From the category archives:

New York

A year in pictures

by Ella on February 3, 2010

Good gracious. I have been living in this mad place for an entire year. How did that happen?

In an attempt to come to terms with this swift passage of time, I am accounting for my whereabouts with a little pictorial recap. Here are some of the standout moments of the last 12 months.

Moo business card

Right before I left Sydney I had some Moo business cards printed up and delivered to my New York address. I remember looking at the template, fingers hovering over my keyboard, and having no idea how to label myself. “Producer” seemed too behind-the-scenesy. “Actor” seemed to promise something I wasn’t sure I could deliver. “Presenter” or “host” also felt a bit weird. I was okay with “Writer”, but it was a bit vague. In the end I went with “Writer, producer and host”. These days I would nix the Producer label, even though I produce some of my Rocketboom shoots. It’s been replaced with “actor”. Finally!

I heard recently that the things you enjoy doing when you are eight years old are the things you should be doing for the rest of your life. When I was that age I adored writing silly stories and staging impromptu plays and musicals for my family. Now that’s reflected on my business card. Awesome.

Park Slope apartment

After spending a month or so sleeping on the floor of my mother’s studio apartment, I moved into a share house I found on Craigslist. It was located in Park Slope, a lovely but frequently mocked suburb of Brooklyn.

This was my bedroom. It measured about five feet by eight feet, and had two doors — in order to access the rest of the house I either had to walk through another girl’s bedroom or out into the hall and in through the front door of the apartment. I lived here for three months. My current bedroom is about three times bigger, and I don’t have to put shoes on or take keys with me when I go to the bathroom. Movin’ on up!

Sunset over Manhattan

Though it was cramped and often smelled of stale cigarettes, the Park Slope apartment had a stellar redeeming feature: rooftop access. This was our view on a hot summer night. Gorgeous.

Gillian Anderson

That’s Gillian Anderson behind me. In order to establish the significance of this moment, let me take you back to 1996. Two notable things happened to me that year: our family bought its first modem — 33.6kbps, baby — and I became obsessed with The X-Files. The first begat the second; stumbling around within the Netscape-encased pages of this new and disarming “internet”, I happened upon an email discussion list called “Smart Young X-Philes”, or SYX for short.

I don’t quite know why this list appealed to me so much — though I had watched The X-Files a few times, I was hardly a rabid devotee. But perhaps seeking a respite from the real world, riddled as it was with pubertal awkwardness, I signed up for SYX, and over the next few years developed a deep and abiding love for the show. I loved Scully in particular. She was all fire and moxie and smarts, and I wanted to be like her. I memorized her birthdate and middle name. Once, in 8th grade Design and Technology class, we had to make a sort of Chia Pet thing using dirt, seeds, a stocking and stick-on googly eyes. I named mine Eugene Victor Tooms, after the immortal, human-liver-eating mutant that was the subject of a season one episode. When we did Kris Kringle gift wish lists, I asked for an X-Files diary. I stole a gold cross necklace from my sister — Scully wore one constantly and it featured in several alien-conspiracy-related plot points — and wore it in my year 9 school photo. And then, when I was 16, I made an X-Files-influenced decision that has lingered to this day: I dyed my hair red.

As you can see, unsuspecting Ms. Anderson has played a significant role in my life. So when I had the chance to meet her at a film premiere in September, I kind of freaked out. Initially I was content to merely be in her presence, but a friend convinced me to go up to her and shake her hand. I had nothing to say and she must have thought I was a tool, but it was certainly a highlight. Here’s a vlog about the experience.

Colbert Report tickets

That’s Zeb and I waiting to go into the studio for a taping of The Colbert Report. I love Colbert. I dig it when he dances, his smile makes me feel tingly, and I die when he and Jon Stewart are busting out some schtick and they end up cracking each other up. So naturally, I pounced on tickets to see his show live. Twice, in the space of three months. The fact that I have published that last sentence may get me banned for life, as you are only allowed to attend once every six months. I am a bad person. But if loving Colbert is wrong, I don’t want to be right.

This time I asked him a question during his pre-show audience Q&A sesh. (It was a stupid question about Twitter — I just wanted an excuse to talk to him. He smiled and made fun of my accent and I pretty much died of glee.)

Elmo

The trip to Sesame Street was, without doubt, my favourite day of the year. Whenever I watch the show now I always think of wandering through Hooper’s Store, sitting on the stoop and climbing into Oscar’s trash can to shoot the intro to our Rocketboom interview with Elmo.

Chicago bean

Back in September I went to Chicago to interview 2,946 winter Olympic athletes for Rocketboom. (Okay, it was actually 11, but it was in the span of 24 hours!) An hour after landing in the city, I was crossing a main street with about twenty other people at a pedestrian crossing. A car slowly turned into the intersection, heading towards us. A man walking in front of me held up his hand to indicate that the driver should stop. The car sped up. The driver intentionally ran the man over and kept going. It was the most bizarre thing I have ever seen. Everyone was in shock.

