Charissa’s Hey! Nielsen Blog











{October 18, 2008}   Featured on MuggleNet? No way.

http://www.mugglenet.com/app/news/show/1915

That’s a snippet of my piece on Radcliffe’s appearance on Inside the Actor’s Studio, as I blogged about last time. There’s been a whirlwind of stuff that has been generated since the article’s release, some good, some bad. But no matter. I’m still damned proud of this article and don’t regret taking on the story one bit. I mean come on, HP changed my LIFE, man. And this was a once in a lifetime opportunity. To see him in the flesh, to hear him speak about Potter, his childhood, and his life. And best of all, to be the one to write about it. It was the ultimate honor, and the best time I’ve ever had as an aspiring journalist.

This coming week’s gonna be even more of a whirlwind. I’m gonna see two Broadway shows which, considering I’ve only seen two in my lifetime, is saying a lot. Tomorrow, I’m seeing Avenue Q with my friend Bonnie. A few days later, it’s A Tale of Two Cities with Em. I’m gonna be staying over at her place again, so I look forward to bonding with her and her mom because they’re awesome people. The day after that, I’m getting my senior picture taken. In between that I’ve got to fill out forms, lots and lots of forms for all sorts of things, make appointments, finish reading a book, and work on my research project. Whew, that was exhausting just to type.



{October 10, 2008}   To-see-list

Serendipity– trite, predictable, Disneyish, still awesome.

Lars and the Real Girl (second viewing)– I am not much different from Lars. The realization jarred me.

What About Bob?– Bill Murray can play anything and I’ll watch it. OCD’s represent!

Movies I’m looking forward to seeing:

Snow Angels– bought the DVD and popcorn (didn’t come with the DVD); waiting for the right time to watch it.

Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist– Because I love Michael Cera and believe in the notion of musical soulmates.

Rachel Getting Married– Because there’s already Oscar buzz for Hathaway and she’s in my cool book.

Choke– Chuck Palahniuk. Need I say more?

Burn After Reading– Eh. Just because John Malkovich is in it.

I really wanna see the play Equus after going to an Inside the Actor’s Studio taping with Daniel Radcliffe. That dude is cool, and talented, and funny, and no, I’m not infatuated, just in awe.



{September 10, 2008}   Fare thee well, GR…

Actually, the farewells took place about 3 weeks ago. I wrote my last news story, uploaded the latest CD review, did some other odds and ends, and took my leave.

What followed were a series of interviews for a fall internship, some with small companies, others, with huge names. Ultimately, I decided to intern for The Nielsen Company– more specifically, for their website, Hey! Nielsen– because they seemed to be about the stuff I am passionate about: all things pop culture.

I started yesterday, and the experience was, in a lot of ways, like Global Rhythm, and conversely, different from GR at the same time. I don’t know if I used “conversely” right there. I hope so.

I get my own cubicle with a huge dying cactus plant behind me. I updated the site with the top ten shows on TV at the moment; the top ten movies out in theatres, etc. The most fun I had was writing a blog about the movies that are coming out this week. Steve, my boss, showed me how to organize a YouTube playlist and link up the movie titles to make the blog post presentable. He didn’t do much in the way of editing the final product, which made me happy.



{August 1, 2008}   Ned Vizzini

Over the past few weeks, I’ve been reading Ned Vizzini’s It’s Kind of a Funny Story, and I’m proud to say I’ve finally finished it.

Back in freshman year of high school, I watched a documentary on Vizzini on PBS (or something) in which he talked about his quasi-autobiographical debut work, Teen Angst? Naah. That year, I stumbled upon the book in my library and without hesitation, took it home. I finished that book in a heartbeat. It amazed me that someone so young– Vizzini wrote the book back in his high school days at Stuyvesant H.S.– could articulate himself into a published work and gain so much subsequent success from it.

Needless to say, ever since that book, I’ve been in awe of Ned Vizzini.

Then last July happened. My friend Bonnie and I were at B&N and I came across his newest book, It’s Kind of a Funny Story stacked beneath a table of summer reading books. I let out an involuntary gasp as I held the book in my hands. My eyes widened as I read its synopsis on the back cover. While Teen Angst? covered much of the hallmarks of teenage awkwardness, pressures, and humor, this new book (new to me at least; it was published in ‘06) seemed a lot heavier.

Vizzini, who himself got checked into a mental hospital some years ago, writes a well-crafted, witty, and oftentimes painful tale of one Craig Gilner, whose pressures stemming from having been accepted into one of New York’s most prestigious high schools nearly drive him to commit suicide. He checks himself into a psychiatric hospital for five days, and there, he meets a cast of fellow mentally ill patients who drive him to rethink everything he once thought made up “the real world.”

I won’t give anything away because this is definitely a work worth reading. When I reached the novel’s end, I was informed that Vizzini started writing the book a mere week after being released from the hospital, and finished writing it in less than a month. I was flabbergasted.

