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Homeless to Hollywood

Homeless to Hollywood

Homeless to Hollywood

by Surinder Moore

Inocente Izucar’s dream of becoming an artist is alive and flourishing today, and the documentary in her name, produced by Fine Films, recently won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Film.

But under the vibrant and whimsically painted face is the painful story of a girl and her journey through a deeply unsettled childhood. Inocente Izucar’s story brings to light the dynamics of poverty and the impact of circumstances faced by many of the 1.8 million undocumented immigrant children.

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Inocente Izucar at the Oscars (second from Left)

Izucar was brought to the US as a young child by her parents who entered the country without legal documents. Her father was deported shortly after their arrival, for domestic abuse. With no legal status, Izucar’s mother couldn’t work, and with no income the family soon found themselves homeless and destitute. In the 9 years that followed, Izucar and her three younger siblings moved from shelter to shelter more than 30 times.

Despite the unstable conditions she relentlessly held on to a dream: To be an artist. Art allowed her a brief escape from the severe realities of being a homeless child. A Distinctive Style recently had the honor of interviewing Inocente to learn about her journey from homeless to Hollywood.

INTERVIEW and VIDEO…

A cardboard bicycle that’s strong and waterproof

A cardboard bicycle that's strong and waterproof

A cardboard bicycle that’s strong, waterproof and costs less than £10 to manufacture.

Designed by Israeli engineer and systems developer Izhar Gafni

Izhar Gafni started developing the Cardboard Bicycle three years ago. “Since there was no know-how with regards to the cardboard material, the first two years were devoted to learning the properties and behaviour of the material,” explains Gafni.

dezeen Cardboard Bike by Izhar Gafni 1a A cardboard bicycle thats strong and waterproof “The idea is like Japanese origami,” he says in the movie. “You fold it once and then it doesn’t become twice the strength, it’s almost three times the strength. So I took it from there and did the same thing with cardboard.”

After the shape has been cut out, the cardboard is treated with a waterproof and fireproof coating specially created by Gafni, before lacquer paint is applied over the top.

The “urban bike” for adults costs around £6 per unit and weighs 9kg, while the kids’ bike costs £3 per unit and weighs 3.5kg.

Both are made almost entirely from recycled materials and cyclists will also have the option to add an electric motor, according to the designer.

Gafni’s business partner, Israeli investment group ERB, is currently fundraising and developing the bicycle for production.

Above: movie by Giora Kariv

dezeen.com has featured lots of unusual bicycles recently, including one with a frame made from steam-bent wood and another that can carry heavy loads front and back despite its compact frame.

SOURCE: www.dezeen.com

Boy With Disability Gets Support of Team

Boy With Disability Gets Support of Team

Team manager Mitchell Marcus has a with a developmental disability but…

With a minute-and-a-half left in the game, Coach Peter Morales of the Thunderbirds, puts him in to finish out the game.

Coach Peter Morales of the Coronado High School Thunderbirds in El Paso, Texas, makes no qualms about it: he has a favorite teammate. Team manager Mitchell Marcus has a developmental disability, but he far surpasses everyone here when it comes to love of the game. ”He’s just an amazing person that our basketball team loves being around,” Morales says.

FROM CBS NEWS

“Mitchell always had a basketball, that was always what he wanted for his birthday,” she says.

And because basketball is that important to him, on the last game of the regular season, the coach told Mitchell to suit up.

“I was very happy,” Mitchell says of what it was like to put on the team’s uniform.

Screen Shot 2013 03 03 at 4.24.46 PM Boy With Disability Gets Support of Team

Mitchell Marcus and Coach Peter Morales

Just wearing a jersey was enough for Mitchell, but what he didn’t know — what no one knew at the time — was that the coach planned to play him at the end, no matter what the score.

Morales says he was prepared to lose the game.

READ MORE 

Anne Hathaway wins Best Supporting Actress

Anne Hathaway wins Best Supporting Actress

Anne Hathaway crowned Best Supporting Actress for her role as Fantine in Les Misérables

With an incredible career, great friends, a loving husband and now an oscar, it’s fair to say Anne Hathaway has it all!

Anne Hathaway had been widely expected to win for her role as Fantine, having already picked up most major awards leading up to Sunday’s ceremony. In her acceptance speech, the actress said that she hopes the “misfortunes of Fantine will only be found in stories and not in real life.”

AnneHathawayandOscar Anne Hathaway wins Best Supporting Actress

Oscar win for Anne Hathaway

Anne Hathaway realized her dream. With poise and grace as she told reporters,”I had a dream, and it came true. And it can happen. And it’s wonderful.”

“Les Miserables” was nominated for eight Oscars, including best picture. The movie is based on the enduring French musical debuted on Broadway in 1987 and won eight Tony Awards, including best musical.

The love and admiration Anne Hathaway has for her husband, Adam Shulman, was evident in her acceptance speech on Sunday, when she stated, ”By far the greatest moment of my life was the one when you walked into it. I love you so much.”

Hathaway admitted in a recent interview with A Distinctive Style, that it’s a “miracle” her marriage survived the filming of the epic musical.

The extreme weight loss she underwent to portray the sickly Fantine, as well as the dark nature of the role, caused her to become “manic.” She admitted to picking fights with husband Adam Shulman. She eventually asked Shulman to go home while she finished up the shoot in London because he was preventing her from going deeper into her role. He understood…

See more of the interview with Ann Hathaway…  A Distinctive Style

One Mind for Research with Tom Hanks and Friends

One Mind for Research with Tom Hanks and Friends

One Mind for Research with Tom Hanks

THE INVISIBLE EPIDEMIC

ONE Mind for Research 300x140 One Mind for Research with Tom Hanks and Friends

1mind4research.org

Non-profit One Mind for Research (1mind4research.org) is dedicated to improving research, diagnostics, treatments, and cures for brain disease, mental illness, and brain injury with the goal of reducing the social and economic burdens on our society significantly within ten years. We need your help to launch our initial major research project, the Post-Traumatic Stress-Traumatic Brain Injury Knowledge Integration Network, and our first year of media advocacy to reduce the stigma and discrimination associated with mental illness and brain injury.

FEATURING TOM HANKS! from One Mind Studios on Vimeo.