The man was physically okay, as the car was travelling at a low speed, but the deliberateness of the driver is something that will stick with me for a long time. It was incredibly unnerving — as though everything I knew about humanity was suddenly rendered invalid.

So, yeah. That was my welcome to Chicago. After that I did my interviews, drank champagne with the US Olympic bobsled team and saw a hilarious improv show at Second City.

The Elegant Guide

In December I launched The Elegant Guide. Putting the series online was scary — when you write by yourself, you never quite know if other people will find it funny. It’s a gamble. But if you try to play it too safe, you just end up with something that’s boring and cliche. I addressed this issue by writing scenes where I threaten a child with a hammer, whine drunkenly from the bottom of a stairwell and use a sexy voice to tell someone they have prostate cancer. To my great relief, my inbox hasn’t been deluged with missives telling me how much I suck.

Lesson: do what you want to do. Make the stuff you want to make. Some people will like it, some won’t. But you’ll feel mega accomplished and energised for another project. Then another. And then, the world!

rsz_boyinny

My good friend Eric Brown of Kornhaber Brown called me up one day and asked if I had any ideas for a short film. He needed to shoot something for a Masters project, and it had to be done within the next week. I suggested a few vague concepts and images. We met up a few days later and threw a rough script together. He refined it, we shot it the next day, and three days after that, The Only Living Boy in New York appeared on YouTube. A short film written, shot and edited in under a week. Not too damn bad! Of course, the talent and easygoing nature of Bob Geile and Anthony Carboni was a significant factor. But it goes to show that you don’t have to slave over something for months. Just git ‘er done.

(That pic is a screengrab from the film, by the way. So credit Bob for the composition.)

————–

The last year has been amazing. Getting to know my family again after being apart for eight years; having the opportunity to meet amazing people in my correspondent job at Rocketboom; doing improv classes and acting classes and running around this mad city in the middle of the night…it’s been grander than I ever expected.

If you are contemplating something big and scary — a move across the world, say, or launching your own website or starting your own business — I think you should do it. Really. Don’t wait for anyone to grant you permission. Make the decision and don’t look back. Choose to be positive, surround yourself with creative, intelligent, encouraging people, and go for broke. There will be times when you wonder what you’ve gotten yourself into, but the satisfaction that comes with charting your own course makes it all worth it.

Finally, in the words of the delightful Conan O’Brien: “Please don’t be cynical. Nobody in life gets exactly what they thought they were going to get. But if you work really hard and you’re kind, amazing things will happen.”

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How to survive a New York winter

by Ella on January 5, 2010

Winter in New York

Pic by Chris

Growing up in Australia, you think you know winter. Then you go somewhere like New York and realise that your life has been a balmy, sunny sham.

One of my biggest worries when moving here was not how difficult it would be to find a job during a recession or how tricky it might prove to secure an apartment. It was whether I could make it through four-odd months of snow, sleet and subzero temperatures. I hate being cold. It’s such a miserable, helpless feeling, and when bitter winds are whipping at your face, you can’t help but take it personally. Well, I do, anyway. In the words of Garth Algar from Wayne’s World, “I’m having a good time. NOT.”

I arrived in the city at the tail end of winter 2009. Having sold or given away most of my possessions — and coming from summer in Australia — I had little in the way of warm clothing. My initial strategy for dealing with wind-chill temperatures of -15 degrees C was to wear all my clothes at once. This made me look rather ridiculous, and also ensured that every time I entered a building or got on the subway, I would start to sweat and feel faint under the weight of 35 cardigans. Rookie mistake.

When dressing for the cold, it’s actually better to wear fewer layers. You just have to make sure that each one traps the heat most effectively. For the benefit of those who grew up sunning themselves on various idyllic beaches, here are the essential items for a winter wardrobe:

    winter-hat
  • A snuggly hat that covers your ears. A few weeks ago I purchased the Best Hat Ever. (See evidence at right.)

    I can’t even deal with the perfection of this hat. For starters, it was cheap: $7.50 from Pearl River, a SoHo store known for its Asian delights like fluoro perspex chopsticks, paper parasols and cheapskate kung fu shoes. (You could also nab a similar style from one of the souvenir shops on Canal Street in Chinatown.) It’s wool, but lined with fleece, so you don’t get an itchy scalp. It covers your ears, preventing Frigid Pinna Syndrome. And it has those braided tie thingies that you can grasp to pull the whole thing tighter around your head when the wind picks up.

