Blogger Appreciation Month Week 1 - Gretchen Rubin: Telling A Story

This month I'm appreciating a handful of bloggers I love and admire and I'm beginning with Gretchen Rubin who writes The Happiness Project blog (among many other things). One of the things Ms. Rubin does on her blog is each week she posts a video.  In each video she tells a story because, in her words, "I’ve realized that for me, and I think for many people, a story is what holds my attention and makes a point most powerfully."  In homage to this device, which I very much enjoy, here's my story:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFyA8AGZxZQ

As it happens, it was the impulse to share this story a la Ms. Rubin that inspired this whole month of appreciation and homage.  Here is one of her recent videos so that you can see the master at work.

I'd also like to say how, having made my own video, I appreciate all the more the effort that goes into these story videos especially because you can tell that, unlike me, Ms. Rubin is not just using the built-in camera on her computer.  She sits in a nice environment, she's nicely lit, made up and coiffed . . . all this and more is why I'm appreciating her here this week.

Blogger Appreciation Month Week 1 - Gretchen Rubin: an introduction

Gretchen Rubin is the author of many books but I first learned about her in the context of her book The Happiness Project. Since the publication of that book (which, last I checked, had enjoyed over 100 weeks on the NY Times Bestseller List) she has also written Happiness at Home. I encourage you to visit her website where you can learn about her books and read her excellent blog. What do I love about Gretchen Rubin's blogging? I love how deliberate she is. There's a sort of square quality about her approach that I happen to enjoy on its own and which goes against this assumption I have that all blogs are supposed to seem breezy - the writing equivalent of the celebrity in the airport who is styled to look unstyled: perfectly imperfect. By contrast, Ms. Rubin's blog is unabashedly specific and thoughtful. She is carefully groomed both literally - in her weekly videos - and figuratively in all of her posts and seemingly not afraid to show that she's taken care and made some effort. Moreover, she shares research and pet philosophies as well as tips and favorite books - apparently all with a rigorous plan and on schedule; her interests and formats vary fairly widely but she manages to make them all cohere.  What she has to say doesn't always resonate with me, but I'm always interested to have read it.

Here are a few representative (and favorite) posts to get you started:

Do You Agree That These "Patterns" Make Places Beautiful and Comfortable?

Don't Assume That Everything Is So Different These Days.

5 Mistakes I Continue To Make In My Marriage.

Make People Happier By Acknowledging That They're Not Feeling Happy.

If you visit The Happiness Project Blog (please do!) and find a post that YOU love, link to it below in the comments!

July is Blogger Appreciation Month (on my blog)!

I've been reading blogs for a long time and blogging consistently for hardly any time at all, relatively speaking. As I've been blogging more often I've found two things:1. The more I blog, the easier it is to blog - ideas come more readily and posts are written more easily when less time passes between posts. (This is not dissimilar to what I've found writing short plays for Too Much Light . . .) 2. I frequently have the impulse to employ the styles and devices of my favorite bloggers. Generally I resist this impulse - those ladies (they all happen to be ladies) have worked hard to establish their voices and grow their audiences and success, who am I to come along and pluck up their gems for my own gain? - BUT for the month of July I'm going to go the other way.

They say that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. This month, I'll be highlighting my favorite blogs - and the ones which have the greatest influence on my own style - both by pointing you to some favorite posts and by creating my own posts in homage to each blogger.

Leave a comment and let me know which are YOUR favorite and/or most influential blogs!*

*See what I did there with the "leave a comment" thing? Tons of other bloggers do that all the time which, in turn, makes me feel self-conscious doing it myself. But I really do want to know what you think! So I'm claiming "leave a comment" as my own from now on. :)

Composting!

I am excited about composting! More specifically, I am excited that NYC is currently involved in a pilot program to recycle food scraps which, it's projected, may become city-wide (and mandatory) sometime in 2015 or 2016.

We've known about the value and importance of recycling for ages: so-called "modern" recycling was introduced to NYC in 1970! It has been frustrating that recycling hasn't been fully supported by infrastructure - however much we may want to recycle, if our city or town doesn't have a recycling program or allow us to recycle certain things, it's hard to do much about it.

The recent expansion of the recycling program to include all rigid plastics and now, looking forward, to include food scraps is so exciting to me because it supports the people of NYC doing something good and right. Clear, simple, uncynical.

(Bonus: I bet Bill Nye approves)

Reel!

Hey!  Here's something else I should have shared here ages ago: my new Reel! [youtube=http://youtu.be/IheAXSmR5_Y]

My friend, and former teaching-partner, Matt Scott edited it.  Great job, Matt!

The Science Guy

Today I read this NY Times article about Bill Nye and a speech he recently gave at Iowa State University.  Here's one of my favorite quotes from the article:

Kaci McCleary, an “aspiring neurobiologist, or neuro-something,” said that Mr. Nye was “a very inspiring person in the field of science — he tells people to make science part of their lives, even if it’s not their career.” Ms. McCleary, who knitted as she waited to be let in, said a friend had joked to her, “I hope to be able to touch the hem of his lab coat, so he could cure me of my stupid.”

