Tag Archives: Fun

Star Trek: The Youth Generation

My family are big Trekkies. Star Trek the Next Generation was the first TV show I remember watching as a child. Forget Barney and Sesame Street. Star Trek all the way. So I was thoroughly appalled when I realized that I’ve had this blog for nearly four years and I haven’t had one Star Trek post. I shall fix that now.

My siblings and I loved it so much, we decided to make our own TV show in 2007. We were going to call it “Star Trek: the Youth Generation”. My sister outlined a script and we all pitched in to make an intrepid class starship. We were planning on making a “sick bay,” an “engineering,” a “personal quarters,” and, of course, the “main bridge”. The bridge we actually made as well as several transporter pads and Starfleet gadgets. Since we had just watched TNG at that point in time, the uniforms, tricorders, pads, combadges, and other technology was Next Generation style. We kids and a few neighborhood friends were going to film it.

I wanted to either be a Betazoid and ship’s counselor or a Bajoran. At first, my sister wanted to be a Vulcan, but because her fingers wouldn’t permit her to do the official “hello goodbye” of “live long and prosper”, she decided to be a human. She was planning on being captain. My brother was going to be her “number one” or first officer and he, too, was going to be human.

Unfortunately, before we could finish the project, my sister, the ring leader and task master, became too busy to continue. So with an unfinished script and ship, the Youth Generation never aired. But the next next generation isn’t gone yet, and neither are these few photos we got of the epic project before it was dismantled. So without further ado, the Youth Generation. Live long and prosper.

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Skyfall Cover

Over Thanksgiving and Christmas break, my brother and I did a cover to Adele’s song Skyfall that’s featured in the new James Bond movie. Nate played drums and piano and I sang all the parts. Just to make things interesting, we decided to make a music video to go along with the epic music. Altogether, it took 20 hours of filming and recording, not to mention all the practicing, to make it happen. This song was a particular challenge because 1) this song is at then end of my range — I’m such a soprano — and 2) because Adele sang it first. But thanks to my voice instructor, I muddled through. Nate and I hope to do another cover soon.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gSPYSLI5-g

Why a Princess?

DSC03895I was thinking the other day about how much girls love princesses. I, too, fall victim to this common occurrence. But why princesses? Of all the things they could be, why do girls want to be princesses? What is the reason for this infatuation with princesses, and is the reason valid?

To get inside the head of a girl to understand this phenomenon, we must first see what ‘princess’ means to a girl. Since I am a girl, I can tell you where I got my image of a princess: Disney. There is no lack of Disney princesses. They all have different stories, but they all have several things in common. They all have pretty dresses, houses, and even faces and hair, and they always get prince charming in the end, not to mention they can all sing.  I believe these are some reasons for the princess pedestal. The pretty dresses and voices capture little girls’ hearts, and they look up to princesses. Getting the prince is important to little girls and bigger ones, for getting the perfect guy is a dream for all girls.

But is all that really true? Not really. In past history, princesses rarely got a prince charming. Normally, they were forced to marry a complete stranger from another country who may not even speak their language. Before marriage, they were given little freedom and not even given the chance to read or write. Disney did a wonderful job making fairy tales. A fairy tale, according to Dictionary.com, is a “sophisticated narrative containing supernatural or obviously improbable events.” Did you catch the “obviously improbable events”? In stories, princesses might have a dream life or a happily ever after but not in real life. So, if the great life and appearance of princesses are the only things that make girls love them, there’s a problem. Thankfully, there is more to the definition of fairy tale. The second part is this: that fairy tales are known for “often having a whimsical, satirical, or moralistic character.” This means that through the “obviously improbable events” there are some redeeming characters and values we can take home from fairy tales.

Even if girls don’t get the overall message of a fairy tale, the princess in it has mainly good effects on girls. For example, many Disney princesses do creative activities (i.e. Rapunzel from Disney’s Tangled paints, Bell from Disney’s Beauty and the Beast reads, Cinderella sews, almost all princesses dance/sing, etc.). If girls are striving to be like these princesses, wouldn’t they try these activities too?

Okay, let’s recap. Girls mainly like princesses because of their pretty appearance and happily ever afters, though in real life princesses don’t always have these two qualities. However, if these qualities, even if they’re false, get girls to watch or read fairy tales which have valuable life lessons and make girls have an interest in creative activities, I think princesses are good role models. Call me a little kid, but I’ll stick with my princesses.

 

 

 

Justice or Mercy? Fall Play

It’s fall, and with fall (at least for me) comes a play. The play this fall was called Justice or Mercy and was a delightful comedy about a little town in Wisconsin, where two college graduates butt heads, and create many mix-ups. Along the way, there is a crazy group of old citizens, several clever high-school students, as well as some practical adults, creating excitement (and just a bit of madness) in their sleepy little town. I played the role of Fran – a trigger happy, dear-hunting, single, 90-year-old lady who owns a restaurant.

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