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・ Sandra Thomas
・ Sandra Thompson
・ Sandra Thompson (linguist)
・ Sandra Thompson (writer)
・ Sandra Tilley
・ Sandra Toft
・ Sandra Tomlinson
・ Sandra Torres
・ Sandra Torres (athlete)
・ Sandra Torres (politician)
・ Sandra Townsend
・ Sandra Trattnigg
・ Sandra Trehub
・ Sandra Troop
・ Sandra Truccolo
Sandra Tsing Loh
・ Sandra Ugalde Basaldúa
・ Sandra Uptagrafft
・ Sandra Valenti
・ Sandra van Nieuwland
・ Sandra Vander-Heyden
・ Sandra Venkata Veeraiah
・ Sandra Vergara
・ Sandra Vilanova
・ Sandra Vinces
・ Sandra Voe
・ Sandra Voetelink
・ Sandra Voitāne
・ Sandra Volk
・ Sandra Vu


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Sandra Tsing Loh : ウィキペディア英語版
Sandra Tsing Loh

Sandra Tsing Loh (, born February 11, 1962) is an American writer, actress, and radio personality.
==Life and career==
Loh is the younger daughter of a Chinese father and a German mother. She was raised in Malibu, Southern California, and after attending Malibu Park Junior High School was bused south to Santa Monica High School, where she was active in the computer-and-engineering-related "Olive Starlight Orchestra" and founded the performance-arts group and civic volunteer organization "Young Bureaucrats, Of Course (YBOC)". She also played violin in the Samohi school orchestra.
Loh graduated from Caltech with a BS in Physics; she returned in 2005 to deliver its commencement speech. She is also a graduate of the Master of Professional Writing Program at the University of Southern California. Her early career as a performance artist included a piano concert on a freeway overpass in Downtown Los Angeles, and one in which she distributed hundreds of one-dollar-bills. She went on to perform a number of well-received autobiographical one-woman shows, in which she developed a particular form of observational humor. Her delivery style is generally ironic and spoken somewhat quickly.
Loh gained some national notoriety when KCRW canceled her weekly radio commentary, ''The Loh Life'', after an engineer neglected to bleep her on-air utterance of the word "fuck" during a segment on knitting that aired on 22 February 2004. ''The Loh Life'' was soon after picked up by the other Los Angeles NPR affiliate, KPCC. She is also the host of ''The Loh Down on Science,'' a daily science oriented radio show, and is/was a regular commentator on NPR's ''Morning Edition'', PRI's ''This American Life'', American Public Media's ''Marketplace'', and other public radio programs. She has some versatility as a radio personality in that many of her programs, some of which airs at the same time, are aimed at a different radio audience. As an example, Loh would use humor to publicize a recent but serious scientific discovery on ''The Loh Down on Science'' series while she would make a humorous comment on a current business topic on her segment on ''Marketplace''.
Loh is the author of several books, including the semi-autobiographical ''A Year in Van Nuys''. She has also written reviews of books about parenting, feminism, and several other topics for ''The Atlantic'', where she is a regular contributor. Loh appeared in yet another one-woman show, "Mother on Fire," at the 24th Street Theatre in Los Angeles between October 2005 and March 2006. She made a brief cameo appearance in the 2006 film ''Unaccompanied Minors''. She is featured in the book ''Part Asian, 100% Hapa'' by artist Kip Fulbeck.
In reviewing Loh's 2008 book ''Mother on Fire'' for the ''New York Times Sunday Book Review'', Pamela Paul wrote that she "was in awe of () quippy brilliance" and that Loh's writing ability "is no less than a feat of genius".

Loh wrote about her divorce in a 2009 article for ''The Atlantic'', where she has been a contributing writer for several years, focusing mostly on parenting and family issues. She explained at the time that, as a parent and full-time writer, "I did not have the strength to 'work on' falling in love again in our marriage."〔(On marriage: Let’s call the whole thing off ). MSNBC (2009-06-22). Retrieved on 2013-01-26.〕 She also admitted to cheating on her husband.
Loh's essay, "The Bitch Is Back," which first appeared in ''The Atlantic'', was selected a Best American Essay for the 2012 edition of the Best American Essays series.
In 2014 Loh published ''The Madwoman in the Volvo: My Year of Raging Hormones,'' and was profiled in the ''New York Times''.
She had been invited to be the commencement speaker at Caltech in 2005 and at UC Irvine in 2014.

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