About One Mind for Research
One Mind for Research is an independent, non-profit organization that is committed to curing diseases of the brain and eliminating the stigma and discrimination they cause. Through collaboration with partners in science, advocacy and corporations, One Mind for Research is working to advance a 10-year plan to cure the diseases of the brain by creating change in the way scientists, health care professionals, NGO and government partners think about and conduct scientific and translational research, and by advancing mental health related public policy.
About Brain Disease
Brain diseases are the number 1 cause of adult disability globally, afflicting, in some form, 1 out of every 3 people. For example, among the psychiatric diseases (i.e. mental illnesses), major depressive disorder leads in prevalence, disabling about 5% of the population to some degree in any given year. Among veterans returning stateside from service in Iraq, 300,000 are estimated to have TBI and/or PTS, adding to the total estimate of 1.5 million Americans living with these diseases. Beyond the emotional pain endured by these individuals and their families, the total lifetime treatment cost for these individuals calculates to about $3.3 trillion. This and the cost of dementia care for our nations’ growing elder population ($400 billion annually now, to triple by 2050) will soon prove beyond the ability of the U.S. economy to sustain—unless neuroscience starts an emergency pace, right now. At a time of decreasing government research funding and pharmaceutical industry’s widespread withdrawal from psychiatric drug R&D, this cause needs public support now to develop the preventions and cures that will protect the brain health of people worldwide.
For more information on One Mind for Research, please visit http://1mind4research.org

Houses made with 70-80% recycled materials

Houses made with 70-80% recycled materials

 Houses made from 70-80% recycled materials

Profound and Visionary Home Building

What an unbelievably unique take on housing and architecture! Dan Philips creates houses that are made from 70-80% recycled materials. The creativity he puts to use is as impressive as the tons of materials he saves from the landfill. You will see decorative details made from eggshells and bottle caps. You will see rooftops made of license plates! You will see water faucets for the bathtub made of a Budweiser beer Screen Shot 2013 01 24 at 11.59.45 AM Houses made with 70 80% recycled materialstap!

His philosophy is that our collective mindset of perfection is what creates all the waste. From the builders to the homebuyers to the marketers- everyone demands adherence to sterile, conventional norms. If a 2x 4 isn’t perfect, it goes in the dump. Dan Philips instead incorporates these blemishes and organic processes.

See all the materials he saves that were headed for the landfill- even vintage stoves! Hear his astute, original and truly amusing take on why we have come to tolerate this level of waste.

In 1998, he and his wife, Marsha, started The Phoenix Commotion, in Huntsville, Texas — a construction company that builds affordable houses from reclaimed and recycled materials. Their mission is to divert landfill waste while creating sustainable housing for single mothers, artists, and families with low incomes. The houses are energy-efficient, cheap and satisfying to build — and wildly, effervescently creative.

In the design process, we have to consider how design linked our social life and people’s perspectives.

There is consideration of his work:

  • Architecture related to human being and natural life. What human need and consideration of nature in our life. So, Dan Phillips design his architecture be a naturalism and not waste of materials. He was inspired organic texture and humanism.
  • Industrials revolution started, consumers wasting mass production and materials and also materials price was becoming expensive.
  • Power of mass media and consumption in our society

Magic in nature

Magic in nature

With all the madness in the world there is still magic in nature

RARE WISCONSIN/MICHIGAN SIGHTING

The odds of seeing an albino moose are astronomical
And to see this in the upper peninsula of Michigan,
Near Wisconsin, is even greater than astronomical.
To see two of them together is nearly impossible.
We wanted to share these photos with as many people as possible
Because you will probably never have a chance to see this rare sight again.
This is a really special treat, so enjoy these shots of a lifetime.

 

An invitation from Willie Nelson of Farm Aid

An invitation from Willie Nelson of Farm Aid

An invitation from Willie Nelson of Farm Aid

By Willie Nelson—As I crisscrossed the country on my bus this year, I saw firsthand the impact drought and extremes of weather have had on this land and our farmers. On the Farm Aid hotline, we worked with many distressed farmers seeking help to survive the worst drought in more than fifty years. When extremes of weather like this hit, it’s hard to keep the faith. And yet that’s what farmers do, each and every day.

 An invitation from Willie Nelson of Farm Aid

I am inspired by family farmers. I know you are too. It’s with your help that we’ve grown and strengthened family farm agriculture. Together we have put more farmers on the land and made family farm food more available to all of us.

In spite of the hardships, thanks to Farm Aid supporters like you, family farmers are leading the way to a future of good food. We answer the Farm Aid hotline every day and the greatest number of calls we receive come from folks looking to get started in farming or from farmers who want to learn how to farm more sustainably. This is good news for farmers — and great news for all of us.

With a gift to Farm Aid, you can ensure we keep growing the Good Food Movement and a brighter future for all of us. We need family farmers — they are essential for helping us solve the challenges we face with our economy, climate change, and chronic health conditions like diabetes and obesity.

Family farm food on our tables guarantees the health and strength of our families and communities. The work of Farm Aid depends on gifts from people like you. Please, give a gift today, to ensure that family farmers not only survive extremes of weather today, but grow and thrive into the future.

Stay Strong and Positive,

 An invitation from Willie Nelson of Farm Aid

Willie Nelson
President
Farm Aid

DONATE HERE

Fall 2012 Eco Designs by Deborah Lindquist

Fall 2012 Eco Designs by Deborah Lindquist

In a recent photo shoot, Deborah Lindquist captures country living with her eco-couture apparel.

Designer Deborah Lindquist works with sustainable, organic, and recycled fabrics to create bespoke eco-couture apparel and home decorative accessories.

Deborah Lindquist showcases her fall line in a photo shoot at the country home of Brit girl, Erin Saltman. Surrounded by her loving and attentive animals which include chickens, horses, dogs, and pot belly pigs, she looks just as much at home in her flower gardens and country surroundings as she does in her usual urban setting. She’s a bit eccentric in her wardrobe and her fashion sense is a blend of edgy/femininity with a bit of punkish influence. She wears a combination of eco couture sweaters, bustiers, and evening wear for fall 2012. She certainly has a nice life…..

Horse Fall 2012 Eco Designs by Deborah Lindquist

Erin Saltman

by Deborah Lindquist

Photographed by Kay Greenwood, model Erin Saltman has been one of my favorite models to work with. I’ve known her and her family since she was 8, (Kay, her mom is the excellent photographer who’s work you see here) and she’s been photographed in my clothing and walked the catwalk for me since then. But its been a while. She moved to London so we don’t see each other so often. I was so fortunate to collaborate with the 2 of them twice in September. (Erin is also the shapeshifter in “Into the Wild, a Love Story”) and she willingly put on her toe shoes for the finale! (she’s a 6’2″ ballerina).

Thanks to Monica Garcia for the makeup and hair, Bare Sole for the shoes and Bill Stankay for composing the soundtrack for the video. What a great team!

See the amazing photos in the Fall 2012 Lookbook by clicking on the magazine below. Listen to the soundtrack by Bill Stankay along with photos by clicking the video below:

A Country Life

Fastest Man in the World : The Tony Volpentest Story

Fastest Man in the World : The Tony Volpentest Story

Fastest Man in the World: The Tony Volpentest Story, about a much-loved Sports Illustrated Athlete of the Year.

