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Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2014

International Love: Part 2

Since the last blog post of me creeping on people was such a big hit, here are more snapshots of love around Europe. 
Since I began looking through my camera lens through a different perspective (that of the photographer and not just a tourist), I've begun to see more around me. It's sort of like when you get a new car, and then you start seeing that car everywhere, where you hadn't really noticed it before.
Looking for simple moments between people and their loved ones is kind of like that.
Once you start looking for them, they're all around you.


A girl in Venice kisses her dog who patiently waits while the family samples gelato.

Two dogs in Prague's old center snuggle while their owner performs in the square.

A couple naps in the sun by the riverside in Prague.

Children in Venice's Piazza San Marco try luring pigeons with snacks.
That wasn't working too well, so they ate the snacks themselves.

A boy and his father enjoy the cool water of a pubic fountain in
one of Berlin's parks on a sunny evening.

A bride and groom in Venice's Piazza San Marco bow to onlookers
taking pictures of them during their photo shoot in the Piazza.

This couple stopped for a moment on Prague's
famous Charles Bridge.

Overlooking the Vltava river in Prague on a sunny afternoon.

A girl in Prague stops to pass on some small change
to a street performer in Prague.





Friday, May 23, 2014

Berlin is for Lovers and I Feel Creepy

I never thought I would be "creeping" on people as much as I have these past few days.
Peering at the world from behind a camera lens alters your perspective of the things around you. 
I find myself examining moments that I would look past as a tourist.

A couple shares a moment together in the Berliner Dom.
I look at people when they think they aren't being watched, and I try to capture that moment. Instead of focusing much on the buildings and monuments, which are definitely worth capturing, I'm instead looking at the people around me. Other tourists, Germans, my classmates, etc.
It can get awkward, I'll be honest. Sometimes you have to fake another photo at something in the distance behind your subject and hope for the best.


A couple stops for a selfie at Alexanderplatz.
But doing that allows you to examine people in a different way. You become aware of acute differences between people. But more importantly, you become aware of the similarities.

My favorite moments are moments shared with strangers. A smile, a chuckle over their cute kid, or even discontent and an audible "Scheiße" as the tram stops because of technical difficulties and makes you walk. 

 I'm enjoying having the excuse, or rather, the opportunity to do this, to be "creepy", in a foreign city. And I am very excited to really begin work with my subject Pascal today. I'll be traveling to his art studio to take pictures of him working and also interview him about his experience in Berlin.

Berlin is for writers, artists, tourists, history buffs, mechanics, students, teachers, lovers and everything in between.
And I love being creepy.

Another pair pauses to embrace in the cool afternoon in Berlin's Tiergarten.

Amidst the hustle and bustle of public transportation,
this couple hugged before saying goodbye at a platform in Alexanderplatz.

A man looks at a woman on a boat trip across the lake in Wannsee.

A father and son watch ducks swim by at a pond in the Tiergarten.


Thursday, May 22, 2014

Berlin: Poor but Sexy

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Willkommen to Berlin!
This blog post is long overdue.
I'm supposed to be blogging while I'm here in Germany, as part of a Photojournalism study abroad trip I am doing with my college.
But each time I tried to sit down and write about this city and my ongoing experience in it, I got stuck.
I have found Berlin really challenging to describe. It truly is unlike any other major city I've been to, and it hasn't at all aligned with my expectations.
Shayla, me and Amanda stop for a selfie at the Wall.
You can follow Shayla's adventures here.

Not only do you have a Berlin that was once separated, now converged, but you have a Berlin that is constantly changing.

Professor Freeman, the photojournalism teacher leading our trip, says each year he comes, he seems buildings and stores come and go.

I'm liking the city so far though, I have to say.
I compared Berlin to someone who you "meet" for the first time on Facebook. You think you've got them figured out. Then you meet them in "real life" and the impression totally changes. You know at least one of those people, right? Yeah. That's Berlin.

We've done walking tours, biking tours, spent decent chunks of time on public transportation, and still this city was throwing me for a loop.
It wasn't until I separated from my group, and met up with my subject, Pascal, that I felt like I was getting to know Berlin on a more personal basis, from a different point of view.

While we're in the city, our project is to meet someone who lives in Berlin and do a profile on them. I ran into Pascal, an artist who bartends at Dr. Pongs and teaches English in his free time. I'll introduce you to him later.

