Anh Do, deputy editor for culture and talent, helps manage our internship, fellowship, recruitment and training programs. Before this job, she worked as community engagement editor, and as Metro reporter covering Asian American issues and general assignments for 11 years. Do has reported for the Seattle Times, the Orange County Register and Nguoi Viet Daily News, the largest Vietnamese publication in the U.S. Born in Saigon, she is a graduate of USC with degrees in journalism and English. Her writing on culture and trauma has won awards from Columbia University and AAJA and she received Yale’s Poynter Fellowship in Journalism. In 2016, she was part of the Times team that won a Pulitzer Prize for breaking news coverage of the San Bernardino terrorist attacks, and in 2024, part of the team named a Pulitzer finalist for breaking news coverage of the Monterey Park shootings. Her passion is dog rescue, having volunteered on missions around the globe.
Latest From This Author
Bouncy ’80s pop takes root in ‘New Wave,’ a film about Vietnamese Americans’ glam glory days
A labor of love for debuting director Elizabeth Ai, the documentary charts an uprooted generation of young people and the dance music that made them feel seen.
After three criminals escaped from an O.C. jail, the state went on red alert. Our original reporter, Anh Do, saw the new Sundance movie based on these events.
Though hardly a household name to the general public, Helen Zia is a trailblazer — to some, a legend — in the fight for Asian American civil rights.
The Taiwanese government hopes to spread its version of Mandarin — along with its values of freedom and democracy — as China’s threats against Taiwan become increasingly bellicose.
Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen met in L.A. with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, intensifying an intractable ideological divide among immigrants.
As former President Trump’s indictment echoed across the nation, protests bubbled up around Southern California.
As the neighborhood gentrifies and Chinese residents grow older and fewer, the clubs remain a vital social glue.
Master kabuki dancer Fujima Kansuma dies at 104; entertained and taught generations of Japanese Americans.
The search continued Sunday for gunmen who left five wounded at a beach in San Pedro.
Lake Arrowhead resident Brady Wade shares the story of how his wife went into labor in the middle of the historic snowstorm.