If you're claiming that teams only looked at him because he was Asian, then he WAS overlooked, because if they paid attention to what he did on the court, he would have gotten much more respect than he did, which is his point. Him being Asian was a disadvantage since no one really took him seriously as a basketball player.
Now he's getting asked these questions and has always answered it the same way. Why are you mad at the answer he's giving? If anything you need to be more frustrated as to why people continue to ask him this stuff.
His publicist sets up these questions

you want me to believe that he doesn't know what will be discussed? His friend wrote a article for sports illustrated hinting at racism as the reason he wasn't brought back to the Knicks .
And again you can find 1000s of cases of people getting overlooked but lins own highschool coach didn't think Lin was that good
"Never did he believe he was coaching an NBA player when he had Lin in high school. ("No, no, no," he says.) And when no big-time program -- not even Stanford, the one across the street -- thought enough of Lin to offer him a scholarship, Diepenbrock really didn't have a problem with that.
"I wasn't sitting there saying all these Division I coaches were knuckleheads," Diepenbrock says. "There were legitimate questions about Jeremy."
Peter Diepenbrock never expected to be watching Jeremy Lin light up the Lakers.
Diepenbrock starts to say something else, then stops. "I already got in trouble with Jeremy for saying this, so I probably shouldn't," he says. Then, a few seconds later, he says, "Oh, what the hell. I'll say it anyway and get in trouble twice: Jeremy was not a good practice player." He's playing the damn sympathy card . He wanted to get drafted or get scholarship offer off intangibles huh
