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The 71st Annual Nisei Week Japanese Festival – a summer-long series of cultural, artistic, athletic and aesthetic events – lined the streets of Little Tokyo on Sunday night for its annual parade running up and down the historic Downtown Los Angeles neighborhood.  Like the Tournament of Roses and its Rose Parade, every year the Nisei Week Foundation selects a Grand Marshall and holds a competition for the Nisei Week Queen and Court.  This year, Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga, one of the seminal figures in the Japanese American community’s fight for redress was honored as the Grand Marshall and a new group of young women took their place as the 2011 Nisei Week Court.  They also rode on a float with THE Angeleno of Angelenos, former Dodger skipper, Tommy Lasorda.

With obon dancers, taiko drummers, Stan Sakai and other community leaders riding on top of classic cars and Ken Miyoshi leading a half dozen import cars, the most dramatic sight during this year’s parade had to be all the military jeeps and trucks navigating through Little Tokyo.  The last time anyone of us could remember witnessing something similar was during the LA Riots when the streets around the old LAPD Headquarters at Parker Center were heavily protected just up the street from Little Tokyo.  The only other time we could remember was following Executive Order 9066.

However, not to be missed this year was the inclusion of the Harajuku-Girl / Anime-Manga fan-base into the parade.  The Ajuku Girls rode on a car like other community leaders, and the legion of Anime fans paraded in costume behind traditional Japanese dancers.  If anything the Nisei Week Parade pieced together all the different slices of Japanese America in Los Angeles for a great evening of celebration.

84 photos below! All by Thomas Nakanishi.

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  The image in the middle top. That’s art by GR friend Shizu Saldamando. There’s not a lot of Asian Americans showing at the Smithsonian in Washington DC, but here’s seven all at once. It’s part of an exhibition called Portraiture Now. It’s about time, right and I think it could even be bigger, don’t you think? We know plenty of artists who could have rocked this too. Congrats to the artists. Smithsonian.
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When you try to change your restaurant’s name, remember the little sign, too. Let’s say the Chinese restaurant you run is already a couple years old — too old for you to call it “NEW GREEN BO.” Let’s say you want to change it to “NICE GREEN BO,” just so your  regulars aren’t thrown off too much. If your sign is translucent and lit from the back, it’s probably worth it to properly fix your sign instead of pasting on “NICE” over it, because at night, your restaurant becomes “NIECWE GREEN BO.” Not that that’s a bad name.
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  Exit Through the Gift Shop stars Thierry, but it also stars Space Invader. His books and ephemera are hard to locate, and he’s become an international star. We still have a few copies of this book! Get it while you can because anything he does is part of the “Bansky Effect”. He was good before the Bansky movement and continues. His care in making his own product reveals his meticulousness. Get this while you can: here  
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The moon is the brightest thing in the sky at night. It can light up a person on Earth. So what does it do to the surrounding sky? Brightens it. The sky goes from thousands of stars the maybe one hundred, even elevated and away from city lights. With the aid of photography, the camera will catch perhaps 20 times more than your eye can see. The are plenty of sites telling people to get out and check out the Perseids, but only do it if you can stay up until dawn where you get just a bit of time of darkness. The moon must go down and then you’ll get darkness, but the sun comes up really quick. That said, I did get a few good photos while the moon was up. I didn’t make it to the 4 or 5AM mark when the moon was to set. I’d say, only do this if you’re going to be up till dawn. Otherwise, even at a higher elevation, you won’t see much.

 

This one of my best shots. Yes, the meteor could be larger, but look at the colors. Here’s a zoom in:

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