A professor of mine once said to my class that you aren’t a writer unless you write. Sure, you can write a masterpiece on a fluke, then sit on your pedestal and gloat for the rest of your life about how brilliant you are– but that doesn’t make you a writer. Writing isn’t glamorous. Rarely are you afforded fame, widespread recognition, or praise.

When my English teacher in sophomore year encouraged me to enter a poetry contest, this was more or less what I told him: I didn’t want to be the girl on the pedestal. I didn’t want to write for the attention; I wanted to write because I loved to. My teacher said that was fine, but there was nothing wrong with indulging in some contests now and then, especially if my work showed potential.

Six years later, I’m afraid I’ve fallen into that pit that I was so afraid of succumbing to. I’ve entered a plethora of contests, won some, lost others, and as of late, have lost perspective on why I loved to write in the first place. Until just now, I was afraid to even open up a blank Word document or a blank page in a notebook, or what have you, and simply…purge. I was too intimidated by my own successes, my past.

This feeling– that I was about to burst if I didn’t get a word out– has lasted for a while. I can’t say exactly when it first enveloped me, but it’s felt like forever since I’ve felt the presence of a muse at my side. I wrote when I had to, reviews and essays and things like that, but what I really wanted to write– what my heart was panging for me to release– just wouldn’t and couldn’t come out.

Then I finished Ned Vizzini’s latest book. And I realized the contests don’t matter, neither did the possibility of offending/confusing/scaring people with my work. I just have to write. Because I’m a writer.

But on a more personal level, what I really admire about Vizzini is his courage. I myself have suffered from depression of sorts and have taken medication for it for years. I’ve been tossed from one psychiatrist to another; my parents felt hopeless; my relatives were petrified at the sight of me; I lost a lot of my friends. I could only imagine what shit Vizzini has gone through himself that would lead him to be checked into a psychiatric ward. There’s a lot of shame and guilt that goes into something like that, and for him to come out of it and articulate his experience (albeit, fictitiously) into a novel in less than a month? That’s the stuff of brilliance. That’s the stuff of a true writer.

A coworker at GR once told me that no matter what, if I felt compelled by a certain feeling, good or bad, that I should find a way to get it out. Because if I suppress it, it’ll find its own way to be released. It didn’t matter if it came out shitty; what matters is that you got it out of your system. Wise words.

I wrote a poem today, for the first time in a month. I used to write poems like crazy, sometimes 2 a day, eventually dwindling down to one every other day. It felt good. Liberating. It feels like something that was previously clogged in my lungs has been dislodged and now I can breathe again.

I know the chances are low that Ned Vizzini himself will ever stumble upon this, but regardless, I’d like to thank him for his honesty and bravery. Most of all, I want to thank him for being a writer. God, the things I would do just to get a chance to meet him and thank him in person…

I hear Paramount bought the rights to It’s Kind of a Funny Story. FYI, Ned, I’d like to play the part of Nia. I think I’d be perfect for the role.



Blogging at GR.

Today has been busy as hell. 3 news stories. I know, 3 news stories; that’s not much; so what? But 2/3 of those were original pieces that I had to do.

Here’s the first of the originals: http://globalrhythm.com/worldnews/LosTigresDelNorteSetToTourTheUS.cfm

And the second:

http://globalrhythm.com/worldnews/WomexMakesInitialAnnouncementOfShowcaseLineup.cfm

 

I researched until my brain passed gas.

I think this blog has become less and less eloquent with each entry. For that, I apologize.

Ontop of that, every time I tried to paste something from MySpace, my Word document would freeze up and I’d have to restart the computer. If I was lucky, what I typed was preserved; if not, I had to retype everything. Swear to God, sometimes I want to strangulate this monitor.

I want to see Pineapple Express soooo effin badd man.

Movies I’ve seen recently:

The Dark Knight: Off the shizzle

Old School: Sucks like donkey fecal waste

Mysterious Skin: MASTERPIECE

The Savages: Depressing but well-acted

10 Things I Hate About You (For the 3rd time): Awesome, awesome, awesome.

 

I love Joseph Gordon-Levitt. He is amazing. I’ve been infatuated with him since 3rd Rock From the Sun. And he has only gotten hotter I mean more talented over time.

I plan on writing another entry soon about this book I’m reading and how awesome the author is. The thing is, I’ve got connections to meet him. Distant connections, but still. Please stop laughing.

Wow, it looks like I was high when I typed this.



{July 10, 2008}   The Virgins

So I finally cracked open my new Virgins CD and it’s AMAZING. So groovy, so retro-punk, so much attitude, so laid back, etc. etc.

Some tracks are severely different from their originals in the EP, but they’re still good. “Love Is Colder Than Death,” for instance, is slowed down– perhaps it’s the slowest ditty on the whole album. Personally, I prefer the grittier version more, but this still rocks.

