Articles

  • 1 day ago | rapidcityjournal.com | David McHugh |Yuri Kageyama

    SPOTLIGHT | TRUMP ADMINISTRATIONThe Trump administration says the sweeping tariffs it unveiled April 2, then postponed for 90 days, have a simple goal: Force other countries to drop their trade barriers to U.S. goods. Yet President Donald Trump's definition of trade barriers includes a slew of issues well beyond the tariffs other countries impose on the U.S., including some areas not normally associated with trade disputes.

  • 3 days ago | bhpioneer.com | Yuri Kageyama

    There are celebrities whose persona is as famous, if not more so, than their works, or what made them stars in the first place. Andy Warhol, probably the most important artist to emerge from the 1960s American avant-garde, is one example. His nervous face peering beneath a shock of white hair is as signature as his Campbell soup cans. kAmxE’D 4=62C (2C9@= H2D?’E 2D92>65 E@ E6== E96 H@C=5 E92E 96 D9@F=5 36 C64<@?65 H:E9 2D 2 9F>2? 36:?8[ 2446AE65 7@C 2== E92E 96 H2D[ :?4=F5:?8 36:?8 82J H96?

  • 4 days ago | timesnews.net | Yuri Kageyama

    Demure, submissive and erotic, Suzie Wong is that bigger-than-life stereotype, that caricature Asian women grew up with in the U.S.We may have also secretly hoped to play that geisha-like image to win our way out of our oppression. But over the years, some of us grew to resent it, fight it and reject it, hoping to claim our true identity and dignity as a person. In “The World of Nancy Kwan,” a memoir by the pioneer Hollywood star, we hear from the real-life woman who played Suzie Wong.

  • 4 days ago | griffindailynews.com | Yuri Kageyama

    There are celebrities whose persona is as famous, if not more so, than their works, or what made them stars in the first place. Andy Warhol, probably the most important artist to emerge from the 1960s American avant-garde, is one example. His nervous face peering beneath a shock of white hair is as signature as his Campbell soup cans.

  • 5 days ago | heraldbulletin.com | Yuri Kageyama

    TOKYO — Panasonic will slash its global workforce by 10,000 people, half in Japan and half overseas, to become a more efficient, “lean” company, the Japanese manufacturer said Friday. The job cuts, amounting to about 4% of its 230,000 workers, will include early retirement offers in Japan and closures and consolidation of various operations, according to the Osaka-based maker of home appliances, such as washing machines and refrigerators.

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →

Coverage map

X (formerly Twitter)

Followers
28K
Tweets
178K
DMs Open
No
Yuri Kageyama
Yuri Kageyama @yurikageyama
11 May 25

Tokyo Today https://t.co/mXNvQGxpOh

Yuri Kageyama
Yuri Kageyama @yurikageyama
10 May 25

Not to boast, I have interviewed Haruko Sugimura.

Yuri Kageyama
Yuri Kageyama @yurikageyama
10 May 25

Tokyo Today https://t.co/2z9S5gAN2e