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Iris Yokoi

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    www.aaja.org/membership/newsmanagement/aajamanage_np2 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/23/2006    Last Visited: 3/4/2007  

    Iris YokoiNews EditorThe Orange County Register

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    www.philosophicalquest.org/latimesrsc.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/29/1992    Last Visited: 4/29/2008  

    The Los Angeles Times (Pre-1997 Fulltext); Los Angeles, Calif.; Jun 29, 1992; IRIS YOKOI;

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    aaja-la.org/2008/04/trivia-bowl-x-knbc-makes-history-in - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2008    Last Visited: 8/16/2009  

    "It's a bummer - four of our players from last year couldn't make it because of scheduling conflicts, but we recruited what I think is fresh talent," said Iris Yokoi, a Register editor and former chapter board member.

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    2001 ACES conference - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 12/7/2000    Last Visited: 1/19/2006  

    Christie D'Zurilla, left, is joined by John Futch, Iris Yokoi and Laura Wingard on the "Briding the Divide" panel at the ACES conference Thursday.
    ...
    Wingard and Futchwere joined on the conference panel by Iris Yokoi, a team leader at theOrange County Register.

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    Asian American Journalists Association : Los Angeles |... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2003    Last Visited: 8/29/2007  

    Editors joining forces - Jeanne Mariani-Belding of the San Jose Mercury News and Iris Yokoi of The Orange County Register both work with reporters who specialize in the coverage of Latino and Asian issues.

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    Asian American Journalists Association : Los Angeles |... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/10/2006    Last Visited: 8/29/2007  

    Iris Yokoi, left, a team leader with The Orange County Register, recruited for the Register at the Job Fair.With her is the Register's Anh Do, a recipient this year of a National Journalism Award from AAJA.

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    Asian American Journalists Association : Los Angeles |... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/29/2007    Last Visited: 8/29/2007  

    Iris YokoiAsian American Journalists Association : Los Angeles | Talking with local leaders
    ...
    Iris Yokoi Honored
    ...
    Iris Yokoi, an editor at the Orange County Register and AAJA-LA member, has received the first ever Excellence in Journalism Award from the Asian & Pacific Islander Heritage Council of Orange County.

    Yokoi, who was honored May 12 at the council's sixth annual awards gala in Santa Ana, was cited for her work in leading the Register's coverage of Asian American issues.

    "This award was really surprising to me," she recalled of that evening."It is really flattering to receive it and rewarding to know that Asian American coverage really made a difference in the paper."

    Yokoi was born in Los Angeles and raised in Santa Ana.After graduating from Pepperdine University in Malibu -- and winning an AAJA-LA scholarship along the way -- she worked at the Long Beach Press-Telegram and the Los Angeles Times.

    She joined the Register in 1997 as a reporter and went on to serve as West County news team leader from 1999 through last year, overseeing coverage in Cypress, Los Alamitos, Garden Grove, Seal Beach, Westminster, Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach.Last November, she was named editor of the Register's Life, etc. feature section; then, in early May, she was named editor of a new website and accompanying weekly publication that the Register's parent company will launch in coming months. Iris YokoiIris Yokoi
    ...
    As a Nisei -- an American-born child of Japanese immigrants -- Yokoi found that covering the lives and stories of others of Asian descent has resonated with her.She convened monthly meetings of about a dozen reporters and editors from various beats to discuss story ideas involving Asian Americans.These discussions resulted in coverage of such issues as the effort to build a Chinese cultural center in Irvine, a city with a high Chinese American population; and the steady growth of Korean American and Vietnamese American businesses in Garden Grove and Westminster.

    Yokoi dubbed this group "The Rice Squad."She recalled with a friendly laugh that "I told the staff members who are not Asian American that it's OK to call us The Rice Squad, instead of something like the Asian American coverage group."

    Yokoi identified a key challenge in ensuring fair, accurate coverage: ethnic diversity within the larger category of Asian Americans.That means journalists need to appreciate that some issues may matter more to Vietnamese Americans, say, than to other groups, or that there may be generational and assimilation issues that are particular to certain communities.

    "Balancing the diversity with the unity is a challenging goal for Asian Americans and for journalists covering these groups," Yokoi said.

    With encouragement and guidance from Yokoi, Register reporter Eric Carpenter has been working on a yearlong series covering the lives of members of a Korean American family.
    ...
    Yokoi said coverage of such depth, and more generally the accurate portrayal of Asian American culture and the prominence of Asian Americans leaders in business, politics, education and community service, makes her proud of her work as a journalist and editor.

    Her most recent project was leading community leaders and Register staff members in creating and publishing a list of 30 influential Orange County Vietnamese Americans.
    ...
    Elaborating on the effect that diversity has had on her life, Yokoi said: "The word ‘diversity' never came into my world until maybe 10 years ago.What made me aware of my ‘Asian-American-ness' was working at the Daily Pilot in Newport Beach.

    "One of the local assemblymen proposed a bill that would have required state textbooks to explain Japanese American internment as a ‘military necessity' at that time," she said, referring to the forced relocation of members of that community during World War II.

    "We covered that story, and the proposal was basically shut down.Covering the story as a reporter, it hit home to me that if the internment happened today, I would have been sent, and my American-ness would have been questioned, and that was ridiculous because I was born here.

    "In terms of my Japanese American identity, suddenly it hit home in a personal way: what it means to be Asian American, and being different and yet not different," Yokoi said."This line that we straddle is that, clearly, we are American and we are always trying to balance American values."

    In accepting her award from the Asian & Pacific Islander Heritage Council, Yokoi found another link to her heritage:

    "Having the awards ceremony take place at Lucky House Seafood Restaurant in Santa Ana is very fitting, because I grew up right around the corner," she said.

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    Asian-Americans call for change - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/11/2001    Last Visited: 6/21/2002  

    By IRIS YOKOIThe Orange County Register

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    NACLosAl :: View topic - O.C. Register - June 27, 2004... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/27/2004    Last Visited: 12/4/2005  

    Iris Yokoi O.C. Register (714)445-6680 iyokoi@ocregister.com

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    NCM EXPO > Schedule - Sessions & Workshops - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/9/2005    Last Visited: 11/21/2005  

    Anh Do, Nguoi Viet Daily and Iris Yokoi, The Orange County Register

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