Tony Volpentest takes us step by step through each of his Olympian wins, and shows us how to acquire the mindset of champion and apply it to our own lives.

Tony Volpentest is a four-time Paralympic Gold Medalist and five-time World Champion sprinter (he carried the Olympic flame at the 1996 Olympics). But it is not the medals or records that make him admirable so much as the grit and determination that got him to the starting line.

Screen Shot 2012 10 18 at 2.25.00 PM Fastest Man in the World : The Tony Volpentest Story

Tony Volpentest

Volpentest has won numerous honors, including the United States Olympic Committee Athlete of the Year. He’s been featured on CNN and served as the National Spokesman for Shriner’s Hospitals. He is a 2012 nominee for the Olympic Hall of Fame. Ross Perot does the Foreword for this inspirational book.

A Distinctive Style (ADS) interviews Tony Volpentest:

ADS: Tell us about, “Fastest Man in the World, the Tony Volpentest story.”
It’s a story about my journey, where the reader is with me, stride for stride, from childhood, through all of my trials and tribulations, and ultimately to my successes. I really believe that my story is relevant to all ages and diversifications.

ADS: Why did you start running? Did you have an “aha” moment when you knew that you could compete for Paralympic gold… and ultimately win?
I always considered myself to be athletic, even as a child I was very active. As I transitioned from a private grad school into a very large public high school, I had a hard time meeting people. Although I have always been very confident and self-assured, track allowed me to get involved and meet new people.  My “aha” moment came to me as a senior in high school when my times were within half a second of current world records.

READ MORE…

Is it possible to have a successful career and a happy family life ?

Is it possible to have a successful career and a happy family life ?

Is it possible to have a successful career and a happy family life ?

By Dr. Claudia Welch, DOM (from the Fall 2012 Issue of A Distinctive Style Magazine)

The last year or so has produced a few editorials and blogs about choice, success and how we spend our time. They struck a chord with us and went viral. And they may help us be healthier and happier, even on our deathbeds.

Anne-Marie Slaughter’s Why Women Still Can’t Have It All from the July/August 2012 Atlantic Magazine became the most widely read piece in the Atlantic website’s history. It was a thoughtful exploration of the difficulties that remain for women who “want it all.”

Slaughter suggested that women are not both able to have a successful career and a happy family at the same time—and won’t be—until our social structure changes.

I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.
Even if we are not able to have it all, most of us—women or men—spend an awful lot of time trying to get it—something New York Times’ Tim Kreider pointed out in The ‘Busy’ Trap on the June 30, 2012. This also went viral, widened the net to include men, and spawned missives like “Stop the Glorifi­cation of Busy,” which began to infest the pages of Facebook. Kreider pointed out how enthusiastically busy we all are, and how this M.O. is applauded, even revered in our culture. He makes the old-fashioned point that time may possibly be more important than money and that having it may be as essential to well-being as things like Vitamin D.

When reading Slaughter’s piece, I am struck by her interpretation of “all.” “All” seems to mean “successful career” plus a family—presumably a happy one. But Kreider’s piece suggests that family and career may really not be everything.

READ MORE >>>

A Distinctive Style with Jackie Evancho, Glenn Close, Bill Cosby

A Distinctive Style with Jackie Evancho, Glenn Close, Bill Cosby

Jackie Evancho, Glenn Close, Bill Cosby, Paul Englishby among others can be found in the Fall 2012 edition of A Distinctive Style

When you open the Fall 2012 issue of A Distinctive Style you will be greeted by a beautiful cover featuring child singing sensation Jackie Evancho, then you will notice the music of Emmy Award Winner Paul Englishby.

In our cover story with Jackie Evancho you’ll hear how she has handled the media storm since coming on the scene as a contestant on the fifth season of America’s Got Talent. She talks about her acting debut in a Robert Redford film to release in 2013 and tells us how she picked the songs for her newly released album “Songs From the Silver Screen.” You will see highlights from the CD by clicking a link on her page.

Other stories you’ll enjoy in this edition include:

  • A personal look at 2012 Emmy winner Paul Englishby focusing on his love of music and the success he has had with film and television musical scores.
  • A preview on “Stories of Change,” a partnership between the Skoll Foundation and the Sundance Film Festival to promote documentary films that promote global awareness and stimulate change.
  •  An interview with legendary film actress Glenn Close as she sits down with Robert Milazzo at The Modern School of Film.
  • An inspirational profile of Tony Volpentest, a four-time Paralympic Gold Medalist and 2012 Olympic Hall of Fame nominee.
  • An examination of the fascination with the Mayan calendar and its prediction that the world will end on December 21, 2012.
  • A look into the “Gerson Therapy,” a natural cure for cancer.
  • A letter from Bill Cosby on “Why we must put our Children First.”
  •  A review of Lizzie Velasquez’ insightful new book “Be Beautiful, Be You” which relates the power of finding inner beauty.

Of course all of the stories feature the innovative aspects that A Distinctive Style is known for. They are expertly written, have vivid photography and are enhanced with audio and video clips to give you a complete interactive experience.

Flipping through the pages of the Fall issue is like losing yourself in a virtual visual world. For the readers of this magazine, this is truly a magnificent treat for the senses and a perfect way to celebrate the publication’s fifth anniversary.

Those who haven’t seen this issue yet should certainly take a look now by visiting www.adistinctivestyle.com. You will be hooked on the experience!

Happy 100th Birthday, Woody Guthrie !

Happy 100th Birthday, Woody Guthrie !

New songs by the American folk legend keep turning up, a century after his birth

By Abigail Tucker
Smithsonian magazine

The recording is old but the voice is timeless: Woody Guthrie is singing to his daughter Cathy Ann (“Stacky” to her dad) on her fourth birthday:

You’ve played, little Stacky, all day
With dolls and wagons and clay
Your bath was warm and your jammers are nice
Goodnight, little Stacky, goodnight.

It’s not clear whether Cathy ever heard the 1947 ditty; shortly after its recording, a spark from a badly wired radio ignited her crinoline birthday dress and she burned to death.

Guthrie never recovered from the loss. His sadness, friends believed, hastened the progress of his Huntington’s disease. By 1952, the folk singer couldn’t remember the words to “This Land Is Your Land,” his most famous song; soon he was hospitalized for good. (He died in 1967, at age 55.) Most of his best work was crammed into a single decade, but he is still celebrated as one of the country’s most prolific artists, the prototypical singer-songwriter and a lodestar for Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and John Lennon.