For now, you can check out my photos here, and my album on Facebook.
Auf Wiedersehen!

A woman meditating near a memorial by the Berlin Wall.

A stop for ais or ice cream under a pretty
Berlin sky.

An example of "Old" Berlin and how some parts of the city
haven't changed in some time.

Prater Biergarten. You can order a beverage and complete
your meal with a bratwurst and potato salad.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Listen to Labes : A preview

A preview of what's to come! 

Soon, Stories About Them will feature young actor/musician Philip Labes. He'll share with us his work, music, and musings. But for now, check out one of his original songs he released in February-Yosemite- and be sure to stay tuned for the article coming soon!

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Rabinowitz : Getting into The Swing of Things


NYU sophomore Tyler Rabinowitz is getting into the Swing of Things....literally. 
Well into his second year at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, he's already found his passion and is running...or should I say, dancing with it. On top of all of the features and facets that come with being a college-kid, Rabinowitz is an aspiring film director, and already has numerous successes under his belt; including being named as a Presidential Scholar in the Arts. While balancing a heavy course load, volunteering with kids, keeping up with friends, exercising, and tearing up the concrete jungle of New York, Rabinowitz is also working towards a career in children's programming.

Following an internship at Warner Bros. last summer, Rabinowitz gained inspiration for his latest cinematic success: The Swing of Things, a charming short film based on the 1940s-inspired by Grandpa Al.  

So swing your way into Rabinowitz's world of the 1940s and watch the film through the link below, and join in our conversation about this film, his goals, and his newest film in production!

LS: Tell us a bit about yourself. School/interests/hobbies/etc.

TR: I go to New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, majoring in Film and Television and looking to do a double minor in the Business of Entertainment, Media, & Technology and Children and Adolescent Mental Health Sciences. I’m really interested in producing, directing, and writing feature films but have recently found that I also care a lot about children’s programming and am working on writing a potential pilot for an animated series. I am starting to tutor elementary school children, who need help with writing, but when I’m not in class or working on upcoming projects, I really value the time I spend with my friends. In my biased opinion, the people I’ve met in New York City are some of the most brilliant young artists and with some of the biggest hearts in the world. I feel flattered to call some of them my friends.
Additionally, I have found myself getting really involved with an exercise routine. I absolutely love going to the gym – it releases endorphins and I honestly feel like it puts me in the right mindset to work towards the ridiculous goals I set for myself. I’m also really into meditation. I give myself about ten minutes each day when I’m in the shower getting ready to just clear my mind through meditation. It helps so much. I also love to doodle, which I’d argue in many ways is a form of meditation. I find it to be one of the most relaxing things in the world.
 
LS: Where did you get the idea or origin of the Swing of Things. How did you get started?

 TR: In the summer of 2012, I received an unbelievable opportunity to get to work at Warner Bros. in Burbank, CA as an intern in their Worldwide Television Marketing department. I absolutely loved working there, but living in Los Angeles completely independently was actually one of the most terrifying experiences of my life. I was using the money I was making through my job to pay for my living expenses, and therefore couldn't afford a car. I felt so isolated because all my life I had been surrounded by commotion. I grew up in south Florida in a family of six with three dogs, and then I left for Manhattan - where I now attend NYU Tisch. So I've always been around people. I never realized how much I needed to be in the company of others. I was completely alone. But while I was alone, I found myself flipping through channels on the TV and came across a black and white scene of people in the 1940's at a swing dance party. It looked like so much fun - and keeping in mind what was happening historically at that time I found it amazing that in a world filled with tension and fear these people were able to escape to these swing dance halls. It felt magical. I became infatuated with swing dance. Every night when I felt really anxious living on my own, I'd watch clips of swing dance/lindy hop on YouTube repeatedly. This one was one of my favorites: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rf55gHK48VQ
So, when I came home for about a week before returning to school for my sophomore year, I told my parents that one day I'd love to recreate a swing dance hall for one of my movies. My dad and I had a conversation about how my grandpa Al loved to swing dance, and how he loved the music - especially "In the Mood" by Glenn Miller. Unfortunately, the memories I have of my grandpa Al aren't the brightest since as I was growing up he suffered from ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease). He ultimately lost control of all of his muscles. 
He couldn't even talk or really smile, yet alone dance.
Imagining my grandpa Al swing dancing was a thought that really stuck with me. I imagined him that he would be the life of the party - that if he were to step onto that dance floor all the joy bottled up inside of him when he was sick would come bursting out like a flash of light, and spread like wildfire to everyone else in the room. Some time after my dad and I had this conversation, I came across a photo of grandpa Al swing dancing. It was one of those moments where you are just overwhelmed with chills. I didn't know how I was going to do it, but I knew that I was going to find a way to capture the feeling I felt when I found that photo and share the joy of swing dance with the world. 
In memory of Rabinowitz's Grandpa Al

