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photo

I don't know either, so from Wiki apparently he's a half-breed, and
>> funny how custody went to the father got stuck rather than the mother,
>> since it's usually the father who leaves (e.g. Obama; besides what's the
>> most confusing day in Harlem? Father's Day!). Maybe this is one example
>> of paternal investment of Asians? (and in this case, the half-breed is
>> not up to no-good, and maybe the father is not quite the sucker?)

>> Quote: "Ohno was born in Federal Way, Washington, to a Japanese-born
>> father, Yuki Ohno (大野 幸, Ōno Yuki?)  and a Caucasian-American mother,
>> Jerrie Lee.[10]  Ohno's parents divorced when he was an infant, and he
>> was raised in Seattle by his father.[11]  He has had little contact with
>> his biological mother and as of 2002, has expressed no interest in
>> knowing her or his older half-brother.[10][11][12]  Ohno's father, a
>> hair stylist and owner of the salon Yuki's Diffusion, often worked
>> 12-hour shifts, and with no family in the United States, found it hard
>> to balance career and family.[12]  His father chose to name his son
>> Apolo after the Greek words "Ap," which means to "steer away from" and
>> "lo," which means "look out; here he comes."[4]"

>> And btw Ohno is not "Korean Pride", OP is a joke.

> "Japanese-born" doesn't say a thing. One can be a Kenyan born in Japan
> or a Japanese born in Kenya. What can you tell of them?

Well, (1) there are relatively few foreigners in Japan making it
statistically less likely; (2) the last name sounds Japanese; (3) the
sentence is followed by the unintended emphasis of a
"Caucasian-American" mother. Of course none of that con