Sandra Tsing Loh

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Sandra Tsing Loh (born 11 February 1962) is a Los Angeles, California-based author, actress and radio commentator.

Loh is the daughter of a Chinese father and a German mother who was raised in Southern California, as she frequently mentions in her performances. She graduated from Caltech with a BS in Physics, and 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 performer included a piano concert on a freeway overpass in Downtown Los Angeles. She went on to perform autobiographical one-woman shows, which have been well received, in which she developed a particular form of observation humor. Her delivery style is generally ironic and spoken very quickly.

She gained some national notoriety when KCRW cancelled her weekly radio commentary, The Loh Life after an engineer neglected to bleep her on-air utterance of the word "fuck" during an essay about knitting that aired on 22 February 2004. (The program can currently be heard on KPCC). She is a regular commentator on National Public Radio newsmagazines and on programs produced by American Public Media, such as This American Life.

She is also the author of several books, including the semi-autobiographical A Year in Van Nuys (whose name is a take-off on Peter Mayle's A Year in Provence, though Tsing Loh points out that Van Nuys is not as glamorous as southern France). She has also written reviews of books about parenting, feminism, and several other topics for The Atlantic. She appeared in a one-woman show "Mother on Fire" at the 24th Street Theatre in Los Angeles from October 2005 to March 2006. She made a brief cameo appearance in the 2006 film Unaccompanied Minors.[1]

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