The class I was about to take at Tisch in the fall was called Sight and Sound: Filmmaking - a class all sophomores take where we shoot five black and white films in one semester. Somehow, some way, my final film for this class was going to bring the world of a 1940's swing dance party to life. I was so passionate about the idea that I needed to make it happen right away. I couldn’t let it rattle around in my head any longer.


Rabinowitz on the set
LS: The filming/production process. How did it go? Things you learned on set about filming/producing/yourself?

TR: The production process was an incredibly difficult yet rewarding journey. We didn’t know if we had official approval to actually make the film from NYU Production Supervision until three days before the shoot because of how many logistics were involved. But I was determined to work through every problem that came up. I didn’t have a budget for the film when I first decided I needed to make it, so along the way I worked two jobs to totally fund the project because I didn’t feel I was at a level yet where I had the right to ask others to donate money so that I could make a movie. It made me more connected to the project. Also, my grandpa Al was known for being hilariously stubborn, so in a way I felt like I was carrying on that part of him as I insisted on working to raise this money on my own. I didn’t want even my parents to pay a penny. This is just one example, but honestly in all facets of my life I was totally one hundred percent immersed in this project. It was a little bit scary because I legitimately felt like I was living in the world of the film for four months, but it was a really special experience for me. There were so many times that I could’ve given up—whether it was when Hurricane Sandy hit in the middle of our crucial rehearsal period and I didn’t even know if my cast was safe or if our shooting location had been flooded out, or when I was lugging a 100 lb. bag of 1940’s costumes five blocks down 3rd Ave. in the middle of a Nor’easter because the cab driver didn’t feel safe to continue driving. But I just laughed when things like that happened. No matter what, I was not going to let anything get in the way of me making this film. If a problem came up, I wouldn’t dwell on it. I’d immediately search for solutions. The image of my grandpa Al swing dancing was constantly in my mind, and I really do think that in a very spiritual way he helped me find the answers to the problems I faced.
“The Swing of Things” was definitely a crash course in filmmaking for me. I’m not at the level yet where I have access to a full crew, so I not only wrote, directed and produced the film but I also was the director of photography, art director, production designer, and even measured the cast for their costumes. I found that I really love so many parts of the process—I could be happy producing for the rest of my life, or possibly even art directing. But I think that what I loved most about the entire process was that I had the chance to work with some of the most incredibly kind, wonderfully gifted people. Before I knew it, we had so many people supporting the project and volunteering their time to act, to dance, to choreograph, to play music, to do hair and makeup. It was unbelievable. I felt a little like George Bailey in It’s a Wonderful Life. I had no idea so many people were out there who believed in me to the extent that they would sacrifice so much time and give so much effort to help make this film happen.

Opening title of Rabinowitz's "The Swing of Things"
LS: After it was all said and done, how do you feel about this project, and how did you share it? What kind of reactions have you received?

TR: For me, the success of the film was simply in making it. Going through such a grueling journey to actually reach our production date made the moment we wrapped our shoot feel like we had just won a marathon. I went home a couple days later for Thanksgiving and I don’t think I had ever stopped smiling since the shoot. But at the same time, I wanted to make sure that I was able to edit together a film that would reflect the journey we went through and the joy I felt on the shoot day. I screened it for my class at the end of the semester, and I don’t think I’ve ever felt more humbled in my entire life. I hoped they would like the film, but when one of my classmates told me it was “magical” that really stuck with me. That’s a reaction I’ve continued to hear. I screened it at Tisch School of the Arts on February 1st for the cast and crew (there were 35 people involved), their friends, and anyone else who wanted to attend, and again I kept hearing that it felt “magical.” That’s why I love making movies. They make people believe in magic again. 

