KALA LIFE
Taking A look at Life through Film, fashion and BRAVADO
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Bridging the Gap: The Voice of International Students Can Make A Difference.
Nkechi Ndukwe Feature Writing: Bridging the Gap: The Voice of International Students Can Make a Difference.
Bridging the Gap: The Voice of International Students Can Make A Difference.
There is a voice on University Campuses and all around societies that is yearning to be heard. This is the voice of international citizens living in America. Whether, a descendent of non-American lineage or the voice of a student that has moved from their home country to attend school in America, there is an importance of cultural enlightenment that traditional American student can learn from students with diverse cultural lifestyles.
As of June 2013, I became a participant in the Miss Nigeria In America Pageant. The Miss Nigeria In America Pageant is a cultural pageant for women eighteen to twenty-nine with the goal of collaborating Nigerian-American born women with Nigerian women that moved to the United States. Undermining the definition of the word pageant, Miss Nigeria In America participants are ambassadors for Nigerian culture, women’s rights, education, and health. This contest was not only about beauty, but also from my personal experience, I learned about what it means to be Nigerian as well as learning that I stand in the gap between Nigeria and America.
Although not a visible division, there is a cultural divide. American students are reluctant to learn about other cultures around the world. As a Nigerian-American woman, I know I must be a reflection of two cultures. Through the lessons learned, during the Miss Nigerian In America pageant, such as leadership skills, the most beneficial skill I learned was how to subtly embrace my culture without making people uncomfortable.
With the knowledge received from the pageant, I now decided to participate in Albany State University’s annual International Week 2013. As a four-year student, in attendance at Albany State University, my appreciation for my culture was regressed due to my need to socialize with my peers. With prior knowledge of international week, I did not participate in the activities until my senior year. During international week, I felt comfortable speaking with my peers, of both American and of International origin, about the shamefulness and ignorance of hiding ones culture, because culture essentially shapes our personality and us as person.
As Miss Lagos in America, under the Miss Nigeria In America Pageant, Dr. Nnneka Osakwe and Instructor Maggie Emily offered me the responsibility of coordinating and hosting the International Week fashion show, under the supervision of Professor Sandra Washington. Having this responsibility, I not only wanted to showcase my culture and the clothes that Nigerians and Africans wear; but also I wanted the international students to have confidence about their cultures and know that the only harm in not embracing the diverse cultures of the world, is not letting the knowledge of cultures to be heard.
As a Nigerian American woman, it is of importance that I share my culture to eliminate the ignorance of Americans has toward other cultures due to what the media portrays. The Miss Nigeria In America Pageant or International Week event such as these reflects the importance to embrace each other will surely rid the misconceptions of a superior cultural group. Society as a whole needs to realize though physically different, we share one planet therefore society must learn to share cultural knowledge; if society wants to learn to cooperate together then we need more international students that are willing to speak up for who and what their culture represents.
“Beats, Stepping, and Theatrics: The annual entertainment of Albany States Step Show"
KalaLife © Feature Story
“Beats, Stepping, and Theatrics: The annual entertainment of Albany States Step Show"
By Nkechi Ndukwe
October 18th, 2013 marked yet another unforgettable step-show planned by
the National PanHellenic Council chapter of Albany State University. The
popularity of step shows amongst predominately African-American collegiate
students is a tradition that has become a rights of passage as generation after
generation of college students, typically under a Greek Fraternity or
Sorority, entertain an audience with various steps routines. It is
appropriate for this type of event to be an annual event here at Albany State
due to the hands on "Greek Life" amongst the students. This years
Homecoming was no exception as three fraternities: Omega Psi Phi, Phi Beta Sigma,
and Kappa Alpha Psi were participants as well as two sororities; Delta Sigma
Theta and Sigma Gamma Rho, unfortunately not all of the fraternities and
sororities were able to participate but the show delivered ample amounts of
excitement.
The show began with the
winners of this years "Battle of the Halls" a step-show that
showcases the student of a particular dorm hall battling in a step competition,
these students are not apart of the National PanHellenic Council. With the
crowd warmed-up and ready for the show to start the judges seated as the show began.
The members of Omega Psi Phi performed with younger boys ranging form ages seven to eleven in a military themed event. Next were the men of Phi Beta Sigma taking a different approach they dressed in all black with their faces painted blue. Last for the men were Kappa Alpha Psi these young men dressed in bow ties and unbuttoned business attire taking a more sensual approach. After the fraternities performed that sororities entered the stage. Up first were the Ladies of Delta Sigma Theta, their them was a nursing home which added much humor to the event. Up next were the Sigma Gamma Rhos their deliverance was one very attention demanding.
Overall the performances catered to the amusement of the audience once again the show held true to the cultural and tradition of a step-show. The winners of the event were the Omegas for the fraternities and for the sororities that Deltas. The crowd was pleased with the outcome of the event. Hopefully next years step-show will be as eventfully as this years.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
India a Dark Place for Women
KalaLife © Documentary Feature
“INDIA A DARK PLACE FOR
WOMEN”
By Nkechi Ndukwe
Horrified
by the brutal gang-rape of a medical student who was riding the bus home in
Delhi, India. Twenty-eight-year old Radha Bedi traveled to India in hopes of
finding the reason behind harsh female brutality in India. In the 2013 BBC
documentary Radha Bedi visits the victim of the brutal gang-rape as she
investigates the reason for gender segregation in India.