WoodyGuthrie Happy 100th Birthday, Woody Guthrie !

“Guthrie was one of these solar flares who pass through periodically,” says Smithsonian Folkways producer Jeff Place, who, with Robert Santelli, put together Woody at 100, a collection of songs (including his lullaby to Cathy, previously unreleased), essays and drawings in honor of the centennial of Guthrie’s birth this July 14. “He threw sparks wherever he went.”

Cathy’s death was not the only time fire touched the singer’s life. His beloved older sister Clara died in a house fire; his father was badly injured in another blaze, and Guthrie, as his illness destroyed cells in his brain, would burn his arm and lose his ability to play guitar.

“Pete Seeger said that fire was Woody’s muse,” says Guthrie’s daughter Nora. “It just followed him around.” Indeed, Guthrie’s whole existence had a combustible quality: He drank hard, couldn’t hold jobs, married three times and fathered eight children (of whom Arlo Guthrie is the eldest son), sweeping through one city after another.

Sometimes called the Dust Bowl Balladeer, Guthrie got his start performing in the late 1930s when he traveled west from his home base in dust-drowned Pampa, Texas, with displaced Arkies and Okies. In California he wrote of his fellow migrants, setting the lyrics to traditional folk tunes. By 1940 he’d moved “from California, to the New York Island,” as his song goes, befriending Lead Belly and other famous artists. His country charm and writing chops inspired the city musicians: “Next thing you know everybody’s got a guitar and harmonica rack,” Place says.

The working man’s struggle was Guthrie’s favorite subject, but he also sang of spaceships, washing dishes, one-legged sailors, Ingrid Bergman and Hanukkah. He composed a remarkable series on the builders of the Grand Coulee Dam, another (commissioned by the Army) on venereal disease and several albums of children’s music. His creativity was almost unnerving in its intensity: He sometimes delivered six songs in a sitting, or reams of skillful pen-and-ink drawings. (Many of those featured in Woody at 100 were drawn in the same week.) He also wrote several books and composed personal letters that could ramble on for 70 pages, scribbling on wrapping paper if nothing else was at hand. “Every letter would have a lyric in it,” says Nora Guthrie. “Even his journal had this flow.”

Today “This Land Is Your Land” echoes at presidents’ inaugural concerts and Occupy Wall Street rallies alike. But it’s not just the classics that survive: In 2005, the  punk band Dropkick Murphys released “I’m Shipping Up to Boston,” an obscure Guthrie snippet that has since become an oft-blasted Boston Red Sox anthem.

Because Guthrie wrote so much, stashes of recordings and drawings are still being found. And it wasn’t until decades after his death that Place finally traced the origins of the “This Land Is Your Land” melody. It’s likely based on a church hymn titled “When This World’s on Fire.”

Source www.smithsonianmag.com

 

 

Pete Seeger : Where Have All the Protest Songs Gone?

Pete Seeger : Where Have All the Protest Songs Gone?

Pete Seeger : Where Have All the Protest Songs Gone?

Now 93 years old, the legendary folk singer recalls his pioneering days touring college campuses and discusses his favorite songs

By Aviva Shen of smithsonianmag.com

In March of 1960, at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, a campus radio station recorded a Pete Seeger concert. The eight reel-to-reel tapes made that night have now been recast into a 2-CD set, released this past April from Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. In The Complete Bowdoin College Concert 1960, the first-ever complete release of one of his community concerts, Seeger performs early versions of songs that would, in just a few years, captivate the entire nation, including anti-war ballad “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?” Pete Seeger reflects on his legacy in a discussion with the magazine’s Aviva Shen.

Listen to an exclusive live stream of The Complete Bowdoin College Concert 1960, a new album from Smithsonian Folkways.

PeteSeeger Pete Seeger : Where Have All the Protest Songs Gone?

Tell me about how you got started doing college concerts?
I think it was 1953. I was singing for $25 a day for a small private school in New York City. And I was keeping body and soul together with $25 a week; maybe I’d make another $25 on the weekend. But then some students from Oberlin asked me to come out. They said, we’ve got the basement of the art department and we think if we pass the hat, we’ll make $200, so you’ll be able to pay for the bus trip out. So I took a bus out to Cleveland and they picked me up, and sure enough we made more than that passing the hat. The next year I sang in the chapel for 500 people and I got $500. And the year after that, I sang in the auditorium, which had 1000 people and I got paid $1000. So that was when I started going from college to college to college.

Actually, this is probably the most important job I ever did in my life. I introduced the college concert field. Before that only John Jacob Niles had tried to sing college concerts and he’d dress up in a tuxedo, and things were very formal. I made things as informal as I could and went from one college to another and made a good living out of it.

How did the students respond?
Oh, they’d sing along with me.

Do you have any favorite memories of the tours?
I remember introducing a young black man, who’d made up a good song in Chicago’s Orchestra Hall. He was only 16 years old, but he got an ovation from the crowd. He was working for Dr. King, organizing things in Chicago. Then in Wisconsin, I’ll never forget. We were in a big arena, which holds 5,000 or 6,000 people, and they handed me a letter from one of the sons of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and said, “Would you please read this letter? He can’t come, but he wrote us a letter and we think that you could read it.” I read this with all the drama I could. Then I said “SIGNED” and just after I said it, there was a huge clap of thunder overhead. There was a rainstorm, and everybody started laughing. Because it was as though God was signing the letter.

When did you start using music as a cause?
My father was in the Communist party way back in the late 1920s, early 30s. He thought music should be part of the struggle. Although he was a classical musician and wrote a column for the Daily Worker on the world of music, he also started with the help of a few friends a group called the Composer’s Collective. They said, “If there’s going to be a new society, there must be a new music.” At any rate, the proletariat was not interested in what they were producing. But before they disbanded, he thought they might put out a fun little booklet called “Rounds About the Very Rich.” We all know rounds like Three Blind Mice and Frère Jacques but he wrote a round: “Joy upon this earth, to live and see the day/When Rockefeller Senior shall up to me and say/Comrade can you spare a dime?” I know these well because I went on a trip to the Adirondacks with my brother and a friend of his and we sang these rounds of his together as we tromped through the Adirondacks. So I was very well aware that music could be part of the whole big struggle.

Do you think there is a lot of protest music happening now?
It’s all over the place. One magazine, Sing Out, is full of protest songs. It started 30, 40 years ago. It nearly went bankrupt in New York, but one of the volunteers took out of the New York office a truckload of paper, and he started Sing Out all over again. It’s never been a big seller, but it prints. My guess is that they’re all around the world, protest songs. Of course, I usually tell people if the human race is still here in a hundred years, one of the main things that will save us is the arts. I include the visual arts, the dancing arts as well as the musical arts, you might even include the cooking arts and the sports arts—Nelson Mandela got Africa together with rugby. And China used ping-pong.

