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Annie Guo VanDan is an American journalist. She is co-founder and president of Asian Avenue, a magazine published since 2006 that covers the Asian-American and Pacific Islander community of Denver, Colorado. [1] In 2021 she won a Maynard Institute Fellowship from the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, which aims to promote equity and diversity in journalism. [2] In 2021 she became a Project Manager for Colorado Equity Compass, a non-profit dedicated to improving health equity through "data storytelling", which entails presenting information in accessible visual and narrative forms for policy-makers and the public. [3]
VanDan's family immigrated from Taipei, Taiwan to Colorado in 1988. After graduating from high school, she attended the University of Missouri and studied journalism. [4] She later earned an MBA from the University of Colorado Denver. [5]
In 2006, VanDan co-founded Asian Avenue magazine with her mother, Christina Yutai Guo, as a printed monthly journal for the metro Denver area that appeals to the Asian-American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community of Colorado. [4] In its print form and associated website, Asian Avenue covers AAPI people, businesses and cultural activities (such as the Denver Cherry Blossom Festival), along with issues of concern within the AAPI community such as LGBT rights, health disparities, changing patterns of immigration, vaccine hesitancy, and, in 2021, anti-Asian racism and xenophobia and the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act. The magazine's website also has sections devoted to food trends, new books by or about AAPI people, and films. [6] [7]
Under the leadership of VanDan and her mother, Asian Avenue has since 2009 presented an annual award called the Asian American Hero of Colorado, which recognizes AAPI leaders for work in the community. [8] [9] In October 2016 Asian Avenue received the Denver Mayor's Diversity & Inclusion Awards for the "innovation" category. [10] They have sponsored an annual lunar new year banquet in Denver which in January 2020 welcomed more than three hundred guests. [11] They have also sponsored a program to promote leadership roles among AAPI women and female students. In June 2020 the magazine published articles about the Black Lives Matter movement and expressed "unequivocal support" for it while also discussing related issues in anti-Asian violence and racism in Colorado. [12] In January 2021, Asian Avenue received a Martin Luther King Jr. Business Award in recognition of these efforts. [13]
In addition to her journalism, VanDan has worked for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment in the Office of Health Equity and Maternal and Child Health. She also managed communications for a nonprofit medical and mental health clinic in Denver that offers services to refugees and immigrants. [5] In 2021 she became a Project Manager for Colorado Equity Compass, an initiative funded by The Colorado Trust, dedicated to improving health equity through "data storytelling": presenting information in accessible visual and narrative forms for policy-makers and members of the public. Among the areas she covers for Colorado Equity Compass is southeast Colorado Springs, which has one of the most racially and culturally diverse populations in the state, with 42% of its children living below the federal poverty line and rates of obesity, diabetes, smoking, and self-reported mental health issues that exceed the state average. [14] VanDan is an expert on using health data to cover health- and health-policy-related news, and on mapping and presenting data by zip codes in ways that can "amplify the voices of the community to go along with the data." [15] [14] She presented her findings at the Culture of Data Conference organized by the Colorado Public Health Association in January 2021. [16]
In 2021, VanDan won a Maynard Institute Fellowship from the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, within its "Media Entrepreneur" track. [2]
Maggie Roswell is an American actress, comedian, writer and producer from Los Angeles, California. She is well known for her voice work on the Fox network animated television series The Simpsons, in which she has played recurring characters such as Maude Flanders, Helen Lovejoy, Miss Hoover, and Luann Van Houten, as well as several minor characters. This work has earned her an Annie Award nomination.
The Coloradoan is a daily newspaper in Fort Collins, Colorado. The Coloradoan's website is updated throughout the day with breaking news and video coverage of community news in Northern Colorado.
Kristina M. Johnson is an American business executive and academic administrator.
Larry A. Mizel is an American business executive and philanthropist based in Denver, Colorado. He is executive chairman of MDC Holdings.
Pamela Cytrynbaum is an American journalist who teaches and specializes in investigative reporting and restorative justice. She is the executive director of the Chicago Innocence Center and a restorative justice practitioner.
