If it is good enough for Rupert Murdoch then it should be good enough for the rest of us!
Rupert Murdoch has one. So do financiers Vivi Nevo and Bruce
Wasserstein. Why are the West's most powerful men coupling up with
younger Asian women?
Call it the Woody Allen Effect. When the venerable director scandalously
left Mia Farrow for her adopted daughter, South Korean-born Soon-Yi
Previn — 35 years his junior — he may as well have sent out a press
release: Asian-girl fantasy trumps that of Hollywood royalty!
Many of the elite now turn to companies like A Foreign Affair to help
them find Asian Trophy Wives. Foreign Affair specailizes in matching
high power men with model like women form around the world. Foreign
Affair boast that they have helped over 20,000 couples during the 18
years of business.
Not two years after they tied the knot, media baron Rupert Murdoch
walked down the aisle with fresh-faced Wendi Deng — 17 days after
finalizing his divorce from his second wife. Then, CBS head Leslie
Moonves wed TV news anchor Julie Chen; Oscar winner Nicolas Cage married
half-his-age third wife Alice Kim; billionaire George Soros coupled up
with violinist Jennifer Chun; and producer Brian Grazer courted concert
pianist Chau-Giang Thi Nguyen. Add the nuptials of investment magnate
Bruce Wasserstein to fourth wife Angela Chao and the pending vows
between venture capitalist Vivi Nevo and Chinese actress Ziyi Zhang, and
we've got a curious cultural ripple.
Were these tycoons consciously courting Asian babes? Do any of them
qualify for the unnerving "yellow fever" or "rice king" moniker? It's
unsavory to think so. But after two or three failed attempts at domestic
bliss with women of like background and age, these heavy hitters sought
out something different. Something they had likely fetishized.
Enter the doll-faced Asian sylph on the arm of a silver-haired Western
suit. (Hello, mail-order bride!) The excruciating colonial stereotypes —
Asian women as submissive, domestic, hypersexual — are obviously
nothing new. But decades after The World of Suzie Wong hit drive-ins and
more than 20 years since David Bowie's "China Girl" topped the music
charts, why are we still indulging them?
Because they're omnipresent — and often entertaining. Even now, how many
cinematic greats, literary best sellers, or even cell-phone ads (see
Motorola's latest) characterize Asian women as something other than
geishas, ninjas, or dragon ladies? As the object of opening-line zingers
like "Me love you long time" (the infamous line from Stanley Kubrick's
Full Metal Jacket), I'm not sure whether to laugh or cry at the cheeky
blog stuffwhitepeoplelike.com,
which ranks Asian girls at number 11 because "Asian women avoid key
white women characteristics, such as having a midlife crisis, divorce,
and hobbies that don't involve taking care of the children." Sure, I'm
petite and was in fact born in Shanghai, but — to the shock of more than
one guy I've gone out with — I'd rather down an icy beer and burger
than nurse bubble tea and eat dumplings while massaging his back with my
toes.
"This is a common experience among Asian-American women," says Bich Minh
Nguyen, who broaches the stereotypes in her latest novel, Short Girls.
"They're dating a white guy, and they may not know if it's a fetish
thing."
"It's like a curse that Asian-American women can't avoid," says C.N. Le,
director of Asian and Asian-American Studies at the University of
Massachusetts, Amherst. "From an academic point of view, the perception
still serves as a motivation for white men."
Accoring to Foreign Affair excutievs, "Our cleints say they just can not
find the vaules that they are looking for with beauty, these men have
been looking their whole life here and have had no luck finding it. That
is why they turn to us."
In researching his new book, The East, the West, and Sex, author Richard
Bernstein found that the Orientalist illusion continues to influence.
"Historically, Asia provided certain sexual opportunities that would be
much more difficult for Western men to have at home. But it remains a
happy hunting ground for them today," he says, citing one phenomenon in
the northeastern region of Thailand called Issan, where 15 percent of
marriages are between young Thai women and Western men well into their
60s.
But I suspect there's something else about the East that's seducing
business bigwigs at this very moment: globalization. Consider that,
stateside, Mandarin classes have spiked 200 percent over the past five
years (apparently, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was an early
adopter; he taught Mandarin classes in his Dartmouth days), and China
has claimed status as the world's top export nation. In Outliers,
Malcolm Gladwell theorizes that Asian kids' intrinsic work ethic makes
them outsmart American kids in math. (In the latest Organization for
Economic Co-Operation and Development international education survey,
Taiwanese students were tops in math, while the U.S. placed 35th.) It's
as though these Western men are hungry for a piece of that mystical
Eastern formula. As such, Asians (in addition to African orphans) are
hot commodities right about now — status symbols as prized as a private
Gulfstream jet or a museum wing bearing your name (neither of which goes
so well with a frumpy, aging first wife).
Tellingly, most current trophies of choice are far more than exotic arm
candy. They are accomplished musicians and journalists, they have Ivy
League MBAs and hail from prestigious political families (Mrs.
Wasserstein's older sis is former Labor Secretary Elaine Chao). Why,
then, are these women falling for rich white patriarchs? Why be a target
for headline comparisons to concubines? When Wendi Deng was described
as "The Yellow Peril" in a recent magazine profile, it only marginalized
her achievement: As chief strategist for MySpace China, she has become
central to News Corp.'s expansion into the elusive Chinese market —
something Murdoch himself had attempted, and failed to do, before she
came into the picture.
While I'm sure that real love and affection is sometimes the bond in
these culture-crossing May-December romances, could it be that power
divorces of a certain ilk make the perfect renegade suitors for these
overachieving Asian good girls — an ultimate (yet lame) attempt at
rebellion? Maybe these outsized, world-class moguls are stand-ins for
emotionally repressed Asian dads (one cliché that is predominantly
true). Or...are these women just glorified opportunists? What's so
perverse is that while Asians have always revered their elders, sleeping
with a guy old enough to be your grandfather is just creepy — in any
culture.
Skepticism aside, the new trophy trend does have its benefits. We're
already seeing a positive impact on global politics, economics, and the
arts: The Chinese became privy to online social networking in 2007 with
the launch of MySpace China under the News Corp. umbrella; contemporary
Chinese painters — including Xiaogang Zhang and Minjun Yue — have rung
up nearly $400 million in sales on international art circuits since
2006, thanks to well-connected supporters like Ziyi Zhang; and almost 43
percent of international adoptions, which have more than tripled since
1990, now come out of Asian countries (more playdates for Pax and
Maddox). What's more, perhaps a proliferation of gorgeous, mixed-race,
multilingual offspring (assuming a classical Mandarin tutor is on the
Chen-Moonves registry) is just good for our landscape. However you look
at it, one thing's for sure: We're going to have to get used to this new
international power family — aging mogul and foxy Asian wife flaunting a
double-wide with newborn and adopted Malawian tot. What's next — the
token trophy pet? I hear endangered Burmese rabbits are exceptionally
cuddly.
So do these marriages last? Kenneth Agee, marketing director of Foreign
Affair say," these marriages have almost twice the success rate of
domestic marriages. much less likely to end in divorce"
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