So what do you think music has had the most impact on?
Plato supposedly said that it’s very dangerous to have the wrong kinds of music in the republic. There’s an Arab proverb that says “when the king puts the poet on his payroll, he cuts off the tongue of the poet.” I think they’re both right. Of course Plato was an extremely conservative man. He thought that democracy was next to mob rule. He didn’t approve of democracy.

Do you have a favorite song that you’ve performed or written?
I keep reminding people that an editorial in rhyme is not a song. A good song makes you laugh, it makes you cry, it makes you think. Now, Woody Guthrie will have his 100th birthday this July 14. He wrote thousands of songs. Every day of his life he was jotting down verses on a little pad in his pocket and once his pad was full he’d get a new one. We were riding in a plane once to sing for some strikers in a union in Pittsburgh, and I was reading a newspaper or magazine. Lee Hays, the bass singer, fell asleep, but Woody was jotting down something on a piece of paper they had given him and he left the piece of paper in his seat when he got up to go. I went over to get it. He had verses about, what are these people below us thinking as they see this metal bird flying over their head, and what’s the pretty stewardess going to do tonight, where is she going to be. I said “Woody, you should know how I envy you being able to write songs like this.” He literally wrote verses every day of his life. And if he couldn’t think of a verse, he’d go on and write a new song. Quite often though, when he got his verse written, he’d think of some old melody that people knew which fit his verses.

Haven’t you done that?
There was an Irish lumberjack song, and I didn’t know I was using it or misusing it. But I was writing in an airplane, and the verse of this Irish lumberjack song, “Johnson says he’ll load more hay, says he’ll load ten times a day.” I was making up a verse: “Where have all the flowers gone, long time passing.” Well, it probably will reach more people than any other song I’ve written. Marlene Dietrich sang it around the world. When her youthful glamour was gone, she had Burt Bacharach put together a small orchestra and for several years she sang around the world. If she was in an English-speaking country like Australia she’d sing it in English, but if she was in Buenos Aires or Tokyo, she’d sing the German verse. The German translation sings better than the English: “Sag mir, wo die Blumen sind.” When she went back to Germany, the old Nazis were out to run her down, “don’t listen to this woman, she sang for the soldiers fighting us!” But that very month her song was number one on the German Hit Parade.

How do you feel about your songs getting covered and interpreted by so many other people?
I’m very proud. It’s a great honor to have different people sing it—even if they sing them differently. Ani Difranco got a group of young men, I think all 10, 11, 12 years old called Roots of Music, and they have a brass band, trumpets and clarinets and so on down in New Orleans. They used a song, which I recorded; I didn’t write the song but I recorded it with my banjo and it became well known: “Which Side Are You On.” By the time they got done rearranging it, you wouldn’t think it had anything to do with my song, except the title.

Source www.smithsonianmag.com

____________________________

Folk legend Pete Seeger has teamed up with stars including Bruce Springsteen and Emmylou Harris for an album of duets.

Steve Earle, Dar Williams and Rage Against The MAChine rocker Tom Morello have also recorded collaborations for the veteran star’s upcoming A More Perfect Union, which Seeger wrote with singer/songwriter Lorre Wyatt.

Jim Musselman, owner of record label Appleseed, tells Billboard.com, “We really wanted people who are carrying on Pete’s spirit. Bruce Springsteen has carried on Pete’s vision. Tom Morello and the albums he is doing as the Nightwatchman are among the best political albums out now.

“Pete loves harmony singers and I feel the best is Emmylou Harris. All of the artists jumped at the opportunity to do something like this.”

The collection is due out on 25 September (12) and will be released simultaneously with Pete Remembers Woody, a two-Cd set celebrating Woody Guthrie’s music.

 

Helping others by supporting their skills and craft

Helping others by supporting their skills and craft

Dana Arbib and Farah Malik Helping Others

Dana Arbib and Farah Malik’s lives have long been intertwined with social justice, humanitarian work and accessories. After Farah’s work at a human rights education non-profit organization and Dana’s close connection to her father’s extensive philanthropy work, it was a natural fit that any path they took would be charged with a social edict. Dana and Farah—the former a Libyan Jew and the latter a Pakistani Muslim—decided to put their love of accessories to good use for both the consumer and the artisan. The resulting fashion line, A Peace Treaty, began in 2008 with the goal to highlight the often under-appreciated work of hand-crafting cultures in politically unstable regions of the world.

“When we started in 2008, there was a growing understanding of eco-fashion but still not very much emphasis or attention was placed on the human rights implications in fashion production,” Dana said. “A Peace Treaty is a social business setting up sustainable projects to revitalize cottage industries and family businesses at risk of closing down, but it also imparts knowledge, attitude change and a long-term readjustment within consumer culture and behavior.”

Screen Shot 2012 07 26 at 9.52.53 AM Helping others by supporting their skills and craft

Dana Arbib and Farah Malik

Dana and Farah base their work on a community empowerment approach. By elevating the value of hand-crafting skills and lauding artisans who have been overlooked or have received less and less attention, they are reinvigorating local artisan economies and employing the artisans at wages up to eight times the local wage.

Inspired by Counterpart International’s work to create enduring solutions for local communities, Dana and Farah donate nearly 10% of their profits to Counterpart International (Counterpart). A Peace Treaty has supported medical supplies in the Darfur region of Sudan, coral restoration and, most recently, reconstruction in Afghanistan.

“We chose Counterpart because we were impressed by the legitimate and genuine way in which they carry out work in so many different regions and program areas. With each collection and season, we shift our giving to a specific project and region that usually connects to the country the artisans are from,” Farah said. “Also, Dana’s father has a long history of philanthropy work and he had been directing his efforts to supporting Counterpart’s work. Connecting A Peace Treaty with Counterpart was an intentional act to follow in his footsteps.”

The scarves at A Peace Treaty are not only charged with social responsibility – they are beautiful. A Peace Treaty has been recognized throughout the fashion world including recent highlights in InStyleNew York Magazine and Marie Claire.

“With Farah’s background in International Development and my lineage from a highly philanthropic family, we really have developed firsthand knowledge of what beautiful things certain regions have to offer,” Dana said. “In our increasingly unstable times, it is an absolute promise to ourselves that we help those who live within these unstable regions by supporting their skills and craft.”