The University of Colorado School of Medicine is the medical school of the University of Colorado system. It is located at the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, Colorado, one of the four University of Colorado campuses, six miles east of downtown Denver at the junction of Interstate 225 and Colfax Avenue. CU School of Medicine is consistently ranked in the top 10 schools for primary care and in the top 30 schools for research.
The Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education (MIJE) is an American non-profit organization that trains journalists to become investigative journalists, editors, newspaper managers, and media entrepreneurs. The organization seeks to increase diversity, equity, and inclusion in newsrooms to diversify coverage of the news itself, creating a more complex and representative picture of the American news landscape.
Dori J. Maynard was an American writer and journalist. She was the president of the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education in Oakland, California, and the co-author of Letters to My Children, a compilation of nationally syndicated columns by her late father Robert C. Maynard, for which she wrote introductory essays.
Nancy Alene Hicks Maynard was an American publisher, journalist, former owner of The Oakland Tribune, and co-founder of the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education. She was the first African-American female reporter for The New York Times, and at the time of her death, The Oakland Tribune was the only metropolitan daily newspaper to have been owned by African Americans. She was a pioneering advocate for diversifying newsrooms.
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The Documentary Organization of Canada (DOC) is a non-profit organization representing the interests of independent documentary filmmakers in Canada. Founded as the Canadian Independent Film Caucus (CIFC) in the 1980s Canada.
Grace Lin is a Taiwanese-American children's writer and illustrator. She is a Newbery, Geisel, and Caldecott honoree, known for contributing to and advocating for Asian-American representation and diversity in children’s literature. She has published more than 25 books, all of which are written for young and middle-grade audiences. Much of her work features young Asian and Asian-American characters in both everyday and fantastical settings.
The White House Initiative on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders (WHIAANHPI) is a United States governmental office that coordinates an ambitious whole-of-government approach to advance equity, justice, and opportunity for Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders. The Initiative collaborates with the Deputy Assistant to the President and AA and NHPI Senior Liaison, White House Office of Public Engagement and designated federal departments and agencies to advance equity, justice, and opportunity for AA and NHPIs in the areas of economic development, education, health and human services, housing, environment, arts, agriculture, labor and employment, transportation, justice, veterans affairs, and community development.
Rosa T. Sheng is an architect based in San Francisco, California. She is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. After a career at Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, she joined SmithGroup as a principal in 2017, where she heads the firm's Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Program. Sheng was president of the American Institute of Architects San Francisco, the first Asian American Woman to serve in this role in the organization’s 136 years. She is the founding chair of Equity by Design, originating author of AIA Resolution 15-1 Equity in Architecture, a member of the AIA Equity in Architecture Commission, and a frequent speaker, writer, and campaigner for equity and inclusion.
Imara Jones is an American political journalist and transgender activist who is the creator of TransLash Media, a cross-platform journalism, personal storytelling and narrative project. She was also the host of The Last Sip, a weekly, half-hour news show which targeted Millennials of color, especially women and the LGBTQ community. She is transgender.
Rosemarie Allen is an American academic who specializes in diversity, equity, and inclusion. She is an associate professor of early childhood development at the Metropolitan State University of Denver and president and chief executive officer for the Institute for Racial Equity and Excellence.
Stop AAPI Hate is a nonprofit organization that runs the Stop AAPI Hate Reporting Center, which tracks self-reported incidents of hate and discrimination against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) in the United States. The organization was formed in 2020 in response to racist attacks on the Asian community as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Stop AAPI Hate’s approach centered on four strategies:
Naomi Tacuyan Underwood is a Filipina-American journalist, and AAPI activist.
People of Chinese descent have lived in Colorado since the mid-nineteenth century, when many immigrated from China for work. Chinese immigrants have made an undeniable impact on Colorado's history and culture. While the Chinese moved throughout the state, including building small communities on the Western Slope and establishing Chinatown, Denver, the presence of Chinese Coloradans diminished significantly due to violence and discriminatory policies. As of 2018, there were 45,273 Chinese Americans living in Colorado.
Mandy Jenkins was an American journalist and editor, known for creating several online local news outlets and her work in the development of digital journalism.
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