LS:  What are your plans for the future? What do you hope to eventually achieve?

TR: While I’m continuing with my studies at Tisch, I would love to get started in creating children’s programming. I think that that’s an outlet through which we as filmmakers can make an immediate impact on our world, because I feel this is a tremendous opportunity for us to facilitate the social and emotional development of children by teaching them about problems that they might face and how they might deal with them. I hope to create a show that can aid child development, while still being a show that is extremely entertaining and features characters that children will love as much as I loved characters like Doug and Tommy Pickles when I was younger. Beyond that, through my coursework I’m working on screenwriting, producing, and directing and I hope to be creating work for film and television for a very long time. But more than anything, I think that at the root of all of my work really what I want to do is show people the importance of imagination and the way that art can captivate us, inspire us, and educate us. Again, if you’ve seen It’s a Wonderful Life, when George Bailey hits rock bottom Clarence the Angel comes down and shows him how important he is and shows him the good that exists in his world. I hope that no matter what it is I end up doing with my life, I can be the Clarence to the George Bailey’s of the world.

LS: Do you have any films in planning or production right now? Can you give us a sneak preview?

TR: Right now I’m collaborating with Blake Krapels, a dancer at The Juilliard School, on a dance film featuring his entire sophomore class of 26 dancers. Blake and I were roommates in Washington, D.C. when we were named 2011 U.S. Presidential Scholars. President Barack Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan honored us with National Medallions, and Blake had the chance to dance on the Kennedy Center stage, while my work was screened at the Kennedy Center and placed in an exhibition at the Smithsonian for a month. It was an unforgettable experience and we’ve remained great friends ever since. So this has been a wonderful opportunity to work together and I hope that the film will raise awareness of some of the world’s brightest emerging dancers while also inspiring other dancers and filmmakers to explore this fascinating genre of dance film. Look out for the finished product this fall!

LS: Quote to live by?

TR: There are a lot of quotes that I really love, but this video of Mister Rogers giving his acceptance speech for his Lifetime Achievement Award at the Emmys in 1997 is really something to live by. The world needs more people like Mister Rogers.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Upm9LnuCBUM

{Photos courtesy of Tyler Rabinowitz}

Sunday, February 3, 2013

This one's mine

This particular story started a little while back. About 19 years to be a little more precise. The story of someone who loves to tell stories. If you stick with me, you'll get to hear a lot of them. Stories about other people; their lives; their dreams; their work. This blog, yes- this one's theirs. But to start it off, you'll need the story of the storyteller. So this one's mine. 

 My mom has told me since I was young, over and over again "Leanna, if you want something badly enough, you can achieve it." I've been known to be very cautious and meditative in my decision making, but I can honestly say I have found the niche where I am no longer hesitant, and a place where I feel I can best use my personal talents and abilities to serve others.


I didn't always start off thinking I would want to do what I do now. Against the Texan backdrop in which I was raised, the elementary-school-aged me saw herself in a more rugged setting...as a cowgirl or farmer. But my aspirations eventually began to change and develop when I moved to Florida and was accepted into an arts middle and high school. There, I was able to find the skill set that began to form my ideas of my future role in the real world, and what kind of purpose my efforts would be put towards. I wanted to tell people about the world and about all the people in it. I loved feeling like I was working for something bigger than myself; how I was given the opportunity to serve the community I was a part of. As you can see, I wasted no time...



I started off reading the daily lunch menu and have since progressed to playing a role hosting and producing in my college's Integrated News Facility,
While I was a communications major, I realized that there was a way to make a living doing the things I loved doing. People fascinate me. I love to listen to them, and I love it when someone teaches me something. I like making each day unique, and collecting stories with me along the way.


My greatest aspiration is to become a well-respected journalist who has the ability to travel and report through all platforms. I hope to have a fulfilling career reporting and that eventually I will make a positive impact in this field and continue to enhance the storytelling medium.
I like to use photography to help capture some of those stories. 



So this blog here. This is for artists, dancers, dreamers, thinkers, tinkers, and all those in between. I want this to be a platform for them to share their work, their thoughts, and their dreams with you, so that one story may affect another in some positive way. After all "We are the music makers, And we are the dreamers of dreams." So stop in often, and experience their stories. Because if anything else isn't, this one's theirs.