Web site: www.apeacetreaty.com

Cast of Dallas 2012

Cast of Dallas 2012

Photos of the Cast of Dallas 2012

Published on Jun 8, 2012 by distinctivestyle
Photos by Yony Kim: http://about.me/YLKphotography
Journalist Karen Soltero: http://AandWDesign.com
Videographer: Luke Alvey: http://AlveyCreative.com
Magazine: http://adistinctivestyle.com

Artist: The Brightwings
Buy “4th of July” on: AmazonMP3,

iTunes

Up Close and Personal with The Cast of Dallas

Up Close and Personal with The Cast of Dallas

The Cast of Dallas – in Dallas

A whole new generation of viewers  is about to meet the Ewing’s

Through the eyes of Karen Soltero, journalist for A Distinctive Style magazine

O ne beautiful evening in May the focus was all about Dallas. The city, the series that made it famous, and yes, the new show. The legendary hour-long drama, Dallas, is back on air starting June 13th on TNT, and a whole new generation of viewers will meet the Ewing’s.

I had a chance to get up close and personal with the colorful cast tasked with bringing these characters to life during the red carpet premiere of the show at the Winspear Opera House. The downtown Dallas buildings glowed in the early evening light and a larger that life image of the new cast was bounced back double from it’s perch in the reflecting pool in front of the opera house across from the red carpet.

KarenSolteroRedCarpetjpg 150x150 Up Close and Personal with The Cast of DallasIt was a real treat to meet the icons who made our city famous on the small screen – Patrick Duffy was kind and charismatic, explaining his true joy and luck at having a chance to work with his best friends again. Linda Gray was lovely, and as gracious as she had been during our one on one interview for A Distinctive Style Magazine a few months back.

Larry Hagman had a wink and a tip of his Stetson for everyone. The newcomers to the cast were delighted to be a part of this exciting adventure. Brenda Strong let me know that this time around, Dallas would be filled with all kinds of strong female characters. Members of the new generation of Ewing’s, Jesse Metcalfe and Julie Gonzalo both told me just how happy they were to be a part of this show and what a great experience it has all been so far. I don’t know about you, but I can’t wait to see what kind of new mischief and drama the Ewing’s have got up their sleeves.

Welcome back to Dallas, Bobby, J.R. and Sue Ellen. We hope you’ll stick around for a while.

About Queen Elizabeth II

About Queen Elizabeth II

“I am writing to thank you for the wonderful support and encouragement that you have given to me and Prince Phillip over these years. In this special year, as I dedicate myself anew to your service, I hope that we will all be reminded of the power of togetherness and the convening strength of family, friendship and good neighborliness, examples of which I have been fortunate to see throughout my reign.”

Queen Elizabeth II 

Interesting Facts About Queen Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth earned her nickname “Lillibet” as a child, when she could not pronounce her name

  • Ascended British and Commonwealth thrones on February 6th, 1952
  • Was crowned in Westminster Abbey in London on June 2, 1953
    This coronation became the first major international television broadcast

Screen Shot 2012 06 03 at 12.16.46 PM About Queen Elizabeth IIOwns one of the world’s largest private collections of postage stamps

  • She formally approves all government legislation, though she does this on the advice of the Prime Minister. It would create a massive crisis if she did not approve a piece of legislation
  • She enjoys watching horse-racing, “Doctor Who” and the British comedy “Last of the Summer Wine” (1973)
  • She has owned over 30 corgis over the years, and her four current dogs are named Pharos, Swift, Emma, and Linnet (as of February 2002)
  • She owns the world’s finest Pink Diamond, It forms the Centre of a flower brooch and weights 54.50 carats
  • Time Magazine’s “Person of the Year” (1953)
  • Learned to drive in 1945 when she joined the Army

Queen Elizabeth is fluent in French

Has never held a drivers license, despite driving an ambulance in WWII

  • The 2009 Sunday Times List estimated her net worth at $442 million
  • Although most of the “Crown Jewels” are owned by the state, the British Royal Family do own one of the most valuable collection of jewels in the world, containing some of the worlds largest diamonds, Emeralds, Sapphires, and Rubies
  • Not including the United Kingdom, she is Queen of over a dozen countries, including Canada, New Zealand and Australia. Since she does not live in those countries, though she visits often, much of her duties are performed by a Governor General who she appoints on the advice of the Prime Minister of the country in question. It is important to note that neither the sovereign nor the Governors General, have had any hand in governing these countries since the 1930s, and their roles are purely ceremonial

Screen Shot 2012 06 03 at 12.21.25 PM About Queen Elizabeth IIHer Majesty Queen Elizabeth II became Queen in a tree house

  • At the time of her father’s death she was staying at the Treetops Hotel. It is literally built into the tops of the trees of the Aberdares National Park as a tree house, offering the guests a close view of the local wildlife in complete safety. It was there that, uniquely, she “went up a Princess and came down a Queen.” She was the first British monarch since the Act of Union in 1801 to be outside the country at the moment of succession, and also the first in modern times not to know the exact time of her accession (because her father, George VI, had died in his sleep at an unknown time). On the night her father died, Sir Horace Hearne, then Chief Justice of Kenya, escorted The Princess Elizabeth, as she then was, to a state dinner at the Treetops Hotel. Upon finding out that she was now Queen she returned immediately to Britain

At the time of her coronation, her favorite actors were Laurence OlivierGary Cooper and Dirk Bogarde

  • Has 8 grandchildren:Prince William Arthur Philip Louis (b. 21 June 1982), and Prince Henry Charles Albert David (b. 15 September 1984, Prince Charles’ sons), Peter Mark Andrew Phillips (b. 15 November 1977) and Zara Anne Elizabeth Phillips (b. 15 May 1981, Princess Anne’s children), Princess Beatrice Elizabeth Mary (b. 8 August 1988) and Princess Eugenie Victoria Helena (b. 23 March 1990, Prince Andrew’s daughters), Lady Louise Alice Elizabeth Mary (b. 8 November 2003) and James Alexander Philip Theo, Viscount Severn (b. 17 December 2007, Prince Edward’s children)

Personal Quotes

My husband has quite simply been my strength and stay all these years, and I owe him a debt greater than he would ever claim.

Grief is the price we pay for love.

Olympics 2012 are Underway as Torch is Passed to London

Olympics 2012 are Underway as Torch is Passed to London

Some 8,000 torchbearers will carry the fire, mostly local people who have worked to better their communities

Olympic organizers hope that by giving the torch to community heroes, they will bring the spirit of the games to a country not necessarily willing to receive it

The Olympic torch was passed to London — witnessed, appropriately, by hundreds of Greeks huddled under umbrellas today.

Seeking some relief from the country’s economic and political woes, Greeks sat on the stone steps of the ancient stadium in Athens on Thursday to watch the ceremonial handover of the Olympic flame to the organizers of the 2012 London Olympics.

They cheered the Greek national anthem. They cheered 88 schoolchildren belting out “God save the Queen. They went nuts when U.K. soccer star David Beckham was announced.

