Monday, December 20, 2010

Final Cut

Mexican culture is family. It’s being home and feeling the warmth of comfort and love. It’s the smell of sweet milk chocolate in the morning and homemade cemas (wheat bread). It is knowing that your parents and loved ones will always lend you an extra pair of helping hands in time of desperate need. It’s neither violent nor selfish. It’s not criminal or abusive. Last and foremost, Mexican culture is not just having children for lack of contraceptive, but for love of family.
Whether Mexican culture is understood or not, it is still definitely judged and interpreted like any other culture. It may be frowned upon or stereotyped based on individual poor action taking. The truth of the matter is, not everyone understands the causes of countless damage done to cities and people in Mexico. Not everyone bothers to learn about the hardships Mexican people undergo. Even more depressing, not everyone bothers to learn about how to help. But regardless there’s definite lack of global knowledge in the America. The same lack of knowledge that is responsible for promoting unethical cultural assumptions.
The widely used cosmetic brand MAC launched a new collection last September in collaboration with the infamous fashion brand known as Rodarte.

The brand featured inspirational colors linked to the cultural aspects of Mexico.

But how can someone truly understand what defines the cultural aspects of Mexico if they’re not culturally tied to it to begin with? Mexico is much more than sombreros and folk. Mexico is much more than the green, white, and red. Mexico has a history. Whether that history is good or bad is up to those who have experienced it to answer.

The recent line featured different products including a sheer white lipstick called "Ghost town" and a pink blush named "Quinceañera".

The name might not necessarily sound offensive, but to those who have lived something incredibly life changing it means the world. To those who have been a part of a real ghost town of murders and harassment it is hard to be desensitized of such terms.

Bertha Garcia, mother of Brenda Castillo, shared the joy of her grandson’s birth, Kevin. Kevin rest in her lap, just one month old, smothered in what seemed to be nothing but peace and harmony. At sixteen months today, he knows his mother only from the fliers his grandmother posts day in and day out. This is one of the stories of many.

Surprisingly, MAC didn't do such a great job distributing proper names to all of their new products after emitting a frosty pink nail polish as "Juarez".
Juarez is a city in Mexico in which there has been continuous involvement in the rape and murder of innocent women and children. The increase of this criminal activity has increased dramatically as the increase of maquiladoras (factories) has gone up. A little before August of 2009, Juarez’s murder rate was considered to be the highest in the entire world, exceeding places like Caracas and New Orleans. In the year of 2008, there were 1,400 murders and more than 2,500 deaths over the same period in the year of 2010. As if that wasn’t enough, these women and children are never bothered to be looked for…they are never bothered to be found. Today, more than 200 are still missing. It’s sick to think they’re still being tortured. It’s sick to think they’re still being kept hostage to fulfill a group of degenerates’ needs. But what was everything but sick was MAC’s line of cosmetics.

What MAC failed to demonstrate and teach was that Juarez is an increasingly impoverished town that suffers of high rates of countless murder.
Gisela Simental shares her experiences in an article published in January of 2010. “I lived in Juarez for most of my life, and one of the things that you often see are children on the streets. These kids are on the streets late at night and during school hours because they have to help their families. The way these children grow up is very harsh -- they are faced with reality from a very young age. Their families are probably very poor and do not have another choice but to make every member of the family work. Children are brought up that way, and have no idea how this will affect them in the future. They understand the responsibility of a job and the need to get money to survive even though they might not know what it feels like to be in a classroom at school. They have no other choice but to work and leave education aside. How will they do better in the future if they are not provided with education right know?”
Education and law enforcement and two among many important issues that have driven Ciudad Juarez from a stable stage, to one of dramatic chaos.

After the issue with MAC’s new line cosmetics, it did however raise a very important point: People have become ignorant of such issues.
Even though through countless surveys, four in every ten Americans say they follow news about world affairs on a close level, many respond “don’t know” to questions about any recent news events. Learning about cultural issues is not a separate discipline, but a perspective that informs and modernizes every discipline. One of our great strengths as a nation is our creativity and determination to lead the world, and using this as an advantage to help fix or help change criminal activity in other places could be phenomenal.

