Friday, July 10, 2026

Two photographs go viral when a subway car becomes a mirror for America

Rowell Encina, left, was photographed by
Finn Gomez of Getty Images.
Initially, Tthe picture of Bernita Bowlding by
 Cheney Orrwent viral

If a picture is worth a thousand words, then two pictures are worth two thousand words.

 On the Fourth of July, a Washington D.C. Metro train at Eastern Market station turned into a pressure cooker. Hundreds of masked members of the white supremacist group Patriot Front flooded a train car, creating an instant nightmare for the passengers trapped inside.

Two separate photojournalists pulled focus on two different minority passengers in that exact same car. What happened next is a textbook example of how the modern media machine works: visceral symbolism moves at lightning speed, while complex reality takes the slow lane.

Frame One: The overnight icon

The first image to absolutely fracture the internet was captured by Reuters photographer Cheney Orr. It showed 33-year-old Bernita Bowlding, a Black woman sitting entirely alone, her eyes fixed forward as a wall of masked white men packed the car around her.

For cable news and social media, the visual shorthand was instantaneous. It didn't matter that the public didn't know her name yet; the image perfectly mirrored iconic Civil rights photographs from the 1950s. The media instantly anointed it "the defining image of modern American division," driving millions of clicks and leading every nightly broadcast.
Frame Two: "There was another photo..."
But while that singular narrative was dominating your timeline, a parallel story was unfolding just a few feet away. Getty Images photographer Finn Gomez had pulled focus on a different passenger: Roswell Encina, a gay Filipino-American immigrant who happens to be the CEO of the U.S. Capitol Historical Society.
"There was another photo taken from a different angle," Encina later noted recalling the media coverage. While Bowlding's photo became a global Rorschach test for racial tension, Encina’s experience provided the raw, real-time audio to the visual horror.
Encina gave a voice to the terrifying sensory experience of being trapped in that rolling metal box. "I froze," he recounted. "I was terrified. I thought, 'If somebody stabs me, if somebody kicks me, I won't be able to identify who did it because everyone is masked.'"

"It was very unnerving, uncomfortable and unsettling when you see a big group of men in masks and sunglasses and hats that could not be identifiable, and they're all coming into your car," Encina said.

The Pivot: From political prop to human reality

As the week rolled on, the media was forced to grapple with the actual human beings behind the viral frames—and the story took a sharp, messy turn.
The Washington Post tracked down Bowlding’s family, who dropped a devastating complication into the media's neat narrative. Her brother revealed that Bernita struggled with severe mental illness and was likely experiencing a health crisis during the ride. Her family publicly blasted the media for turning a vulnerable woman into a political prop, saying she looked like "hounds surrounding her."T
However, because Encina was a highly articulate civic educator, the media utilized his voice not as a passive symbol, but as an active analyst. He was able to give words to the collective trauma of the train car.
Encina used his platform to contextualize the moment, drawing strength from the very history he protects. "I thought of Ruby Bridges. I thought of the Little Rock Nine," Encina said, explaining how he survived the 30-minute ride. "They went through worse. I can survive a 30-minute subway ride."
The view from the edge
Ultimately, the D.C. Metro incident became a masterclass in how modern media digests trauma. Bowlding’s photo received the lion's share of the press because it fit a pre-existing, powerful historical template.
But it was Encina’s willingness to speak out that allowed the media to pivot from exploitation to education.

Encina's story is the "American Dream." He came to the United States as an infant from the Philippines and became a US citizen. His father served in the US Navy. He said suddenly being surrounded by a group of people with a very different vision of America from his own was a powerful moment.
A day after the subway ride, Espina reflects on his experience, and posts his thoughts on Instagram:

Encina hopes that when people see the photo of him, they’re reminded that we are one country.

“I’m hoping when they see my image they’ll remember we are a nation of different people, but also remember our history. There’s a lot to celebrate,” he said.

"One thing I realized is that democracy is very fragile ... We need to stay engaged with history and civics and education," Encina said. "Doris Kearns Goodwin likes to say that there is hope in history. I really believe that's how we can get through this."

He transformed a terrifying viral moment into a serious conversation about the fragility of American democracy—proving that sometimes, the front line of the culture war is just a random subway ride on America's birthday.
EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.