But they really roared when they saw the fire.

Screen Shot 2012 05 17 at 6.34.29 PM Olympics 2012 are Underway as Torch is Passed to London

Photo: Yannis Behrakis / REUTERS POOL

“The flame belongs to the world,” London Olympic chairman Sebastian Coe said. “The arrival of the flame in the host nation is a clarion call to the athletes and young people in more than 200 nations and territories preparing to gather for the London 2012 Games.”

Once in Britain, the Olympic torch heads off Saturday a 70-day relay
“Once the flame is lit, for all intents and purposes, the Games start,” Coe told reporters.

The flame was lit last week at the Temple of Hera in Olympia, and has been making its way around Greece in a relay. Despite a political crisis, a financial debacle and the unusual weather, Greeks were heartened by their eternal link to the Olympics.

“I am Greek and I am proud to be Greek,” said Konstantina Giannpoulos, 27, a drenched physical education teacher who clutched a plastic blue-and-white Greek flag. “I want to honor my country.”

Screen Shot 2012 05 17 at 6.38.10 PM Olympics 2012 are Underway as Torch is Passed to London

Photo: Thanassis Stavrakis / AP

The handover also marked a poignant moment for Greece as well. Greeks like to point out that the Olympics — while terrific — were not the only enduring concept they dreamed up.

The flame will fly Friday — with its own seat and security agent — on British Airways Flight 2012, an Airbus painted gold at the nose. Shielded in a miner’s lantern, the flame will first land at a naval air station in Cornwall, before the Royal Navy flies it to Land’s End, the furthest point west in England.

Once in Britain, the Olympic torch heads off Saturday a 70-day relay — an Anglophile’s dream tour that ventures through hill and dale to embrace everything from cool Britannia to Stonehenge. The journey ends at London’s Olympic Stadium for the July 27 opening ceremony.

Screen Shot 2012 05 17 at 6.55.08 PM 135x300 Olympics 2012 are Underway as Torch is Passed to LondonSome 8,000 torchbearers will carry the fire, mostly local people who have worked to better their communities. Olympic organizers hope that by giving the torch to community heroes, they will bring the spirit of the games to a country not necessarily willing to receive it.

The London Olympics has cost 9.3 billion pounds ($14.6 billion) — a large sum for a country grappling with economic austerity — and some in Britain worry about what happens when the games end Aug. 12. The future of the massive Olympic stadium, in particular, remains in doubt.

SOURCE: www.chron.com

 

Do not publish Capone family secrets…

Do not publish Capone family secrets...

Uncle Al Capone, The Untold Story from Inside His Family

Only a family knows the unvarnished truth about someone. Everyday, face-to-face interactions can reveal character more effectively than anything else. Al Capone’s brother, Ralph Capone, knew this – and that’s why he begged his granddaughter Deirdre Marie Capone not to publish the Capone family secrets until she was the last living member of the family. Uncle Al Capone, The Untold Story from Inside His Family (Recap Publishing) is the result, revealing for the first time many startling facts about one of the most famous gangsters of the twentieth century.

Screen Shot 2012 05 16 at 6.52.56 PM Do not publish Capone family secrets...In one hard-hitting chapter after another, Capone examines her great-uncle’s involvement in the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, the real reason he went to Alcatraz, ethnic prejudice in the early twentieth century, and much more. She offers compelling evidence that Al Capone was specifically targeted for prosecution by law enforcement agencies with the collaboration of the media, which made gross exaggerations of her uncle’s exploits and fueled a phenomenon of half-truths and utter falsehoods. From the family’s roots in Angri, Italy to the author’s ongoing investigations today, this debut offers a comprehensive and moving portrait of an iconic American family and one woman’s efforts to make peace with the past.

As a child, she didn’t know he was a notorious gangster; he was just her Uncle Al. He taught her how to swim, ride a bike, and play the mandolin. But after he died on her seventh birthday she began paying the price of being a Capone. From age 7 to 13 her classmates were not allowed to play with her. When she was 10 her father committed suicide due to the burden of the Capone name. At age 18 she was fired from her first full-time job because of her name. As soon as she could, she left Chicago and her family name behind.

Readers have found Uncle Al Capone dramatic, unyielding and provocative. A moving, highly readable portrait of the Capone family and its mob ties, the book takes a close look at what it means to survive a legacy of notorious criminal activity. Through years of meticulous research and exhaustive interviews with aunts, uncles and cousins, Capone tells the story that eluded  dozens of writers: Al Capone as a loving,if flawed, family man.

See the interview with the Deirdre Capone….

and listen to an except from the book in Al Capone’s voice: www.adistinctivestyle.com/issue/60485/85

Happy Mothers Day — Remember When…

Happy Mothers Day!

A Letter from a Mother to a Daughter…

Screen Shot 2012 05 03 at 10.33.49 AM Happy Mothers Day — Remember When...

“My dear girl, the day you see I’m getting old, I ask you to please be patient, but most of all, try to understand what I’m going through. If when we talk, I repeat the same thing a thousand times, don’t interrupt to say: “You said the same thing a minute ago”… Just listen, please. Try to remember the times when you were little and I would read the same story night after night until you would fall asleep. When I don’t want to take a bath, don’t be mad and don’t embarrass me. Remember when I had to run after you making excuses and trying to get you to take a shower when you were just a girl? When you see how ignorant I am when it comes to new technology, give me the time to learn and don’t look at me that way… remember, honey, I patiently taught you how to do many things like eating appropriately, getting dressed, combing your hair and dealing with life’s issues every day… the day you see I’m getting old, I ask you to please be patient, but most of all, try to understand what I’m going through. If I occasionaly lose track of what we’re talking about, give me the time to remember, and if I can’t, don’t be nervous, impatient or arrogant. Just know in your heart that the most important thing for me is to be with you. And when my old, tired legs don’t let me move as quickly as before, give me your hand the same way that I offered mine to you when you first walked. When those days come, don’t feel sad… just be with me, and understand me while I get to the end of my life with love. I’ll cherish and thank you for the gift of time and joy we shared. With a big smile and the huge love I’ve always had for you, I just want to say, I love you… my darling daughter. “

Happy Mothers Day!

After Head Injury, Man Becomes a Math Genius

College Dropout becomes a mathematical genius after mugging

Screen Shot 2012 05 01 at 7.44.04 PM After Head Injury, Man Becomes a Math GeniusWhen Jason Padgett was attacked by muggers outside a karaoke club in Tacoma, Wash., a decade ago, he thought he was going to die.

The attackers, who he said were after his leather jacket, kicked him in the head repeatedly. Miraculously, he not only survived the attack, but developed a mysterious mathematical gift as a result of it.