I got really jealous of those Iowa state kids because I LOVE Bill Nye.  In particular I love that he speaks his truth (which, because he's a scientist, often happens to be THE truth) calmly in the face of angry, shouting politicians (among others) and, while I'm sure he's cynical about things in life, he comes across as a basically uncynical person.

That's all.

Here's an episode of his TV show (of which I was a HUGE fan growing up) which, for whatever reason, I happen to particularly remember: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39ErZahcDaY&list=PLtkpCHUwxFsC7thPOGgWzGyJS-DFHYhpM&index=14]

Starbucks Insano!

Background: most weekend mornings, if the weather is nice enough, my husband and kiddo and I have "park breakfast."  He goes to the bagel store to get us egg sandwiches.  The kid and I go to Starbucks (we *wish* we had another local coffee shop option) for coffees, we all meet up and go to the park where we sit on a bench and watch kids play sports and eat our breakfast.  It's really nice. So.  This past Saturday, I was in Starbucks with my stroller (and its contents) waiting in line.  The man at the head of the line, took his coffee and placed it on a nearby table (at which, I later realized, he'd left his bag) prompting the heavyset man sitting at that table to get up.  (My impression is that the first man had reserved this table with his bag, and the second man realizing this, was vacating appropriately.)  So the heavyset man stood up and kind of adjusted himself and, quietly but decisively, he took two bags of coffee off the shelf, tucked them into his jacket and walked out.  The woman ahead of me was aghast and, in a bird-like voice, turned around and said "Sir? Sir. Have you paid for that?"  I didn't turn around but I heard him say, in a rough and angry voice, "you need to mind your own business" and then he left.

Now, I'd seen the theft as well but I didn't choose to say anything a) because I was with my small child and you don't risk the wrath of a potentially-volatile heavyset man who feels the need to steal bags of coffee from Starbucks when you've got to protect a kiddo; 2) I'd heard something about how employees in stores like The Gap don't stop shoplifters - they aren't supposed to - they just report them and then security or the police are supposed to intervene.  Starbucks doesn't have security and I thought "what are these poor Starbucks workers supposed to do?"

The woman ahead of me remained aghast saying things like "I just can't believe it" and "I've never..."  The man behind me, who I'd noted was a bit shabbily dressed, said quietly to me "If he hasn't got any money . . ." as though the theft was natural and possibly inevitable.  I replied with a weak "yeah" because I didn't want to get into it with him either but I was thinking "but then he has to steal a coffee maker!" and "but if he hasn't got any money shouldn't he steal some food or sneakers or something a little more immediately applicable?"  And I thought about this poem from the Spoon River Anthology.

Mostly what I thought was "I am right between these two extremes (or quasi-extremes) of human experience - this woman and this shabby man."  And I thought about how, on the one hand, there's a lot in the human experience to connect us and, on the other, we are all still vast worlds apart from so many other folks even in our own neighborhood.  And I thought about how, as an actor, sometimes I'm asked to play people who are "close to home" and sometimes people much more foreign to me but how just about everyone considers their lens "normal" and regards how similar or dissimilar everyone else is in comparison with theirs.  We're all "normal" to ourselves.  Probably even the coffee thief.

Awesome Class

I can't believe it has taken me so long to share this!

I took this AWESOME Commercial class with Brooke and Mary.

You can go to the link and learn about the ladies' resumes and credentials.  What you can't tell just from the website is that these women have the most amazing, positive energy - it was a pleasure to be in class each week.  They taught us a bunch of really valuable and helpful things by, you know, talking to us BUT I really feel like their attitudes - their way of being - was equally instructive especially with respect to commercial casting.  Bonus:  now that I've taken the class, I'm invited to other one-night classes which provide the opportunity to meet commercial agents and casting directors.  Fantastic.

Off you go, commercial actors.  You can thank me later.

The Artist Tax

The Artist Tax

Dave Loehr (@dloehr) who I only know from Twitter posted a link to this essay recently. 

Periodically, the internet will swell with a series of articles, blog posts, tweets, etc. about artists getting paid, not getting paid, "deserving" to be paid, not "deserving" to be paid (usually because they enjoy what they're doing) and it all makes me a little crazy.  I appreciate what Amanda Hirsch has to say in her post because she's making the kind of points I don't tend to see as much in those big internet brouhahas.  They're the kind of points I'd make and she makes them fairly articulately and concisely. 

(P.S. I'm also really intrigued by her new book, "Feeling My Way: Finding Motherhood Without Losing Myself" which feels like exactly the book I was looking for but couldn't find when I was pregnant and a new mom and trying to navigate hanging onto my old identity while also stepping into being a mom.)

Vampire Cowboys' "Geek!"

Vampire Cowboys' "Geek!" Vampire Cowboys have a new show, "Geek!"  Written by Crystal Skillman & directed by Robert Ross Parker, it's being presented in association with the Incubator Arts Project and runs through April 13.

Vampire Cowboys? Love them.

Crystal Skllman? Love her.

Robert Ross Parker? Haven't met him in person, but love his work.