Best tracks? “Rich Girls,” of course, and “Hey Hey Girl,” which really impressed me. The guitar riffs matched the lead singer’s enunciation of every other word in the chorus. “Murder” and “One Week of Danger” are also great. I already listened to the CD twice in a row now. I think I’m addicted.

The singing sounds like a drunkard’s slurring, the music itself is sloppy, but that only helps The Virgins’ effort. This music is probably what a night out at a crazy bar in New York City feels like. And who to better convey it than a group of four lads who hail from New York City?



I’m gonna attempt to write this while still a bit buzzed.

I’ve got a fevah! And the only prescription…is more Dengue! Dengue Fever that is!

Wow, that was lame.

Anyway, I was reppin’ GR at Summerstage today. Dengue Fever and two other bands performed, and ohmygollyness, it was awesome.

Went there with Tad and Alex. The former wore his distinguished Editor’s Note hat and the latter wore his Australianness. I wore my trademark scowl, as per having had the shittiest morning in C-town with my folks and because as of late, I’ve forgotten how to make my mouth smile.

Because I live in a pod, this was my first real concert. I helped sell a coupla issues before Tad egged me on to “rock it,” and deciding Why not? I ran off into the crowd. At the sight of my little Zenbumedia pass around my neck, the crowd just kinda…parted to let me get to the front. I felt like Jesus.

Best part? Meeting Dengue Fever, getting pics taken with them, getting their autographs. So fucking surreal.

Worst part? Using the portapotties, or however you spell them. Got unidentifiable orange stuff on my new Chuck Taylors, had no sink to wash my hands to quell the OCD voices in my head, etc. Ontop of that, I opened the door of a portapotty to find a man urinating in it. That was…awkward. I promptly ran back to blend in with the crowd so he wouldn’t find and beat me.

Getting back was kind of a nightmare. Tad’s directions to the station just slipped out of my Corona-addled brain and I ended up walking from 70something street to 59th and Lex, only to have the 4 train take me halfway, leaving me to take the 5 to Bowling Greenandblahblahblah. You’re getting bored, aren’t you.

Let me sum it up for you then: Today was fanfuckingtastic. Needless to say, I smiled. For the first time in ages.



{July 1, 2008}   The fruits of my labor

Finally saw my Sa Dingding piece in magazine form today and MAN was that exciting. I still can’t believe it. I feel legit now.

Also typed up my lead review for Natalia Clavier’s Nectar and ran over the word count by 100 words. It’s kinda rough, but I’m proud of it. The tough part was finding bio info on Clavier that wasn’t in the press release. Practically every site I stumbled across had the exact same info– word for word– as the press release, which got annoying, fast. But her story of how she came to fame is pretty cut and dry, I suppose. Liked music as a kid, moved to a music hot spot, got discovered, made a record, etc. etc. Good record though. I think I conveyed that sentiment better this time around.

In other news, I fear my soul is dying.



Indeedy I am.

I am going to see Dengue Fever at Central Park Summerstage next weekend with Tad. Selling subscriptions and getting people’s emails. We’ll supposedly be sitting pretty beneath a tent right by the stage. So to all the stalkers out there, you now know where to find me.

I gave Natalia Clavier’s Nectar a listen the other day. Ain’t so bad. I mean, I really expected the thing to be mellow and girly…and it didn’t disappoint in that regard. I felt like lighting some candles and taking a bubble bath or something. Instead, I just sorta lay there on my bed and by the album’s end, my drooping eyelids closed on their own as I fell into a deep contented slumber.

No, it’s a good CD, I swear. I just gotta work on aptly conveying that.

You know what show I really like? I Survived a Japanese Game Show. Fucking genius. Culture clash at its funniest. I’m not usually into game shows, but this one’s different. It makes us Americans look like complete dolts. The things they’ll do for money…dressing up like bugs and launching themselves onto a dartboard; binging on mochi balls while on a treadmill…Genius, man.



{June 13, 2008}   The Buzz is out!

So a few days ago I was shown the layout of my Sa Dingding Buzz piece in the next GR issue on China. And I nearly passed out; it was that magnificent. It looked so…professional. Okay, yeah, it was professionally done, but I imagine this is how someone looking into a mirror after major plastic surgery would feel. Like, Woah, that’s me?! Cool, I’ll take it! Like that. Totally made my day.

On an unrelated note, Coldplay’s Viva la Vida is coming out in 4 days and I can’t sleep just thinking about it. They released the full-length album online and I’m currently digging the title track (which is amazing), and even though by the end of this night I would have had listened to the whole CD, I’m still buying the it on the 17th to support my favorite Brit lads. Feels like it’s been forever since X&Y.

On yet another unrelated note, I finally purchased Wonder Boys, starring Michael Douglas and Tobey Maguire– a movie I’ve watched 5 years ago and totally fell in love with and never saw again because it was a library copy. Which is why I buy everything now. Which is why I’m poor.



et cetera