Thursday, July 9, 2026

AAPI artists nominated for Emmys

CREATED BY GEMINI


The 2026 Emmy nominations are out, and once again, it is a mixed bag for our community. While we are seeing historic representation on one side of the ledger, the TV Academy still manages to leave some of our finest talent out in the cold.

Let’s break down the wins, the behind-the-scenes power players, and the glaring omissions that have us scratching our heads.

Actors' noted

Our community showed up in major acting categories this year. Leading the pack is Riz Ahmed, who secured a Lead Actor nod for his powerful role in Bait. 

Meanwhile, the second season of Netflix's smash hit Beef brought in major acting love: Oscar-winner Youn Yuh-jung and Charles Melton both scored Supporting Actress and Actor nominations for their respective turns in the anthological dramedy.

Over on the drama side, Sepideh Moafi clinched a Supporting Actress nod for her stellar performance in Max’s medical juggernaut The Pitt. playing 
Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi, a doctor taking over the ER as Noah Wiley's character prepares for a sabbatical. She is the first Iranian woman and woman from the Middle East to be nominated in the support actress in a drama series category, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

"I can’t imagine a more ideal world, show, character to have this sort of recognition with," Moafi said after she heard about her nomination. 

"Playing this woman who carries so many worlds, so many of which I can identify with in my own way, and that I’ve heard over the last several months, so many people identify with, whether it’s with her chronic disease, her chronic illness, people with disability, people who are mixed race, people who are from the Middle East or Africa, women in medicine who are in similar positions and have to deal with certain male counterparts."
FYI: The 78th Primetime Emmy Awards will air live on NBC on Monday, September 14, 2026 at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT
Steven Yeun, who won an Emmy two years ago in the first season of Beef, landed a voice-over nomination for keeping things animated in Invincible.
True representation means having a seat at the table where decisions are made, and our behind-the-scenes creatives are dominating this year's Emmy ballot.
The Beef mastermind Lee Sung Jin, continues his historic streak, earning individual nominations for Outstanding Writing and Outstanding Directing for a Limited or Anthology Series, alongside a nod for Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series as executive producer. He's joined in the executive producers' circle by Steven Yeun, Ali Wong, Kitao Sakurai and Anna Ouyang Moench.
Destin Daniel Cretton, the Japanese American director-producer, is nominated as the driving executive producer behind Marvel’s buzzy Wonder Man.
Hiro Murai & Claudia Shin: The powerhouse duo earned Executive Producer nods for Apple TV+'s freshman comedy hit Widow's Bay.
Chris Nguyen-Gia & Marian Wang: Nguyen-Gia scored a Best Drama Series nomination as a producer for the freshman drama Paradise, while Wang is back in the mix as a producer for the late-night champion Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.
Yulin Kuang: Celebrated writer-director Kuang scored an Outstanding Television Movie screenplay nomination for adapting Netflix's People We Meet on Vacation.
You can't talk about the Emmys without talking about who got left behind, and the Academy dropped the ball on several standout AAPI performances.

Should have been nominated

Isa Briones (The Pitt): In what is arguably the most heartbreaking snub of the morning, Briones was completely shut out for her role as the sharp, headstrong Dr. Trinity Santos. What makes this a bitter pill to swallow is that The Pitt actually led the entire pack with 25 total nominations—including 13 acting nods for her co-stars. How voters completely bypassed Briones's polarizing, fiercely layered performance is beyond us.
Bowen Yang (Saturday Night Live): Despite delivering a highly celebrated final run on the sketch show before his mid-season departure, Yang missed out on a Supporting Actor in a Comedy nod. The Academy chose to shut out the entire regular SNL cast this year.
Industry Cast & Crew: HBO's financial thriller was entirely shut out by the Television Academy. This means no love for Ken Leung, who has consistently turned in a masterclass performance as the complex and shrewd management executive Eric Tao.
Young Mazino & Tati Gabrielle: Both actors missed out on highly predicted guest and supporting drama nominations for their impactful roles in The Last of Us.