The
creativity behind this documentary is that a British born woman of Indian
decent is exploring the cultural differences between how she was raised in a
country with female independence and the suppression of women in India.
Followed
by a small film crew, Bedi roams the streets of Delhi to find an answer to the
brutality of women in India. She visits hospitals and speaks with different
victims of abuse. Below is an example the brutality women in India
endure,
BANGALORE: A 38-year-old woman was brutally attacked with a
machete in an ATM in the heart of
the city on Tuesday, leaving her severely injured, police said.
The woman, manager at Corporation Bank, entered the ATM
in which no security guard was present, to withdraw cash when the assailant
followed her inside and brought down the shutter before threatening her with
the weapon, police said. This documentary utilizes the
Indian culture, music, and art to depict the rise and fall of women in India’s
culture. This documentary is perfectly executed by having a combination educated
historians and doctors that full explain the problems that this brutality
creates.
Monday, September 9, 2013
First feature story in your blog
KalaLife © Documentary Feature
“A Hip-Hop-menatary; Beats Rhymes & Life: The Travels Of
A Tribe Called Quest, the Documentary with
rhythm”
By Nkechi Ndukwe
From Hip-hop's immense communal acceptance in
the early 1980s to the current distorted image surrounding the industry today, this
genre of music has quickly submerged the music market with pioneers of rap
(hip-hop) who have changed the way people relate to music. Every generation
has their handful of musical geniuses who trail-blaze a new way of style and
thinking. Hip-hop fans universally experience their own trailblazers as well.
No other group solidified their position in the hip-hop kingdom other than the
infamous hip-hop group “A Tribe Called Quest.” Through an eloquent documentary, director Micheal Rapaport conveys a different form documentaries by fusing hip-hop and storytelling.
Beats Rhymes & Life: The Travels Of A Tribe Called Quest, is not a typical documentary. The editing technique along with the directors vision showcases the impact that hip-hop made on multiple societies during the 90s. Fourteen years after the group's dismantlement in 1997, July 8th, 2011, became the day that director Michael Rapaport and group members of A Tribe Called Quest: Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, and Jabori White graced fans with their critically acclaimed documentary Beats Rhymes & Life: The Travels Of A Tribe Called Quest, an urban twist on biographical documentaries.
Beats Rhymes & Life: The Travels Of A Tribe Called Quest, is not a typical documentary. The editing technique along with the directors vision showcases the impact that hip-hop made on multiple societies during the 90s. Fourteen years after the group's dismantlement in 1997, July 8th, 2011, became the day that director Michael Rapaport and group members of A Tribe Called Quest: Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, and Jabori White graced fans with their critically acclaimed documentary Beats Rhymes & Life: The Travels Of A Tribe Called Quest, an urban twist on biographical documentaries.
After watching Beats Rhymes & Life, the background history of who the four
members of A Tribe Called Quest are allows for a better understanding of why
the group became breakout pioneers during the era. Being a Caucasian male director, Micheal Rapaport proves that A
Tribe Called Quest has targeted audiences of multiple diversities. In 2013, VH1
aired Beats Rhymes & Life for fans
of the group who could not experience the original debut of this urban classic
documentary. With its high viewer ratings, once again, documentaries such as this one show
that music fans still appreciate documentaries as an elite form of art that goes beyond the shallow levels of standard films and television.
As a different approach to documentaries this film would favor a feature writer that is interested in music, it is important that the feature story blends the music groups history along with the techniques the director used to creatively tell the story of this shift in hip-hop music.
As a different approach to documentaries this film would favor a feature writer that is interested in music, it is important that the feature story blends the music groups history along with the techniques the director used to creatively tell the story of this shift in hip-hop music.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Feature Writing
Subject
Description For Feature Writing
The Influence and Art of Documentaries:
|
The objective of my research is to prove the powerful influence of
documentaries as well as documentaries evolution into an important art form of
modern society. Proving that personal eyewitness of a subject matter through
documentaries has a stronger impact on societies ethos, logos, and pathos in
regards to life changing issues. First, it is important to describe the
history surrounding film and how documentaries bridge the cultural gap amongst
people. Then through my personal experience of creating my own documentary, I
will explain that an affective documentary informs without being biased
allowing the audience to choose their own opinion of the subject presented.
This Feature writing will target both males and females as I will use examples
of different documentaries that have assisted in shaping the modern culture.
Examining both documentaries and features stories will show the relationship
that each of the forms of mass media need; through a well written feature story
people might want to watch a documentary. For example this article written in
on NaturalNews.com eloquently describes the documentary Let Them Eat
Grasswill,
|
The author of this feature story does an
excellent job at connecting the subject matter, which is the documentary, to
the importance of the grassroots movement. My goal in this class is to evaluate
and connect both documentaries and feature stories.
http://www.naturalnews.com/040623_Morninglane_Dairy_Vernon_Hershberger_food_freedom.html#ixzz2lWeQZYNN
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
BODY BY SIR Promo
Taking the world by storm, Sir Markadoo of the "Body By Sir" and "Heavenly Body Products" (an assortment of all natural body, health, and wellness merchandise) is now challenging the community, through fitness to defeat the difficult battle of poor health, while gaining proper fitness awareness. Held every Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday for five dollars a session. Sir and recurrent members push themselves by working the body physically, along with discussion, followed by dietary suggestions to help evolve each other through a sense of community. Located on 2571 Park Central Blv. in Decatur, Ga. from 7pm to 8pm.
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