The 41-year-old does not see the world in the same way that most people do.

“All I saw was a bright flash of light and the next thing I knew I was on my knees on the ground and I thought, ‘I’m going to get killed,” he told ABC.

Doctors initially thought it was a concussion, but then Padgett started becoming obsessed with drawing intricate diagrams. He couldn’t draw before and at first had no idea what the diagrams were of.

The diagrams turned out to be fractals, small portions of a visual representation for Pi that are similar to the whole image. Everywhere he looks, he sees formulas such as the Pythagorean Theorem.

Because of the damage, his brain is forced to overcompensate in areas most people can’t access.

“Savant syndrome is the development of a particular skill, that can be mathematical, spatial, or autistic, that develop to an extreme degree that sort of makes a person super human,” said Berit Brogaard, a neuroscientist and philosophy professor at the Center of Neurodynamics at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, to ABC.

–––––––––––––––––
Jason D. Padgett is from Anchorage Alaska, currently living in Tacoma Washinton. The beauty of numbers and their connection to the pure geometry of space time and the universe is shown in his fractal diagrams. Fractals are shapes that when decomposed into pieces, the pieces are the same or similar to the whole. His is currently studying how all fractals arise from limits and how E=MC2 is itself a fractal. When he first started drawing he had no traditional math training and could only draw what he saw as math. Eventually a physicist saw his drawings and helped him get traditional mathematics training to be able to describe in equations the complex geometry of his drawings. He is currently a student studying mathematics in Washington state where he is learning traditional mathematics so he can better describe what he sees in a more traditional form. Many of the captions were written before he had any traditional math training. His drawing of E=MC^2 is based on the structure of space time at the quantum level and is based on the concept that there is a physical limit to observation which is the Planck length. It shows how at the smallest level, the structure of space time is a fractal. He does his own fractal diagrams and can also create new ones by request. His price for originals depends on the difficulty of the fractal. So sit back and enjoy the beauty of naturally occuring mathematics in pure geometric form connecting E=MC2 (energy) to art. All are HAND DRAWN using only a pencil, ruler and compass.

See Jason’s amazing work here: jason-padgett.artistwebsites.com

and on his Facebook page: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1347537460

 

Running on Empty … A Journey from California to New York

Running on Empty, 3063 Miles, 52 Days, 57 Years Old

A fascinating glimpse inside the mind of an ultramarathon runner and the inspirational saga of his phenomenal journey running across America.

Screen Shot 2012 05 01 at 1.42.14 PM 300x220 Running on Empty ... A Journey from California to New YorkThe ultimate endurance athlete, Marshall Ulrich has run more than 100 foot races averaging over 100 miles each, completed 12 expedition-length adventure races, and ascended the Seven Summits – including Mount Everest – all on his first attempt. Yet his run from California to New York—the equivalent of running two marathons and a 10K every day for nearly two months straight — proved to be his most challenging effort yet.

Featured in the recent documentary film, Running America, Ulrich clocked the 3rd fastest transcontinental crossing to date and set new records in multiple divisions. In Running on Empty, he shares the gritty backstory, including brushes with death, run-ins with the police, and the excruciating punishments he endured at the mercy of his maxed-out body. Ulrich also reached back nearly 30 years to when the death of the woman he loved drove him to begin running— and his dawning realization that he felt truly alive only when pushed to the limits.

READ MORE AND SEE VIDEO…

Tap Dancing until 79 years old!

Every day IS a NEW adventure for 94 year old Helene Soltero…

By Karen Soltero

Helene Soltero 242x300 Tap Dancing until 79 years old!At 94 years old, Helene Soltero is not only alive, she’s thriving. In a youth-centric society, where people over a certain age are often disregarded, ignored or even abandoned, she’s proof-positive that life quite simply doesn’t end when we think it does.

“Nobody’s too old to try anything they want to do,” she says, simply. Helene took up tap dancing for the first time at 77. About a year ago, she started taking Zoomba classes. These days, she keeps up with a busy schedule, playing poker and bridge, working out and competing in a Wii bowling league at a Senior Facility in Dallas, where she’s been a resi­dent for the past eighteen months, following the death of her husband, Albert in 2010.

Senior Living Centers and people like Helene are going a long way in making a difference in the idea that members of our older generation no longer want to “have a life.”

In other cultures and countries, elders are both respected and cared for by younger generations. Here in the U.S., elder care is often seen as a burden. But these men and women are the guardians of our past, the keepers and tellers of the stories of a changing world.

Born in 1917, Helene lived through two World Wars, waited while her husband served for years at a time overseas, raising children and keeping the home.

With almost a century under her belt, she’s seen the evolution of the modern home, been in-step with the advance­ments in technology and is in a unique position to appreciate the ease of using her MacBook Air to send emails.

 Dustin Allen, head of the wellness department at the senior living facility where Helene resides, tells us that Helene is an inspiration for other residents, including those younger than her. She often can be found encouraging her neighbors to try new things, to get out and move and most importantly, to keep having fun. She says that’s what she’s done all her life and that’s what her husband would want her to continue to do.

See our live interview with Helen and if you would like to contact her, she’d love to hear from you! Email her at: helene1@soltero.org.

Casting Calls for America’s Real Modern Family

Casting Calls for America's Real Modern Family

Casting Calls for America’s Real Modern Family

Doron Ofir Casting announcing the nationwide search for America’s Real Modern Family

Doron Ofir Casting, the epic star making casting company behind Millionaire Matchmaker, Jersey Shore and Nashville Star officially announces the national search for America’s real Modern Family.

A major television network is seeking the nation’s most entertaining, MULTI-GENERATIONAL and/or EXTENDED MULTI-CULTURAL families.

Over the years, TV has brought us different examples of family. Leave it to Beaver, The Brady Bunch, All in the Family, The Cosby Show and now Modern Family; they redefined stories of the American family. Isn’t it time TV represented a real American modern family?

“My ideal family will be a cast of characters that live near one another who regularly get together for Sunday dinners, BBQs, and birthdays. The kind of family everyone wants to spend time with because they are the most outrageous and fun”– Doron Ofir, Executive Casting Director.

We are seeking diverse families with an array of dynamic personalities, real drama, and a penchant for hilarious comic relief. Despite the dynamics, differences and dramas, love and acceptance conquer all in the true definition of a real modern family, just like the Keatons, the Seavers, the Ricardos, the Tanners, the Huxtables, or even the Addams.

Is your family’s last name the next great television sensation?

Casting applications can be found at www.MyModernFamilyCasting.com

Doron Ofir, President of Doron Ofir Casting is available for media interviews in person, via phone or Skype.