Entertainment Spotlight

Actor Tim Lounibos - Hopeful Opportunities Ahead for APA's in Hollywood Movies and Television

Posted by AC Team - on Tuesday, 08 October 2019

Actor Tim Lounibos - Hopeful Opportunities Ahead for APA's in Hollywood Movies and Television
October 8, 2019 Hollywood   Actor Tim Lounibos wrote on his Facebook page  about the positive changes he is currently experiencing in Hollywood. We caught up with him to share his thoughts with us. Asian Americans have historically found limited opportunities as actors in movies and television in Hollywood, but fortunately for Tim he had a great start as a busy actor in the 1990s, but then his career went off a cliff - temporarily.  We thank Tim for sharing his...

Pho-dobo-rrito at GR2

Posted by AC Team on Monday, 01 January 2007.

Martin Cendreda, John Pham, and Albert Reyes are featured in Pho-dobo-rrito at GR2, a group show that will include their drawings, sketches, prints, and other work, from January 20 - February 14, 2007.

LOS ANGELES-- (U.S. ASIAN WIRE)-- Giant Robot is proud to present Pho-dobo-rrito at GR2, a group show that will include drawings, sketches, prints, and other work by Martin Cendreda, John Pham, and Albert Reyes at the GR2 Gallery from January 20 - February 14, 2007.

Since Martin Cendreda self-published the cute-yet- melancholy Dang! and Zurik Robot mini-comics, his work has evolved into longer forms of storytelling. He made the jump from stapled-and-folded pieces to the indie comics elite when Top Shelf published a collection of his strips in 2004. In addition to his solo work, Cendreda has contributed to indie- comics anthologies including Project: Superior, Hi-Horse Omnibus, and MOME, as well as magazines such as Dazed and Confused and Giant Robot.

John Pham entered the indie comics scene when he won a Xeric Foundation grant to publish the first issue of his well-designed, manga-influenced Epoxy comic magazine. After being forced by a Canadian design company to change the publication's name, Pham has produced mini-comics, zines, a sketchbook, and 1-Up magazine under the Substitute Life banner, as well as provided illustrations for CDs, posters, and magazines.

Albert Reyes is a Los Angeles-based San Francisco Art Institute graduate who has developed a style equally influenced by graffiti, comics, and fine art. Among other media, he draws and prints on the inside covers of old books and mixes traditional Mexican imagery, popular culture icons, and political suggestion. His work has been collected in a book, Don't Give Up, and his name can be seen on public walls as GIVE.

The opening reception for the artists is Saturday, Jan. 20th from 6:30-10pm.

GR2
2062 Sawtelle Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90025
(310) 445 - 9276
gr2.net
http://www.giantrobot.com

About Giant Robot
Giant Robot started from a black and white photocopied zine in 1994, evolving into a reputable, internationally distributed quarterly magazine and book publisher. Giant Robot Store opened its doors on Sawtelle Blvd. in West LA in 2001. In 2003, Giant Robot opened GR2, a hybrid store/gallery featuring emerging artists such as David Choe, Kozyndan, and Souther Salazar. Later that year GRSF opened in San Francisco's Upper Haight district, followed by a Giant Robot restaurant, gr/eats, to further the lifestyle experience. In 2005, a fourth store was opened in Los Angeles' popular Silverlake neighborhood, with a fifth installment in New York City's East Village.