View from the edge

We've come a long way from the days of absolute invisibility, but as these snubs show, the fight for the Academy to fully recognize the depth of our talent continues.
What is especially noteworthy, is none of the characters played by AAPI actors, are the stereotypes that pigeonholed generations of Asian actors in Hollywood.
But there is so much more room for improvement. That's why overlooking Briones' role as Dr. Trinity Santos in The Pitt is so disappointing. There were so many moments where we saw glimpses of the life of Santos beyond the ER -- such as a white-passing Filipino American -- makes us crave  for more of her storyline to explore.
In fact, you can say that about all the acting AAPI nominees and the AAPI community as a whole. As two seasons of Beef have shown us, there's more complexity in us than Hollywood has been able to capture so far.  Hollywood's creators and artists are only starting to scratch the surface of the multiple worlds we live in and start delving into those stories.
EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Asian Americans Pegula and Osaka lose at Wimbledon


The Wimbledon run ends for Jessica Pegula, left, and Naomi Osaka.


Any hope that there would be an Asian or Asian American in the Wimbledon finals ended today as both Jessica Pegula and Naomi Osaka fell in their respective quarterfinal matches. It was a bittersweet Tuesday for the AAPI community, which had high hopes of seeing history made on the grass courts, only to watch both stars get knocked out in the final eight.

Meanwhile, although she lost in the quarterfinals, the Philippines Alexandra Eala's star power continues to grow in the world of tennis.

Gauff outlasts Pegula in all-American battle

Four-time Grand Slam quarterfinalist Jessica Pegula—the highest-ranked Asian American player in singles tennis today—saw her Wimbledon title hopes slip away on Centre Court.

Facing fellow American Coco Gauff, the half-Korean Buffalo native came out firing. She used her trademark flat, low-bouncing groundstrokes to take the first set 4-6, consistently forcing unforced errors and capitalizing on Gauff’s early double faults.

However, Gauff cleaned up her game in the second, boosting her serve efficiency to level the match 6-3. In the deciding third set, Pegula went toe-to-toe through an intense exchange of breaks, but Gauff took total control at 3-3, rattling off the final three games. Pegula’s deep run ended with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 defeat, leaving fans waiting for her breakthrough Grand Slam singles title.

Osaka’s resurgence halted by Muchova


Over on No. 1 Court, four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka's inspiring return to the upper echelons of major tennis hit a wall. Although she has chosen to represent Japan in international matches, Osaka was raised, lives and trains in the United States.

In a highly anticipated clash against Karolina Muchova, the Japanese/Haitian American superstar fought fiercely in a razor-thin opening set. Osaka had to call for an early medical timeout to get her ankle taped, but she battled on, matching Muchova game-for-game until a tight tiebreak slipped away 7-6 (4).

That opening set proved to be the turning point. Muchova carried all the momentum into the second set. While Osaka continued to fire powerful aces, a handful of critical unforced errors and missed break-point opportunities proved costly. Muchova closed out the match 7-6 (4), 6-4, ending Osaka's dream of adding a historic Venus Rosewater Dish to her trophy cabinet.

On her way to the final eight, Osaka captured her most significant victory since returning from maternity leave, completely dismantling World No. 1 and top seed Aryna Sabalenka in straight sets, 6-2, 7-6.

The Philippines' Alex Eala lost her match but left to a standing ovation at Wimbledon.

Eala’s historic run comes to an end

One would have thought that Alexandra Eala had just won her match with the standing ovation she received as she walked off Wimbledon's Centre Court Monday. But her history-making run at tennis' premiere grand slam tourney ended with a fourth-round loss to Italy's Jasmine Paolini.
The fairytale run of Eala — who became the first-ever player from the Philippines to reach the round of 16 at a Grand Slam — finally hit a wall on Centre Court. 

"It was a very challenging match today. I think that Jasmine played great. I gave everything that I could, did everything that I could do today so I'm proud of that. I have to be proud of what I've achieved this week. Leaving with positive thoughts."

Fresh off dethroning defending champion Iga ÅšwiÄ…tek, the 21-year-old Filipina sensation fought valiantly before bowing out to 2024 finalist Jasmine Paolini in a 4-6, 6-4, 3-6 rollercoaster. 
With a bandaged thigh and left forearm, Eala did not use her apparent injuries as an excuse. Eala struggled against Paolini's blistering serve advantage but managed to push the Italian veteran to the absolute limit in a two-hour battle. 
Eala was the first player from the Philippines to be seeded at the heralded venue and the first player from Manila-born player to make to the quarter-finals. 
Because of her performance at Wimbledon, her world ranking rose to No. 28, the highest rank the 21-year old has held and who entered the pro circuit two years ago.

