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Post by Audrey Mag • May 15, 2011 • Post a comment
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Roses are red

Violets are blue

Here are some stories

From Audrey mags old and new

For your enjoyment

‘Cause Audrey loves you!

Spring 2012

Cover Feature | Hannah Simone of New Girl

Feature | Mother Superior

Plugged In | The Reeducation of Cherry Truong

Personalities | Sarah Kay, Katrina Law, Reggie Lee, Jay Hayden, Marie Lu, Jin Akanishi

DestinAsian | Taj Campton Place, The Luxury Place, Tokyo on Foot

Mind & Body | Detox and Cleanse

Style | Meg Frampton, Mama Knows Best

My Story | Balancing Life from Uneven Bars: Anna Li

The Awful Truth | Isn’t it Bromantic?

Entertaining | Dina Yuen

Winter 11-12 

Cover Feature | Keeping Up with Kaling with The Office‘s Mindy Kaling

Feature | Booze Control

Plugged In | The World We Found, The Lady with Michelle YeohAmy Rider, Ellie Wen

Personalities | Dia FramptonSendhil RamamurthyBooboo StewartMaria HoTina Guo, John Cho

DestinAsian | Zozi, The Cosmopolitan, Chiva Som

Mind & Body | Protect Your Eyes, Keep Your Smile Healthy, Adjust Your Diet

My Story | Dying to Be Me: Sarah Yeung

The Awful Truth | Grading the Hall Pass

Entertaining | To Give and Receive, Winter Cocktails

Cultural Collage | Blog Spotlight: Cakies

FALL 2011

Cover Feature | I Dream of Jenna with Glee’s Jenna Ushkowitz

Feature | Picking Up The Pieces: faces of the Recession including Kimberly, Cat, Celena, Enid, and Alfred

Plugged In | The Fire Within book review

Plugged In | Q&A’s with Blush, Steven Yeun, Beats Per MNET‘s Yvonne Lu, Frieda Pinto, and Chin Han

Personalities | Tim Kang

Personalities | Diana Reyes

Personalities | Brent Chua

Personalities | Rachael Yamagata

Personalities | David Chiu

Personalities | Rebecca Wang

Mind & Body | Audrey staff samples Supplements

Beauty | Lighten Up with brightening cosmetics

My Story | Yangzom Brauen fights for her grandmother’s Tibet

The Awful Truth | How the Internet Changed My Sex Life

Entertaining | Surachai Tangsakyuen

Cultural Collage | Through My Pen

SUMMER 2011

Cover Feature | Unbound with Snow Flower and the Secret Fan’s Li Bing Bing

Feature | Body of Quirks ft. real women Violetta, Neha, Nebula, Helena, Jessica, Joz, Iris, Yoko, and Doris.

Plugged In | Daughter of the River Huong book review

Plugged In | Q&A’s with Jeannie Mai, Olivia Speranza, and Lucia Micarelli

Personalities | Ashok Amritraj

Personalities | Dilshad Vadsaria

Personalities | Jared Eng

Personalities | George Takei

Personalities | Priscilla Ahn

Personalities | Anjula Acharia-Bath

Mind & Body | Lose the Plastic with Angela Sun

Beauty | Sunscreen Special

Beauty | Cargo’s Judy Yonemoto

My Story | Patty Chang Anker

The Awful Truth | Dates of Glory

Entertaining | Royal/T’s Picnic Cocktail

Entertaining | Nami Design

Cultural Collage | Through My Lens: Desert Refuge

SPRING 2011

Cover Feature | New Munn Rising with Olivia Munn

Feature | Generation Diverse: Are We There Yet and Being That Asian

Plugged In | The Devotion of Suspect X

Personalities | Steel Magnolia: Anisha Nagarajan

Personalities | Late Bloomer: Randall Park

Personalities | The Queen’s Speech: Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai

Personalities | The Storyteller: Jon M. Chu

Personalities | A Joyful Noise: The Go! Team

Personalities | Dream Weaver: T.V. Carpio

Audrey Style| Audrey It-Girl: Kelsey Chow

My Story | The Wish Maker: Judy Lee of Design Squad Nation

Mind & Body | Food Fail: Natalie Minh’s Nutrition Failures

The Awful Truth | The Back-Up Plan: How To Be a Good Wingman/woman

Entertaining | Japanese Cocktails

DestinAsian | Travel Gear

Cultural Collage | Through My Lens: Poppy Fever

 

WINTER 2010-2011

Feature | Paradise Found: India’s Wellness Retreats

Plugged In | Bitter in the Mouth by Monique Truong

Personalities | On The Rise: YouTube Sensation Joseph Vincent

Personalities | The Glamorous Life: The Motivational Ruby Veridiano

Personalities | Party Time: Food Network Star Aarti Sequeira

Personalities | National Hero: The Green Hornet’s Jay Chou

Personalities | Soul Barer: Singer Heather Park

The Awful Truth | Dating for Dummies: New Year’s Resolutions

My Story | An Uncertain Education by Lianne Lin

Beauty | Lash Royalty’s Elizabeth Le Pek

Entertaining | Kabuki’s Master Sake Sommelier Yuji Matsumoto

Entertaining | Hot in the Kitchen with Kelly Choi

Through My Lens | Last Look of Winter

FALL 2010

Feature | Something Old, Something New … Something Red?: Asian Wedding Superstitions

Personalities | Radical Reboot: Hawaii Five-O’s Grace Park

Personalities | Girl Next Door: Pretty Little Liar’s Shay Mitchell

The Awful Truth | The Office Grind: Intra-office Dating

My Story | The Giving Tree

SUMMER 2010

Feature | Hip Hop Groundswell: Far East Movement

Feature | The New Rhythm Nation

Personalities | Comedian Steve Byrne

Personalities | Host Jeannie Mai

The Awful Truth | Going the Distance

My Story | Gianna Driver’s Cycle of Hope

Plugged In | The Surrendered by Chang Rae Lee

SPRING 2010

Feature | A Quiet Revolution: O.A.R.

Personalities | Thao Nguyen and Get Down Stay Down

The Awful Truth | Gaming the System

My Story | Veronica De La Cruz’s Fight For Life

Entertaining | In the Kitchen with Jaden Hair

FALL 2009

Feature | Protecting Our Youth

Feature | The Spicy Trade

Girl Talk | Gleek Appeal: Jenna Ushkowitz

Audrey Man | New Moon’s Justin Chon

My Story | A New Direction

Plugged In | Thirsty For More: Park Chan-wook

Stylemaker | Seventy Two Changes

SUMMER 2009

Girl Talk | A Wave of Love

—-

We’re going to be constantly updating this archives page with our favorite stories from past Audrey issues so continue to check back when you have time. If you want to read the issues in print (and really, who doesn’t) and keep a little bit of Asian American history in your archives, check our shop to purchase back issues. But hurry — they sell out fast!


Related Articles

12 Responses
  1. 12
    Joe says:

    Hey Audrey!

    How come I cant find the Dec 2008/Jan 2009 with Jamie Chung in your archives? There is an article I’d like to give to my friend Carole, who is featured in the magazne. Unfortuantely, I cant give her a copy of the magazine because its sold out.

    Thanks,

    Uncle Joe

  2. 11
    Kanara says:

    The magazine was named after the publisher’s daughter, Audrey.

  3. 10
    Kaila says:

    Hi Audrey Magazine! I’m doing a class project on Audrey Magazine, I was wondering how Audrey Magazine got its name?