After asking some of Santa Rosa’s community members how they felt about the issue being raised by MAC cosmetics, some said “It sucks that the police force in Mexico won’t admit to a serial killer problem or even a cult & that USA companies hire these woman and won’t protect their own workers...makes me sick.”

Alaina Chenette-Barton of Santa Rosa emphasized “Mexico isn’t the only place that this is going on. This has been happening all over the world. It saddens me and somehow needs to be put to an end immediately!”

Naming a shade of pink nailpolish "Juarez" emphasizes the extensive cluelessness and insensitivity on behalf of the brand, and the general population.

Hundreds of cases have gone and continue to go unsolved and uninvestigated.

MAC further promoted their new link with a secondary nail polish shade "Factory". Coincidentally, most of the women and young girls who have been raped and murdered in Juarez have disappeared on their way to or from work at the town’s factories.
MAC continued to apologize for some of the titles given to their recent products and has consistently been trying to win back offended customers.

As a result, MAC planned to donate all profits to women organizations that aid Juarez. Despite the fact that their new line caused controversy, it was able to remind its consumers and followers that cultural issues do exists and go neglected. The fact that even offended people were able to speak up about their cultural issues demonstrates an interest of change in their own community, a change that should be wanted in every community that suffers of even the most minimal social issues.
Ciudad Juarez may not change its criminal activity, women may not be found, children may not be helped through educational or labor support, but if people care to read and learn about these things, then awareness has been raised.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Giving Juarez a Little Makeover

The widely used cosmetic brand MAC launched a new collection last September in collaboration with the infamous fashion brand known as Rodarte.


The brand featured inspirational colors linked to the cultural aspects of Mexico.


But how can someone truly understand what defines the cultural aspects of Mexico if they’re not culturally tied to it to begin with? Mexico is much more than sombreros and folk. Mexico is much more than the green, white, and red. Mexico has a history. Whether that history is good or bad is up to those who have experienced it to answer.


The recent line featured different products including a sheer white lipstick called "Ghost town" and a pink blush named "Quinceañera".


The name might not necessarily sound offensive, but to those who have lived something incredibly life changing it means the world. To those who have been a part of a real ghost town of murders and harassment it is hard to be desensitized of such terms.


Bertha Garcia, mother of Brenda Castillo, shared the joy of her grandson’s birth, Kevin. Kevin rest in her lap, just one month old, smothered in what seemed to be nothing but peace and harmony. At sixteen months today, he knows his mother only from the fliers his grandmother posts day in and day out. This is one of the stories of many.


Surprisingly, MAC didn't do such a great job distributing proper names to all of their new products after emitting a frosty pink nail polish as "Juarez": a city in Mexico in which there has been continuous involvement in the rape and murder of innocent women and children. As if that wasn’t enough, these women and children are never bothered to be looked for…they are never bothered to be found. Today, more than 200 are still missing. It’s sick to think they’re still being tortured. It’s sick to think they’re still being kept hostage to fulfill a group of degenerates’ needs. But what was everything but sick was MAC’s line of cosmetics.


What MAC failed to demonstrate and teach was that Juarez is an increasingly impoverished town that suffers of high rates of countless murder.


This does however raise a very important point: People have become ignorant of such issues.


After asking some of Santa Rosa’s community members how they felt about the issue being raised by MAC cosmetics, some said “It sucks that the police force in Mexico won’t admit to a serial killer problem or even a cult & that USA companies hire these woman and won’t protect their own workers...makes me sick.”


Alaina Chenette-Barton of Santa Rosa emphasized “Mexico isn’t the only place that this is going on. This has been happening all over the world. It saddens me and somehow needs to be put to an end immediately!”


Naming a shade of pink nailpolish "Juarez" emphasizes the extensive cluelessness and insensitivity on behalf of the brand, and the general population.


Hundreds of cases have gone and continue to go unsolved and uninvestigated.


MAC further promoted their new link with a secondary nail polish shade "Factory". Coincidentally, most of the women and young girls who have been raped and murdered in Juarez have disappeared on their way to or from work at the town’s factories.
MAC continued to apologize for some of the titles given to their recent products and has consistently been trying to win back offended customers.


