Hopnhat MEDIA Agency

Hopnhat MEDIA Agency

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Inside of the Vietnamese Community Center from 10/2020.

10/16/2024

Mùa Thu, không khí ở trường thật mát mẽ, xung quanh cây cối xinh tươi và tấp nập sinh viên qua lại cũng làm nhộn nhịp hơn cho những giờ giải lao chờ sang lớp khác. Người đời thường bảo, "Đi học còn khó hơn đi làm." thoạt nghe cũng tức cười với những người bận rộn nhưng nghĩ ra cặn kẽ thì cũng có cái lý của nó chứ chẳng ngoa. Già rồi mà được đi học là một đặc ân rất lớn mà ơn trên đã ban cho không phải ai cũng có thể lãnh nhận được một cách dễ dàng. Cứ lo cho tuổi già rãnh rổi nên cứ phải đến trường để học chữ yêu thương.
Cơm trưa của tôi hôm nay thật đơn giản, với những món ăn làm sẵn của người Mexico trông thật bắt mắt. Mua cho mình một tô cơm với thịt giá cả nhẹ nhàng để thưởng thức khi vừa tan lớp sáng. Món ăn của họ hương vị đặc trưng của người Nam Mỹ cũng làm cho thực khách người Việt ít khi ưa chuộng. Ăn được mới biết thế nào là sự ngon lành trong thức ăn của họ. Tôi như vất vã lâu rồi nên món nào cũng thích và ăn thật là ngon món cơm Mễ ở đây.
Hi vọng sẽ gặp được bạn bè cùng chung sỡ thích ăn uống với nhau để cùng thưởng thức nhiều món thật ngon ở UH nhé!

10/03/2024

Pantomime, Text vs. Theatre
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Pantomime is a humorous play by Derek Walcott. He is a highly decorated author who received a MacArthur Fellowship, or “genius grant,” in 1981 and won a Nobel Prize for Literature in 1992.
In Pantomime, the two characters are Harry Trewe, an Englishman and a hotel owner. The other is Jackson Philip, Trinidadian, a Creole servant. Similarly, based on Robinson Crusoe's story, in Act One. Derek Walcott has presented the first poem to be sung and danced, “It is our Christmas … magic wand.” It is a portrait of audiences, with landscaping of the beautiful West Indies and open traditions and culture. Caribbean islands from racial-mixed backgrounds and many languages create a form of text as poems and writing to play as anti-colonial implications.
In Act One, the theatre has some walls, such as a summer house painted white, some plants, and a breakfast table. The simple objects let audiences catch their eyes on the main characters more than expected of the author.
In Act Two, the same characters as in Act One, Harry and Jackson, move back and forth, using their physical gestures to express content to audiences.
In short, following the Pantomime, the incredible story of Derek Walcott has been leading audiences from sorrowful to humorous. Crying and smiling open human hearts to understand the Caribbean, where people have an advanced culture and the Creole languages are highly evaluated.

09/29/2024

An Educational System “On the Boat”
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A couple of days ago, I visited my friend and her son. In the past, I used to discuss education with them and how to achieve better goals. I have asked something about her son and his schooling grade this year and to know if he would be in eighth grade next year. It would be too late if he didn’t learn English now.

She paused momentarily and said, “I am preparing hard to send my son ‘on the boat.” Her voice made me misunderstand and surprised, “On the boat.” What does it mean? I asked her quirkily. Seeing my bewilderment, she smiled and said: “These two words are commonly used now. “On the boat” means that parents would spend a lot of money to help their kids study overseas. It is also an implication for the "boat people" to find freedom after the Vietnam Communists won the Vietnam War in the last century.

From 1975 to 1990, Vietnam was the country where the boat people and political refugees of the South Vietnam Government conflicted ideals with the new one to leave their country. Nowadays, people in Vietnam expect a better education system for their children.” It turns out that I was so backward. A new departure, no less profound than the previous one. They were urgently fleeing the education system that their parents feared for their children. It must be only relatively well-off families anyway.
Then, I met another friend who was originally from Saigon. I told her the story of “Getting on the Boat” I had just heard. She said: “It’s not just in the city. Bro!”.

I just returned from my hometown, a small South Vietnam county. Many families who are not well-off are also worried about selling their houses and farms to have money to send their children to study abroad right from high school. Parents always understand what is terrifying in this education system for their children. This “Getting on the Boat” story. Vietnam's government knows about a new, slow, silent, but massive educational exodus that is happening every day, fiercely, a quiet but fierce resistance on foot against the education system that's forced on people's destinies. However, I am surprised to see that problems did not say anything about the apparent pollution of the education system. Why has it happened in life? It is so dangerous that almost any parent who can afford it does not want their children to suffer and is determined to do everything to get their children "on the boat." A major educational evacuation, why is no one raising the alarmingly today?

Hung Nguyen – Sept 29, 2024

09/29/2024

10000 TẤN GẠO GIÁ RẺ CŨNG 10 TRIỆU ĐÔLA. CHO TẶNG AI CŨNG PHẢI THÔNG QUA QUỐC HỘI VIỆT NAM. TBT TÔ LÂM LÀM VIỆC KHÔNG PHÉP TẮC QUYỀN LỰC NHƯ THẾ THÌ KHÓ CHO DÂN.

09/14/2024

"Notebook of a Return to the Native Land"
​Review 9/12/2024
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Before reading this "Notebook of a Return to the Native Land", I thought it was a poem book talking about someone, who has a tourist trip to their homeland. However, I followed this book with many reading articles and strange words I had never seen. A lot of poems are helpful ideas for me to gain a deep understanding of the “negritude” words. Based on prompt 2, “Césaire often repeats, "I accept." That meaning makes me remember the Oscar movie named "Roots", which I saw more than 40 years ago. The famous movie is about enslaver destinies.

Back to the Césaire poem book, “I accept” is a shouting voice of a human who has suffered in life and is accepting punishment from their farming owners.

“I accept! I accept! … forgive me master… the cippus, the head screw.” "I accept" in this poem as a denouncement of their farming owners’ ruthlessness.

Cesaire wrote this poem book more than 80 years ago, and the world has changed globally. Slavery ended, and the United States had many leaders who were African Americans.

Talking about slavery is always sad. Nowadays, people in the United States are less racist than in previous centuries. Caribbean culture is taught in colleges and universities. Former President Barack Obama has always been respectful.

In short, skin tone doesn't matter when people worldwide develop their communication and get more understanding than before.

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