Incubator Arts Project? Love. Love Love.

As if that all weren't compelling enough, Time Out NY gave "Geek!" Four Stars!

Enjoy!!

He is risen (Bock! Bock!)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rx8DO-yeUyA

Every Easter I get nostalgic for this commercial. Then, I get nostalgic for all the things about my life during the period of time it was on the air - pets and plays in school, Holiday TV specials, and being so wide-awake-excited about the Easter Bunny that I'd get up and do squat-thrusts on my little twin bed to exhaust myself so I could fall asleep.

I think you probably don't appreciate Jim Croce enough

Just consider the following three songs: Time In A Bottle (even though the "logic" of this song's main conceit makes me a little crazy):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dO1rMeYnOmM

I'll Have To Say I Love You In A Song:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EN1nMpmC0n4

(And my favorite) I Got A Name:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YcqauC49Xmc

Still not sold?  Try one at karaoke.

More HERE.

Ash Beckham at Ignite Boulder

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Gxs78C3XGok

Joanna Goddard of the excellent blog A Cup Of Jo recently posted this video and I thought it was so excellent I wanted to post it as well.

It's not that what Ash says in the video is surprising or particularly new to me, but it's said really well and it touches on a huge category of my brain activity which is "fantasies about how I'll teach my kid to be a good person and do what's right." I have fantasies all the time about talking to my son about just this sort of issue - I work out my own version of this speech (and many others) so I'm ready - which is why I appreciate being given such a great template. If you've got 5 minutes, check it out. It's totally worth it.

Business Idea

Here's what I want:It's a service like Style For Hire except it's about housekeeping.

So where, with Style For Hire, a Stacy London-approved stylist comes and works with you to style the clothing you've already got (and maybe do some strategic additional shopping), with my idea a (let's just say) Martha Stewart-approved housekeeping maven would come to your house and help you figure out the best way to keep your house clean - the order in which to clean things, tools and techniques for getting things done efficiently, etc. Maybe this person would also help me set up a calendar of home maintenance tasks - bigger things that don't need to happen every week.

I clean my apartment once a week and it takes me about two hours which, I think, is a reasonable amount of time. But I also know there are things I could do better (like floor mopping) and things I really don't know how - or how often - to do at all (like taking care of the wainscoting). A service like the one I've imagined feels like a great way to clean better and more efficiently without resorting to hiring a cleaning person.

So, universe, get on that, please.

Futurism + Food (a Sunday night in Brooklyn)

Last night I participated in a reading of Futurist and Neo-Futurist texts.  It was the second of four such evenings - each exploring a different "-ism" -  in a series called Disembodied voices, all taking place at Jack in Brooklyn. 

It was a fun event - three of us Neo-Futurists plus two actors we'd never met before our one rehearsal two days prior, read excerpts from The Futurist Manifesto by Marinetti, Italian Futurist plays by several different authors, and three of our own Neo-Futurist plays. 

Additionally, there was a recorded sound piece that incorporated a visual in the form of two static sculptural pieces and then an electronic musician who creates improvised pieces using a series of small, battery-powered motors and then adding different additional pieces which would vibrate and create the sound. 

After there was a great group discussion about Italian Futurism, its relationship to Fascism (the politics of the time), Neo-Futurism and the future in general.  The audience was rather academic - smart and engaged - and it was a gratifying and illuminating conversation.

The whole thing was super nerdy in a really great way.

Then, the other two Neo-Futurists and I went to Locanda Vini e Olii and had a memorably delightful and delicious time eating together at the bar.

The next two Disembodied Voices evenings are going to be on Dadaism and Surrealism and I really encourage you to check them out.  While you're at it, think about making a reservation at Locanda Vini e Olii. If you go, keep an eye out for Daniel the bartender who I like to think of as Italian Joseph Gordon Leavitt. 

Be My Valentine, Signature Theater

Last Friday I went to see David Henry Hwang's The Dance and the Railroad at the Signature Theater.  It was - it is - EXCELLENT.  What, specifically, was excellent?  Off the top of my head, I'd say the writing, the performances, the direction, the set, the lights, the sound . . . please just go see it already.

More broadly, if you're not already familiar, please acquaint yourself with the Signature Theater.  Beyond the stand-alone excellence of their productions, they provide the opportunity to get to know the work of important playwrights - like Mr. Hwang - more deeply, via their mission and programming philosophy

Also, on a related note, I heard on the radio yesterday that the Signature theater had the highest rate of actors of color in their productions - this in a climate in which only 23% of actors performing on NYC stages are not white. 

High-Five, Signature! I love you.

It's not an accident

There's a reason George Clooney has a successful acting career and it has a lot to do with his talent, his smarts and, oh yeah, his looks. He keeps working and we're not surprised. One of the first blogs I started reading is MightyGirl - I've been reading it for years - and this recent post is a great example of why I keep coming back (nevermind that she happens to be quoting another blog I enjoy).

I try to do right by you blog readers of mine, but I'm just a newbie compared with Ms. Maggie Mason of MightyGirl - she's like the George Clooney of bloggers.