Saturday, March 24, 2012
Capitol Fashion and What Fans Wore to the "Hunger Games" Midnight Premiere
Roll out the red carpet, the fans have arrived! The Hunger Games feature film premiered on Friday, March 23rd, 2012, at midnight. At the New York City AMC Lincoln Plaza theater, fans arrived in style from their stretch underground, commuter limousines. They printed their pre-ordered invitations to one of twelve showings and entered early to take the best seats in the house and, to no surprise, many came in costume, including myself. But of course, the dolled-up fans attended without seeing the movie prior. They came up with their ideas from the trailers, clips, articles, promotional screen shots and photographs, and from their own visions developed when reading the Hunger Game novels. It involved a lot of creativity... So I thought it would be fun to hang out in the lobby and see how others dressed for the reaping. I mean, we did have time to kill. The star players were Katniss, Effie Trinket, and residents of the Capitol.
Labels:
bow and arrow,
Capitol,
class,
costumes,
District,
Effie Trinket,
fans,
fashion,
feminism,
Flowers,
Hunger Games,
interpretation,
Katniss,
Marie Antoinette,
novel,
poor,
red carpet,
rich,
Seneca Crane,
Victorian
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Validation is an underrated neccessisty.
"Girl at Mirror" by Norman Rockwell |
When you're fighting with your significant other, validation can be saying, "Although my motives are not what you perceived from my actions, I understand why you thought that or why it upsets you." In lamest terms and an example? "When I was talking to my ex, I didn't mean to come off as flirting, but I can see why you're worried." Validation is saying, "You don't need to be worried. I left that person for a reason. I want to be with you." Validation is also honest. If the ex is a threat, then its a false sense of validation. So an honest and scary validation would be saying, "I do have feelings for that person still. But... [Insert solution if applicable.]"
Without emotional validation, "Psh, she's just my ex. Don't you trust me," it can make people afraid to share their irrational feelings, because that's what they think they are. They think they shouldn't be feeling what they feel. It's called "gas lighting": tricking someone into believing their emotions are not valid. (source) But either way, without having emotional validation, it can make a person feel lost. It can lead to the same fight repeating over and over, instead of growth. And that can be really "fun."
We need validation in our careers, as well. We need to know what we're good at, because if we're not good at our profession, we need to know how we can improve ...or what we should be doing instead. Career validation can be, "Wow, you know how to make things happen." Validation can even be seeing your own progress. How you've made so much from scratch.
Labels:
affirmation,
career,
comfort,
communication,
confidence,
constructive criticism,
insecurities,
love,
negative,
perception,
positive,
relationship,
support,
understanding,
validation
Thursday, March 8, 2012
"Ladies, we are not against each other. Let's stop thinking only one of us can make it, while the rest of the employees are men." - Audrey Zao
We are stronger when we support each other. Let's have more Female Camaraderie! Happy International Women's Day! Wo/Men, let the females you respect, appreciate and admire know that you do and why.
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Friday, March 2, 2012
Why You Should Think of Networking as Making Friends
Published by NYCreativeInterns.com
By Audrey Zao
This article is about the anniversary of my experience on the feature film, Petunia staring Thora Birch, Christine Lahti, Brittany Snow, Eddie Kaye Thomas, Michael Urie, and Tobias Segal. It was a "networking snowball." I was the first to be referred and the production just kept asking for more and more interns... so I brought on the people I knew who deserved the opportunity and could get the job done. Yes, I call them friends. And yes, we all went to college together.
Read the article: here
By Audrey Zao
This article is about the anniversary of my experience on the feature film, Petunia staring Thora Birch, Christine Lahti, Brittany Snow, Eddie Kaye Thomas, Michael Urie, and Tobias Segal. It was a "networking snowball." I was the first to be referred and the production just kept asking for more and more interns... so I brought on the people I knew who deserved the opportunity and could get the job done. Yes, I call them friends. And yes, we all went to college together.
Read the article: here
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