As a result, MAC planned to donate all profits to women organizations that aid Juarez.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Article Outline

I. Introduction: The Launch of Something New
A. The widely used cosmetic brand MAC launched a new collection last September in collaboration with the infamous fashion brand known as Rodarte.

1.The brand features inspirational colors linked to the cultural aspects of Mexico.

a.) What colors exactly depict Mexico?

2. The recent line featured different products including a sheer white lipstick called "Ghost town" and a pink blush named "Quinceañera".
a.) But what exactly was so controversial about the booming brand's new cosmetic line?

II. Body: What caused controversy?
A. Apparently, MAC didn't do such a great job distributing proper names to all of their new products after emitting a frosty pink nail polish as "Juarez".
a.) Juarez? A city in Mexico
b.) Impoverished town that suffers of high rates of rape and murder of countless girls and women.
B. Naming a shade of pink nailpolish "Juarez" emphasizes the extensive cluelessness and insensitivity on behalf of the brand (and the general population).
a.) How many cases go unsolved/uninvestigated
C.MAC further promoted their new link w/a secondary nail polish shade "Factory".
a.) Coincidentally, most of the women and young girls who have been raped and murdered in Juarez have disappeared on their way to or from work at the towns factories.
D. MAC continues to apologize for some of the titles given to their recent products and has consistently been trying to win back offended customers.
E. The line, inspired by Laura and Kate Mulleavy's launched soon after their road trip through the Southwest.
a.) How are road trips often misleading to Juarez?
F. Other??

III. Conclusion: So what??????
A. As a result, MAC planned to donate all profits to women organizations that aid Juarez.

Monday, October 25, 2010

A Small Dose of E.B. White

"Mr. Highstone, being himself a practicing farmer, knows one important truth about country life: he knows that farming is about twenty per cent agriculture and eighty per cent mending something that has got busted. Farming is a sort of glorified repair job. This is a truth that takes some people years to discover, and many farmers go their whole lives without ever really grasping the idea. A good farmer is nothing more nor less than a handy man with a sense of humus. The repair aspect of farming looms so large that, on a place like my own, which is not really a farm at all but merely a private zoo, sometimes months go by when nothing but repair goes on. I can get so absorbed in the construction of a barn door that I can let the spring planting season go right by without ever opening the ground or sowing a seed. If I were engaged in making myself self-sustaining, I should perhaps be a little wider awake; but I know, from experience, that at any given moment of the year I would be found doing the wrong thing, and with a dull tool. I mention this because the weakness in Mr. Highstone’s book is not in his plan for subsistence but in the people who are going to carry it out. In spite of all his warnings, there will be plenty of them who will get sidetracked, probably along the line of some special hobby, hitherto unindulged. I have been fooling around this place for a couple of years, but nobody calls my activity agriculture. I simply like to play with animals. Nobody knows this better than I do — although my neighbors know it well enough and on the whole have been tolerant and sympathetic."

Before I even realized what the title of White's piece was, I had thralled upon the idea that it was an article on his experience in regards to farming. Something mentioned in class was that you could write a sentence on something completely tragic, yet it could have that small hint of hopefulness or happiness for that matter. "Farming is a sort of glorified repair job." Ironically, the sentence connotes a sort of positive feel to farming. Because the writing in general is very personal, it allows for its readers to better grasp the concept as a hobby rather than a task. A good writer always says what he thinks, and E.B. White definitely captivates this sense in his writing. In this small piece, he reflects on pure honesty: the honesty of what farming is for him, the honesty of what farming may be portrayed as to others. He mentions he gets easily distracted without even getting to the actual farming part, something most "How To" writers might not admit. As a reader, I think it's safe to say the writing has to be personal.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Magazine Title Ideas and Possible Sources/Contacts/Resources

Titles?

(1) J'adore

(2) Bee El Oh Gee

(3) College Post

(4) Time to Tell

(5) Ohh Magazine

Resources?

