. “We don’t want any contact with you at all,” he replied. Still, I persisted. How could someone with whom you have had a symbiotic bond—a karmic connection—change, or age, so much? He had such love of beauty, how could charm and grace be replaced by fear and inflexibility?
Or had he simply forgotten me?
For the next nine months, I sought openings that would reveal the answer to me until, finally, I released the beautiful memory of a dear friend to the stranger he had become. My dream was indeed prophetic: his heart was dead inside.
Other reconnections have had far happier endings. Continue reading Speak, Memory
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