  • An insulated jacket or coat. If you live somewhere where “winter” means anything below 20 degrees celcius, don’t even bother going coat shopping. The lightweight wool specimens on offer will let you down when you venture into the real chill. I guess you could hit up a ski shop, but the prices tend to be steep, and, in Australia at least, the selection’s not great. Wait ’til you get here, then hit up The North Face and nab a waterproof, fleece-lined, let’s-not-mess-around-here jacket or coat.
  • Thermal singlets, tights and long underwear. Now we’re talking! This is real hot-chocolate-and-marshmallows-by-a-roaring-fire type stuff. Head to Uniqlo — conveniently located on Broadway, right near Pearl River — and pick up some of their Heat Tech singlets and shirts. They come from Japan, cost less than $20 each, and are magical. Would you expect anything less from the industrious Japanese? Apparently the fabric is a mixture of rayon and milk protein. Bad news for vegans, but good news if you don’t mind warming your derriere with dairy.

    As for your legs, girls can go for woollen tights under jeans, and dudes can pick up some long underwear. Unless you’re all “long underwear’s for girls, I’m hardcore”. In which case, please suffer in silence when you freeze your ass off.
  • Waterproof boots. You’ll need them when it snows! And, more importantly, the day after it snows, when the gutters are a mix of grey slush and giant camouflaged puddles. For cheapo wellies, head to K-Mart at Astor Place or good ol’ Pearl River.

Everything else is pretty self-evident: add a scarf, gloves, a cuddly jumper — that’s “sweater” to you American folk — and thick socks. You are now ready to face winter in New York. Which is actually pretty neat, once you’ve got the dressing part down. Here are just a few highlights:

  • Ice skating. There are rinks everywhere. The most famous, natch, is the one at Rockefeller Center, but it’s super pricey and chocka-block full of tourists. The only advantage of going there is that you might get to see some nervous guy from Iowa propose to his girlfriend on the ice. (This happens multiple times a day, as a result of the rink’s $250 “Engagement On Ice” package — see this PDF for details. Commodify my love, baby!)

    I say get your schmaltz fix by watching proposal videos on YouTube, and for cheaper, less-crowded ice skating, try The Pond at Bryant Park, Lasker Rink at the top of Central Park, or Wollman Rink in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park.
  • Snow. It really is gorgeous, the way that it coats the trees and houses and roads in icing. Especially in a frenetic city like New York. Everything becomes quiet and slow and peaceful. And everyone is a kid again! A few weeks ago there was a snowstorm, and a snowball fight broke out in Times Square. Stuff like that reminds you that you don’t have to be glued to your PS3 to have a glorious time playing around.
  • Central heating. In a way, winter is almost worse in Sydney, because everyone pretends it doesn’t exist. Unless you’re a fancy rich person, it’s unlikely that you’ll have central heating. So when the mercury dips to 10 degrees C overnight, you’re stuck with your crappy little fan heater that you don’t want to turn on because your energy bill will skyrocket.

    Most apartments in New York are equipped with beefy radiators. When winter hits, the super will flick a magical warmth switch, and all of a sudden your house is toasty. And there’s no heating bill — it’s included in your rent. The only downside is that some radiators make a really loud hissing noise. Lately I’ve been having these crazy dreams about snakes coming to kill me, and I realised that it must be result of radiator sounds filtering through to my unconscious brain.

All that said, I still consider myself a n00b to this whole winter thing, so if you have some good tips for staying warm and happy, please share them in the comments!

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How Surprise Industries made me an instant expert

October 26, 2009

Blindfolded and a little nervous, with Maya from Surprise Industries and Sam.

Recently I came across a rad New York startup called Surprise Industries. They deal in “surprise experiences” — you pay a flat fee of $25, receive a time and location, and show up having absolutely no idea what might happen.
Naturally, this killer [...]

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The story so far

August 3, 2009

Six months ago I left Sydney and moved to New York with precious little money, no job lined up and few possessions filling my suitcase. The story since has been full of unexpected twists, remarkable characters and more highs and lows than a sine wave. Here are a few bits and pieces from the last half-year.

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Things to do in New York

July 20, 2009

Legions of people — I’m talking at least two — have asked me for tips on what to see and do when visiting New York. So here are a few suggestions. They range from bleedingly obvious guidebook stalwarts to slightly more obscure, stumbled-upon treasures.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Map)
If aliens ever land and [...]

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Absence note

July 11, 2009
Thumbnail image for Absence note

Ugh, don’t you hate it when bloggers write “Sorry I haven’t updated lately” posts? I know I do.
So anyway, sorry I haven’t updated lately. The past two weeks have been a McFlurry of moving into a new apartment, acquiring stuff for said apartment and settling into — Price is Right voice, please — [...]

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Video post: Cultural differences

May 29, 2009

It was 10pm on a Thursday night. What else was I going to do in New York but sit on my single bed and make a webcam video for the ol’ blog here?
This is a quick run-down of a few of the linguistic and behavioural differences between Australians and Americans, with an alcohol-related epiphany [...]

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