View from the edge

What we saw at Wimbledon this year isn't an anomaly — it’s might be a new blueprint.

While today’s results bring a stinging sense of "what could have been," the broader picture tells a story of an undeniable paradigm shift. The days when Asian and AAPI representation in the deep rounds of a Grand Slam was a rare, singular novelty are officially over.

Between Naomi Osaka’s fierce, inspiring return to form, Jessica Pegula’s relentless consistency at the absolute highest level of the sport, and a surging generation of talent led by Eala redefining the baseline across both the ATP and WTA tours, the landscape of global tennis has fundamentally changed. These athletes are no longer just breaking barriers; they are anchoring the draw.

The trophy didn't head home with an Asian or AAPI player this time around, but the momentum isn't stopping. Besides Eala, a new generation of players including Leylah Fernandez and Emma Radacunu are coming into their own.

The narrative has shifted from if these players will dominate the second week of a major, to how many will be left standing. The edge is getting sharper, and the breakthrough isn't a matter of chance — it's inevitable.
EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.


Sunday, July 5, 2026

Filipino Brit is anchoring the big stage of the FIFA World Cup

Jules Breech, ESPN analyst, represents on Fox Sports coverage of the World Cup.


American soccer fans have discovered a new media star n Jules Breach. You might have seen her in Fox Sports coverage of the FIFA World Cup.

My family makes fun of me whenever I see person of Filipino heritage in the media I like to bring their attention to that person. Sok while watching the FIFA World Cup games, Before the game starts, Fox Sports interviews former players about the upcoming contest. The anchoring host drew my interest. Her skin tone, her facial features hinted that she might be of Asian heritage. 

Is she, or isn't she? Could she be ....? Yes, she is!A Google search confirms that yes. She is of Filipino racial heritage.

As the anchor, she usually sits on the left side of a panel of sports experts, asking knowledgeable questions, offering insights and effortlessly guiding the give-and-take of former players on the panel.

There is a major win for Asian representation happening right now on mainstream sports television, and it is coming straight from the soccer studio desk.

Jules Breach, a heavy-hitting broadcast journalist and television host, has officially cemented her position as a primary studio host for FOX Sports. For members of the Filipino diaspora tracking media equity and visibility, seeing a woman of Filipino heritage steering one of the biggest sports broadcasts in the country is a massive milestone.

A proud Pinay & global upbringing

While Breach, 39, is a household name across the Atlantic, many American viewers are just learning her story. Born in Brighton, England to Filipino parents, Breach has consistently spoken of her deep pride in her roots.

In interviews reflecting on her background and her family’s immigrant journey, Breach has regularly emphasized how much her heritage defines her work ethic and perspective:

"I’m incredibly proud of my Filipino heritage. My family background and the values passed down to me are a huge part of who I am, both on and off the screen."

Her childhood was a truly global journey. Moving from England to Mauritius at just six months old, she later spent her formative years living in Jamaica from ages 8 to 15 before returning to the U.K. This cross-cultural upbringing shaped her worldview, but her family’s culture remained a constant anchor.

Why FOX Sports chose Breach

When FOX Sports needed a world-class anchor to command its elite soccer coverage following Kate Abdo's high-profile move to CBS, they didn't just look for a familiar face—they went after elite capability.


Breach isn't new to high-pressure environments. She is a prominent fixture in the U.K., anchoring England men’s national team matches on Channel 4 and leading elite Premier League and UEFA Europa League action for TNT Sports.


A top-tier studio host must manage big personalities. Breach’s sharp tactical authority and effortless style allow her to seamlessly trade insights and lead discussions alongside global football legends like Thierry Henry and Zlatan Ibrahimović.


For a long time, the sports broadcasting landscape — particularly in soccer — lacked diverse faces at the center anchor desk. Breach is shattering that mold. Seeing a woman of color with Filipino roots driving the narrative of one of sports most-watched  event  on a major American network isn’t just great television; it’s a powerful statement  of representation in America's living rooms. Breach's presence is a  testament 
 that our community belongs on the grandest stage in global sports.

“I’m absolutely buzzing. I am the biggest football fan, so to be hosting a tournament as big as this for a network as big as Fox is genuinely a dream come true.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.