  4. 9

    [...] My Story | Balancing Life From Uneven Bars: Anna LiWorld Championship gold medal gymnast Anna Li may have her foot in a cast, but that’s not stopping her from aiming for the Summer Olympics in London this July. ISSUE: Spring 2012 DEPT: My Story STORY: Anna Li When I was 4, all I wanted was a sparkly gymnastics competition leotard. My parents told me I couldn’t get one unless I competed, and they were reluctant to get me started. They themselves had been in the 1984 Olympics for China and understood the commitment and discipline gymnastics required. It was demanding, to say the very least. However, I persisted, and by the age of 6, I had started my career in gymnastics. When I was in high school, I competed at the elite level and trained for six to eight hours a day, six days a week, in addition to attending school. My parents trained me at their gym. With their help, I won a number of titles and placed at Nationals, the USA Championships and the U.S. Classics from 2002 to 2005. When I was in college, I was a full-time athlete for UCLA and trained to be in all of the 17 competitions each season. Training began anywhere from 5:30 to 7 in the morning and ended at noon, followed by classes till the evening. As a college freshman, I competed in every event in every meet and was the only freshman in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) selected to be on the All-Pac-10 team in the all-around. I suffered a concussion my sophomore year, but I didn’t allow that to slow me down. I captured 19 individual victories, seven on bars, two on beam, four on floor, and five in the all-around. By my junior year, I had won the NCAA Regional title on uneven bars for the third consecutive year. During my last year at UCLA, I earned my fourth consecutive NCAA Regional bars title with a perfect 10. After college, I made the World Championship Team for 2011, the year the U.S. team brought home the gold. Shortly after, I had surgery and got two screws placed in my foot because it had been bothering me. Right now, I am training to be on the U.S. Olympic gymnastics team at the London Summer Olympics this July. Though it has only been three months since my foot surgery, training has already begun. I’m at the gym all day, every morning and every evening. When you’re involved in the sport of gymnastics, you learn about strict discipline. When you start competing at the age of 6, you know what kind of competition you are competing in, and you know you’ve got to give it all you’ve got. You train your entire life for this kind of competition. It would be sad to shy away from this kind of opportunity. However, even with my discipline and dedication, I can’t say it’s easy training six days a week with my coaches, who happen to be my Olympic gymnast parents. And I can’t say it’s easy getting up every morning to warm up and start my strength and conditioning. By the time my day is done, I just want to go home, rest, eat and get ready for the next day. There really isn’t much time for anything else. It’s a lot of sacrifices. I don’t have a regular 9-to-5 job. Even my relationship with my boyfriend is different from most because gymnastics is my number one priority; my relationship isn’t. Who wants to hear that? But then I have to remind myself what my head coach at UCLA said: “What hurts more — the pain of discipline or the pain of regret? The pain of failure or the pain of regret?” There are days when I want to give up. There is no guarantee that I’m going to make the Olympic gymnastics team. There are only five spots on the team and to get a spot on the team, it’s nearly impossible. But all I can do is train my hardest, and whatever happens, happens. If I try my best and work my hardest, I won’t regret the outcome. I surround myself with people who support my goals and aspirations. My friends and boyfriend understand and support me. My parents know my body and how I train under certain situations. We trust each other. They help me move forward. It doesn’t matter what your dream is. If you want something, when you believe in yourself, no one can take that away from you if you give it your all. If it works out, that’s great. If it doesn’t, you know you tried your absolute best to be what you wanted to be. If I can accomplish something today, I’m going to push for my dream. I can definitely say I won’t have any regrets. — as told to Han Cho More stories from Audrey’s spring issue here. [...]

  5. 8

    [...] stories from Audrey’s Summer issue here. tweetmeme_source = 'AudreyShops'; tweetmeme_style = 'compact'; [...]

  6. 7

    [...] Joz is one of nine women Audrey featured in its Body of Quirks feature. Check out more stories here. [...]

  7. 6

    [...] Audrey covergirl Olivia Munn and Lucy Liu both showed some legs in black cocktails. However, I liked how both [...]

  8. 5
    emily says:

    Plz do a magazine with Celeste Thorson on the cover she’d b so pretty!

  9. 4
  10. 3

    [...] to read some of our old issues? Now you can at our Archives [...]

  11. 2
  12. 1

    [...] PS. Started to put Audrey archives up on the web. Check it out if you have a moment or two. My profiles of Joseph Vincent, Jay Chou [...]

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