Wendy Tokuda, CBS 5 News anchor- via email or phone number-personal connection
http://www.facebook.com/people/Wendy-Tokuda/1227083062
650-868-3669

Michelle Phan- via email @ MichellePhanBusiness@gmail.com

Monday, October 4, 2010

My Query: Outline/Letter/High-Concept

To Editor Andrew Todhunter:
The following is my proposed story for next week’s layout.
• Michelle Phan
• What my story’s about: My story will be about Michelle Phan’s transformation from an average art major student to a Cosmetic public figure and how she achieved this through her own passion and dedication. Because she is a new-comer to the writing business as well, she talks a little bit about blogging! “I compared blogging to being in a relationship. Most relationships require attention and commitment. You can have the greatest love in your life, but let’s face it… it can wear you down and next thing you know you are on a break. Depending on how long the breaks are, maybe you need time to think, recollect your thoughts, or just need a breath of fresh air.”
• Why this story: I think it is important for people to hear stories about people who have achieved their dreams through their own hard work and effort. It serves as a reminder to students that hard work does pay off and that anything is possible. Most importantly, to not go out looking for fame. When you do what you love really well, sometimes you’re lucky enough that fame already comes with it.
• Who/ Sources and Subjects: Michelle Phan’s multiple networking websites and I will attempt to email her asking questions related to the topic matter.
• What treatment: Positive Impact through good use in resources.
• Who are you and why/ passion: Because I am a believer that good things can happen when you do what you love, I find it fascinating to hear stories such as Michelle Phan. She is absolutely amazing and also is living proof that the internet is by far one of the most amazing pieces of technology today (since she first launched herself out there publicly through YouTube.
• What length: Average Article, 750 words.
• When will you deliver: I plan to deliver this article by Next Monday.
If you have any questions don’t hesitate to ask or send an email.
Sinerecly,
Vanessa Villafuerte
Writer in Art/Cosmetic Journalism

High Concept: This story is an attempt to focus on Michelle Phan's success as an artist and present an overview of her latest projects.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Success and Failure as a Writer

Success as a writer means putting your thoughts and ideas on paper without holding back. It means being able to express yourself and having the courage to expose it to others to read. Success is having the ability to identify your writing with your person and staying true to you and not what others want to read. It means putting yourself out there in hopes that you can reach out to at least one person, and not reach out to the money behind the cover. Writing successfully means writing with passion, writing for identity, and writing for the love of doing it.

Failure as a writer is more of a difficult thing for me to reflect on. I believe that the only way you can truly fail as a writer is by not writing what you want to write. The second you abide by someone else’s guidelines, I feel as if though the writing with passion is lost, the writing for identity is never met, and the love of doing it fades. It’s hard to say that following someone else’s guidelines is failure because evidently there are usually more than often “rules” we must abide by. However, one of the things a great writer should be able to do is follow these “rules” and still be able to find a connection with him.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Magazine Commentaries

As I was flipping through the travel magazines, I came across and article titled The New Kid. I wondered, "What could an article titled The New Kid be doing in a travel magazine?" As I read it, I realized it had nothing to do with a new kid. The article interestingly enough was about Elle's impact in fashion in the world. I liked that the article had an interesting title that grasped the readers attention. It certainly grasped mine.

On the other hand, there was a history article in the travel magazine that caught my attention. I didn't think it had anything to do with the magazine "theme" yet because it was kind of off topic, it made me want to read it even more.

Ezine Commentaries

As I was browsing at ezinearticles.com, an article titled A Teen’s Guide to Making Money, stood out to me the most because I found it interesting that financial help is still being employed at an early stage. I think it is a good idea for an article because these are the kinds of things that you would expect teenagers to not really read about, yet it is still published somewhere.
To continue, there was an article on religion that just completely caught my attention. You would think that religion would be something you wouldn’t want to comment on publicly, just for the sake of saving the criticism and controversy, but on the other hand this article talked freely about God and Sex(hence the title of the article).

Sunday, September 19, 2010

My Experience in Writing and Journalism

My experience in writing and journalism does not go beyond a college classroom. I, like many other students, have only taken the appropriate english classes, (nothing out of the ordinary). Back in high school, however, I was a part of the journalism club, in which I learned to develop some of the computer skills needed to put together a newspaper. Through Communications 320 I would like to learn how to apply my writing skills towards writing for a magazine. Even though I am unsure as to what I would be an asset in when it comes to this class, my interests revolve around hosting on television, people magazine, movie reviews, and cosmetics.